Failing to stop and assist after vehicle impact causing grievous bodily harm is an offence under section 52AB(2) of the Crimes Act 1900, which carries a maximum penalty of 7 years in prison.
To establish the offence, the prosecution must prove beyond reasonable doubt that:
- You drove or rode a vehicle,
- The vehicle was involved in an impact which occasioned grievous bodily harm to another person,
- You knew, or ought reasonably have known, that the vehicle you were driving or riding had been involved in an impact causing the death of, or grievous bodily harm to, another person,
- You failed to stop and give assistance that may have been necessary, and
- It was within your power to stop and give that assistance.
A ‘vehicle’ is defined as:
- Any motor car, motor carriage, motor cycle, or any other vehicle propelled, wholly or partly, by volatile spirit, steam, gas, oil, electricity, or by any other means other than human or animal power, or
- A horse-drawn vehicle.
The definition does not include a vehicle used on a railway or tramway.
An ‘impact’ is that which occurs:
- Between an object or a person and the vehicle,
- Between an object, including the ground, due to being thrown from the vehicle,
- With another vehicle or object in, on or near a person,
- With anything on or attached to the vehicle, or
- With anything in motion through falling from the vehicle.
‘Grievous bodily harm’ has been defined by the courts as ‘really serious harm’, and there is no exhaustive list of what constitutes such harm and what does not.
However, the Crimes Act states that such harm does include:
- The destruction of the foetus of a pregnant woman, whether or not the woman suffers any other harm, except for in the course of a medical procedure or a lawful termination of pregnancy,
- Any permanent or serious disfiguring of the person, and
- Any grievous bodily disease.
The courts have also found the following injuries to be grievous:
- A fractured arm,
- ‘Glassing’ of the face requiring stitches,
- A gaping wound to face and throat requiring large number of stitches, and
- Severe facial and/or cranial injuries.
Defences to the charge include self-defence, duress and necessity.
Failing to stop and assist after vehicle impact causing death is an offence under section 52AB(1) of the Crimes Act 1900, which carries a maximum penalty of 10 years in prison.
To establish the offence, the prosecution must prove beyond reasonable doubt that:
- You drove or rode a vehicle,
- The vehicle was involved in an impact which occasioned the death of another person,
- You knew, or ought reasonably have known, that the vehicle you were driving or riding had been involved in an impact causing the death of, or grievous bodily harm to, another person,
- You failed to stop and give assistance that may have been necessary, and
- It was within your power to stop and give that assistance.
A ‘vehicle’ is defined as:
- Any motor car, motor carriage, motor cycle, or any other vehicle propelled, wholly or partly, by volatile spirit, steam, gas, oil, electricity, or by any other means other than human or animal power, or
- A horse-drawn vehicle.
The definition does not include a vehicle used on a railway or tramway.
An ‘impact’ is that which occurs:
- Between an object or a person and the vehicle,
- Between an object, including the ground, due to being thrown from the vehicle,
- With another vehicle or object in, on or near a person,
- With anything on or attached to the vehicle, or
- With anything in motion through falling from the vehicle.
Defences to the charge include self-defence, duress and necessity.
If you are going to court for the offence of Failing to Stop and Assist after an Impact Causing Death or Grievous Bodily Harm , call Sydney Criminal Lawyers 24/7 on (02) 9261 8881 to arrange a free first conference with an experienced defence lawyer who will advise you of your options and the best way forward, and fight to secure the optimal outcome.
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