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Bob tells Bill, "I want to shoot someone, but I don't have a gun." Bill gives Bob a gun. Bob then shoots Bill. (Assume that Bill survives, both are legally allowed to possess the gun, the transfer of the gun would have been legal if Bob requested it for a legal reason, and Bob doesn't shoot anyone else.) Obviously, Bob has assaulted Bill, but has Bill committed a crime?

Someone
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4 Answers4

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In the notorious Spanner Case in the UK in 1987, several gay men were prosecuted for aiding and abetting consensual sadomasochistic assaults upon themselves. So the answer to your question is yes, at least in the UK.

Mike Scott
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Aiders and abetters are liable for the primary offence

Criminal Code, s. 21 makes parties to an offence liable of that offence on equal footing with the person who actually committed it:

21 (1) Every one is a party to an offence who

(a) actually commits it;

(b) does or omits to do anything for the purpose of aiding any person to commit it; or

(c) abets any person in committing it.

The purpose is to "make the difference between aiding and abetting and personally committing an offence legally irrelevant... whether a person personally commits or only aids and abets, he is guilty of that offence... and not some separate distinct offence." R. v. Thatcher, [1987] 1 S.C.R. 652.

The actus reus

The actus reus that makes one a party is to do or omit something that assists or encourages the principal to commit the offence. R. v. Briscoe, 2010 SCC 13.

The mens rea

The mens rea requires that the aider or abetter "know that the perpetrator intends to commit the crime, although he or she need not know precisely how it will be committed." The aider or abetter also does not need to share the perpetrator's intention. "It is sufficient that he or she, armed with knowledge of the perpetrator’s intention to commit the crime, acts with the intention of assisting the perpetrator in its commission." Briscoe.

"Criminal liability as a party to an offence... does not require that the harm in issue be foreseeable in relation to a specific identifiable individual." R. v. Natewayes, 2015 SKCA 120, affirmed in 2017 SCC 5.

Application

Bill very likely knew of Bob's intention to assault someone using a gun, and, with that knowledge, Bill did something to assist Bob in commiting that offence. This would make Bill a party to an assault.

Jen
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If any given law actually applies is for judges to decide, but on the face of it this sounds like a case of "Beihilfe" as per § 27 Strafgesetzbuch (German penal code):

(1) Als Gehilfe wird bestraft, wer vorsätzlich einem anderen zu dessen vorsätzlich begangener rechtswidriger Tat Hilfe geleistet hat.

(2) Die Strafe für den Gehilfen richtet sich nach der Strafdrohung für den Täter. Sie ist nach § 49 Abs. 1 zu mildern.

With (1) saying that anybody aiding a crime (more literally a purposefully committed illegal act) will be punished, and (2) saying the possible punishment depends on the punishment for the crime that has been aided.

(As a later addendum, the fact that Bill is the victim should not have much bearing onto the outcome, since he clearly was okay with a crime being committed; that he happened to be the victim is incidental. A German judge is also not elected and indeed completely independent, subject only to the law and his own conscience, so unlikely to respond to outside pressure. Instead this comes down to the question if Bill was aware that Bob was making a serious threat and a crime actually was planned.).

Bill can also not escape this by not starting legal action against Bob since shooting somebody is "gefährliche Körperverletzung" (aggravated assault, I think) per StGb 224, and this is an "Offizialdelikt", i.e. a crime that will be persecuted by a state attorney even if the assaulted party does not seek legal action (and this would certainly uncover Bills part in the shooting).

Following a very interesting comment by JanusBahsJacquet I tried to find out if Bill would have already aided a crime if Bob had not actually shot anyone. It seems that is very hard to answer and depends on the difference if that was a "Vorbereitungshandlung", i.e. abstract preparation to commit a crime, or a "Versuch", an attempt to commit a crime. As this source says

Der Wille desselben, ein Rechtsgut zu verletzen, muss sich zusätzlich in einem bestimmten nach außen sichtbaren Verhalten manifestieren

meaning "the intent to violate the law must manifest in a distinct visible behaviour" to determine if this was a Vorbereitungshandlung or an actual attempt.

Arguably, making threats to shoot somebody should count as "nach außen sichtbares Verhalten", so my layman's intuition would suggest that even if Bob does not shoot, Bill aided the attempt to commit a crime, which is already a criminal offence, so even if Bob does not actually shoot, Bill will still face legal consequences.

Eike Pierstorff
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Sure you can. For example, you tell Bob "my spare car keys are under the flat rock by my front door." Then your car disappears, and Bob is arrested driving the car. You have aided and abetted the crime by telling Bob where to find the keys. And since you told Bob directly, it cannot be disqualified as hearsay.

David K
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