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Criminal Law NCA Notes

The most common fail point: confusing general intent and specific intent offences — the entire intoxication defence turns on this distinction.

Sample exam question

"Alex consumed 12 beers and punched a stranger at a bar, causing a broken nose. Crown charges assault causing bodily harm. Alex claims intoxication as a defence."

How the notes help

  • General vs specific intent offence chart included — assault causing bodily harm correctly classified so the defence analysis follows immediately
  • Defence availability mapped by offence type — ordinary intoxication vs Daviault extreme intoxication distinguished and structured
  • Template structures the entire mens rea analysis — from identifying the offence category to concluding on defence availability

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What's Inside

What these notes cover

Complete NCA Criminal Law coverage — every doctrine, defence, and analysis framework:

Why It Matters

Why Criminal Law is more manageable than other subjects

Criminal Law is rated moderately difficult by most NCA candidates. Most internationally trained lawyers have some exposure to criminal law concepts, even if the specific Canadian rules differ.

The key challenge is precision on the specifics — the exact three-part test for s.34 self-defence, the precise Daviault threshold for extreme intoxication, the correct mens rea analysis for attempt. These notes give you every specific rule with the exact wording needed in an exam answer.

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FAQ

Frequently Asked Questions

How is Canadian criminal law different from other common law systems?

Canadian criminal law follows the Criminal Code of Canada, which codifies most offences and defences. Key differences include: the s.34 self-defence framework (revised 2012), the Daviault extreme intoxication defence, and the Charter-based exclusion of evidence rules under s.24(2) (Grant test).

What is the mens rea test for attempt in Canada?

For criminal attempt, the mens rea is intention to commit the complete offence — even if the mens rea of the completed offence could be satisfied by recklessness or wilful blindness. The actus reus requires an act beyond mere preparation.

How many hours should I study for NCA Criminal Law?

Most candidates require 80-120 study hours for Criminal Law. Focus time on the Canadian-specific tests: s.34 self-defence, Daviault, and the Grant test for s.24(2) exclusion of evidence.

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