MedVision ad

Aggravating + Mitigating VS Subjective + Objective factors in sentencing? (1 Viewer)

akataylor

Member
Joined
Sep 3, 2008
Messages
42
Gender
Male
HSC
N/A
Just as the title suggests, what are the differences between the two types?

I know essentially what they are, just not the differences between the two. Mitigating = reduced sentence, aggravating = higher sentence, but...yeah.

Thanks y'all.
 

jeff.wong

Member
Joined
Oct 27, 2008
Messages
177
Gender
Male
HSC
2008
Circumstances of the offence - Objective factors
Every crime has unique circumstances and this must be considered when passing sentence. These circumstances, often referred to as ‘objective features’, are usually put forward by the prosecution in a bid to reinforce the severity of the crime. E.g. use of weapon, threat of violence or actually violence, preplanning and whether crime is becoming more prevalent and requires a deterrent.

Circumstances of the offender - Subjective factors
The law makes provision for judges to take into account the offender before determining an appropriate sentence. The judge will want to have as much information—known as ‘subjective features’—about the offender as possible. E.g. offender’s age, prior convictions, any mental or physical disabilities, whether other people rely on them, pleaded guilty, whether the offender was of assistance to police and mitigating circumstances.

Aggravating and mitigating circumstances
When a crime is said to be aggravated it means that is a particularly severe example of that offence. E.g. sexual assault is defined as ‘aggravated’ when the victim is under 16, weapon is used or if the victim suffers from mental or physical disability. Aggravating circumstances are those where:
-Victim is either young, elderly or disable, making the impact of the crime particularly damaging
-Gratuitous violence is involved etc.

On the other hand mitigating factors partly excuse the actions of the offender may lower the sentence. Common mitigating circumstances are:
-Offender is young and relatively inexperienced—led into crime by others
-Poverty or previous abuse may be considered etc.
Mitigating circumstances are not a defence to the crime; they are raised during the sentencing in a bid to reduce the severity of the sentence.
 

akataylor

Member
Joined
Sep 3, 2008
Messages
42
Gender
Male
HSC
N/A
Thanks for that, very imformative. I learnt what they were afterwards because I forgot to check back here before my exam today. It wasn't tested...:mad1:

Thanks again for that information anyway.
 

Users Who Are Viewing This Thread (Users: 0, Guests: 1)

Top