HM Advocate v Ross was a 1991 Scots criminal law case decided by the High Court of Justiciary.[1] The defendant had been charged with violently attacking others in a public house, but was allowed to go free on the premise that he was in a state of non-self-induced automatism. Others in the bar had slipped LSD and other drugs into his beer without his knowledge, and he had drunk only a small amount of alcohol, and so was found not responsible for the intoxication that led to his violent actions.

This case set a key precedent in Scots law for automatism, namely that since this case, if someone has been under the effect of drugs that they themselves did not voluntarily know they were taking or were under the influence of and commit a violent act, it may be a defence for them in court if they can prove or give evidence that their intoxication was not self-induced.

Later cases suggested that the Scottish precedent established in Ross would be followed in England as well.[2]

References

  1. 1991 SLT 564, 1991 JC 210.
  2. A. P. Simester, A. T. H. Smith, Harm and Culpability (1996), p. 140, n. 35.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.