South Australian Current Acts

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CRIMINAL LAW CONSOLIDATION ACT 1935 - SECT 137

137—Robbery

        (1)         A person who commits theft is guilty of robbery if—

            (a)         the person—

                  (i)         uses force, or threatens to use force, against another in order to commit the theft; or

                  (ii)         uses force, or threatens to use force, against another in order to escape from the scene of the offence; and

            (b)         the force is used, or the threat is made, at the time of, or immediately before or after, the theft.

Maximum penalty:

            (a)         for a basic offence—imprisonment for 15 years;

            (b)         for an aggravated offence—imprisonment for life.

        (3)         If 2 or more persons jointly commit robbery in company, each is guilty of aggravated robbery.

Example—

Suppose that A and B plan to steal from a service station. A assaults the attendant while B takes money from the till. In this case, each is guilty of robbery on the principle enunciated by the High Court in McAuliffe v R ((1995) 183 CLR 108). Robbery committed in these circumstances is to be treated as aggravated robbery. In other words, the principle that, where robbery is committed jointly, each participant in the offence is guilty of aggravated robbery applies irrespective of whether all elements of robbery can be established against a particular person.



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