There are a small number of defences against charges under the Protection of Children Act. Below is a list of defences set by the statutes, precedents and case law.
Marriage and enduring relationships On May 1, 2004, when section 45 of the Sexual Offences Act 2003 came into force, raising the general minimum age to appear in sexual images, in England and Wales, from 16 to 18, under the Protection of Children Act 1978, exceptions were provided for in law for contexts in which images of 16 and 17-years-olds were to remain lawful, these being under the following contexts: In cases where a defendant has taken or made a photographic image of a child over the age of 16, the defendant is not guilty if, at the time when they obtained the photograph, they and the child: :: (a) were married; or :: (b) lived together as partners in an
enduring family relationship1; and :: (c) the defendant
reasonably believed that the child consented to the image being obtained. This exemption was introduced in 2003 under the Sexual Offences Act, which had changed the statutory definition of "child" (in the Protection of Children Act) from 16 to 18. 1 - A definition of "enduring family relationship" is not supplied within the Act.
Mens rea The common-law
mens rea defence applies to the Protection of Children Act offences. The prosecution must demonstrate that a defendant took a photograph deliberately, intending it to be an indecent photograph showing a child. Presumabably the notion of intention is that defined elsewhere in English criminal law found in
Woolin [1998]: that is, either clear intent or (summarised) 'whatever the defendant's purpose, if it is virtually certain that the
actus reus will result from the defendant's action, then the jury may infer intent." By the latter test mere
foreseeability or
likelihood will not suffice (see
Nedrick and
Woollin) as this encroaches on the notion of recklessness. It would appear that the offences in the act are of specific intent (that is, intent is required and not mere recklessness, and certainly the offences are not absolute with strict liability, see
Smith and
Jayson below). This was upheld in
R v Smith and Jayson (2003), where it was held that "the mens rea necessary to constitute the offence [of making an indecent pseudo-photograph of a child] is that the act of making should be a deliberate and intentional act with knowledge that the image made is, or is likely to be, an indecent image of a child" It is thus a defence for the defendant to raise sufficient doubt about whether he took, made, distributed, showed or possessed an image without the knowledge that the image was, or was likely to be: ::* an indecent image; and ::* an image of a child. Further to this, if an image is found only in a computer cache, if the defendant can reasonably be thought not to have had knowledge of the existence of the cache, he is innocent of a possession offence. The mere existence of the image in the cache should not necessarily be sufficient proof that the image was made when it was downloaded, however; this should be backed up by evidence of an intentional directed search, for example (see
Atkins v DPP). The definition of the mens rea for making, however was thought to be thrown into confusion by the decision in
Harrison v R [2007] EWCA Crim 2976 where it was suggested that if the actions of the defendant were
very likely to make an image that would constitute the mens rea.
Smith and
Jayson however were not overtly overruled and
Harrison is regarded as made
per incuriam or at least a badly worded setting out of the rule found in
Woollin. In
Harrison there was clear and admitted evidence that a directed (and "unusual") search for and visit to a site had been made which would fall under the
Woollin rule - it could be argued that it was a virtual certainty that images would be made (in the cache). Harrison knew that
pop-ups which contained indecent images of children would be produced and carried on regardless. ==See also==