Murder
Crimes Act 1958
Murder requires the prosecution to prove that the accused caused the death and did so with the necessary intent: an intention to kill or to cause really serious injury. It is tried in the Supreme Court of Victoria.
A homicide charge, whether murder, manslaughter, or an offence of causing death by driving, sets off the most serious process in the criminal law. The matter begins in the Magistrates' Court at a filing hearing and a committal, where the prosecution evidence is tested, and a murder or manslaughter charge is then tried in the Supreme Court of Victoria.
Homicide offences are governed by the Crimes Act 1958. Murder requires the prosecution to prove that the accused caused the death and did so with the necessary intent. Manslaughter covers unlawful killings without that intent, including death caused by an unlawful and dangerous act or by criminal negligence. Where a death is caused by driving, the relevant offences are culpable driving causing death and dangerous driving causing death. The charge filed shapes the elements in issue and the penalties the court can impose.
These matters turn on careful work with the brief: causation, the accused's state of mind, the forensic and expert evidence, and the reliability of witness accounts. A homicide brief is large, and the committal stage is an important opportunity to test the prosecution case. How that stage is handled can affect the shape of the trial that follows.
Tringali Lawyers acts for people accused of homicide offences. For a trial in the Supreme Court, the firm instructs experienced Counsel and continues to instruct throughout the proceeding, so the client has both a barrister with the right trial experience and a solicitor who knows the file. The firm's role is to read the brief closely, give honest advice on what the evidence shows, and prepare the matter properly at every stage.
Homicide offences in Victoria range from murder and manslaughter to offences of causing death by driving. The charge filed determines the elements in issue and the penalty range.
Realistic options depend on what the prosecution can prove on causation and state of mind. The starting point is a close reading of a large brief.
| Charge | Statute | Classification | Maximum |
|---|---|---|---|
| Murder | Crimes Act 1958 | Indictable | Life imprisonment |
| Manslaughter | Crimes Act 1958 | Indictable | 25 years imprisonment |
| Culpable driving causing death | Crimes Act 1958 s 318 | Indictable | 20 years imprisonment |
| Dangerous driving causing death | Crimes Act 1958 s 319 | Indictable | 10 years imprisonment |
Homicide offences carry the most serious penalties in Victorian criminal law. Murder carries a maximum of life imprisonment. The other homicide offences carry substantial terms of imprisonment that scale with the seriousness of the conduct.
The maximum is not the sentence imposed in every case. At sentencing, the court weighs the circumstances of the death, the accused's state of mind and personal circumstances, any prior history, and the material put before it in mitigation. Preparing that material properly is a significant part of the work in any matter that proceeds to a plea.
Murder and manslaughter are tried in the Supreme Court of Victoria. Every homicide matter begins in the Magistrates' Court with a filing hearing and a committal.
A homicide charge begins, like other indictable matters, in the Magistrates' Court, with a filing hearing followed by a committal stage where the prosecution evidence is disclosed and can be tested. Murder and manslaughter are then tried in the Supreme Court of Victoria. Offences of causing death by driving are also indictable and are heard in the higher courts. The committal stage is an important part of the process and is approached as a genuine opportunity to test the prosecution case.