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Published: 2000

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CAP 101 CRIMINAL CODE ACT BELIZE

CRIMINAL CODE

CHAPTER 101

REVISED EDITION 2000

SHOWING THE LAW AS AT 31ST DECEMBER, 2000

This is a revised edition of the law, prepared by the Law Revision Commissioner

under the authority of the Law Revision Act, Chapter 3 of the Laws of Belize,

Revised Edition 1980 - 1990.

This edition contains a consolidation of the following laws- Page

ARRANGEMENT OF SECTIONS 3

CRIMINAL CODE 28

Amendments in force as at 31st December, 2000.

BELIZE

CRIMINAL CODE

CHAPTER 101

REVISED EDITION 2000

SHOWING THE LAW AS AT 31ST DECEMBER, 2000

This is a revised edition of the law, prepared by the Law Revision Commissioner

under the authority of the Law Revision Act, Chapter 3 of the Laws of Belize,

Revised Edition 1980 - 1990.

This edition contains a consolidation of the following laws- Page

ARRANGEMENT OF SECTIONS 3

CRIMINAL CODE 28

Amendments in force as at 31st December, 2000.

THE SUBSTANTIVE LAWS OF BELIZE REVISED EDITION 2000

Printed by the Government Printer,

No. 1 Power Lane,

Belmopan, by the authority of

the Government of Belize.

Criminal Code [CAP. 101

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CHAPTER 101

CRIMINAL CODE

ARRANGEMENT OF SECTIONS

PART I

General Provisions

TITLE I

Preliminary

1. Short title.

2. Commencement of Code.

3. General rules of construction.

TITLE II

Interpretation and General Explanations

4. Miscellaneous definitions.

Standard Tests for Questions of Criminal Liability

5. Establishment of standard tests for certain questions relating to criminal

liability.

The Standard Tests and the Keywords

6. Intention.

7. Knowledge.

8. Recklessness.

9. Proof of intention, knowledge, recklessness and foresight.

10. Negligence.

11. Causing an event.

12. Consent.

13. Fraud.

14. Threats.

15. Duress.

16. Definition of "person".

17. Imprisonment with or without labour.

TITLE III

Attempts to Commit Crimes

18. Attempts.

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19. Preparation for crime.

TITLE IV

Abetment and Conspiracy

20. Abetment of crimes.

21. One crime abetted, another committed.

22. Duty to prevent felony.

23. Conspiracy.

24. Punishment for conspiracy.

TITLE V

General Exemption from Criminal Liability

25. Infancy.

26. Insanity.

27. Intoxication.

28. Ignorance or mistake of fact or of law.

29. Abolition of presumption of marital coercion.

TITLE VI

Justifiable Force and Harm

30. Justification for force and harm.

31. Grounds on which force or harm may be justified.

32. General limits of justifiable force or harm.

33. Authority by statute.

34. Execution of a sentence or order of a court.

35. Authority to keep the peace or to preserve order.

36. Prevention of or defence against crime.

37. Defence of property, possession or overcoming obstruction of legal

right.

38. Preserving order on board vessel.

39. Authority to correct child or other similar person.

40. Consent to the use of force.

41. Interference by third persons.

42. Additional force and harm.

43. Aid of other persons.

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PART II

Particular Crimes

TITLE VII

Criminal Force to the Person

1. Assaults

44. Common assault.

45. Aggravated assault.

2. Rape and Like Crimes

46. Rape.

47. Carnal knowledge of child, girl under sixteen years and female idiot,

etc.

48. Mandatory life sentence for habitual sex offenders.

49. Procuration.

50. Procuring defilement of female by threats or fraud or administration of

drugs.

51. Householder permitting defilement of young females on his premises.

52. Saving as to rape.

53. Unnatural crime.

3. Kidnapping, Abduction, Forced Marriage, Abandonment and

Incest.

54. Kidnapping.

55. Child stealing.

56. Abduction.

57. Forcible abduction.

58. Compulsion of marriage.

59. Special provision as to abetment.

60. Abandonment of infant.

61. Test of relationship when incest charged.

62. Incest by males.

63. Incest by females of or over sixteen.

64. Prosecutions for incest.

65. Special provision for treatment and reporting of sex offenders.

66. Kinds of assault.

67. Definition of assault.

68. Assault without actual battery.

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69. Unlawful imprisonment.

70. Definition of common assault.

2. Rape and like crimes-Definitions

71. Rape defined.

72. Marital rape defined.

73. Evidence of rape, etc.

74. Avoidance of marriage.

3. Kidnapping, stealing a person and abduction-Definitions

75. Kidnapping defined.

76. Stealing a person.

77. Abduction defined.

78. Special provisions as to abduction, etc.

TITLE VIII

Criminal Harm to the Person

79. Intentional harm.

80. Wounding.

81. Grievous harm.

82. Maim and dangerous harm.

83. Use of deadly means of harm.

84. Administering noxious matter.

85. Aggravation.

86. Garrotting, etc.

87. Intentionally endangering train or vessel.

88. Throwing, etc., at a train.

89. Obstructing trains.

90. Interference with signals, etc.

91. Frauds endangering trains or vessels.

92. Abandonment likely to cause grievous harm.

93. Negligent harm.

94. Negligent wound or grievous harm.

95. Negligence by persons in charge of dangerous things.

Definitions and Special Provisions Relating to the Matter of this

Title

96. Kinds of harm.

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97. Unlawful harm defined.

98. Causing harm by an omission.

99. Duty for preventing harm defined.

100. Duty to supply necessaries of health and life.

101. Explanations as to office, etc.

102. Exceptions from general provisions.

103. Surgical or medical treatment.

104. Hindering the saving of life.

105. Poison explained.

TITLE IX

Criminal Homicide

106. Murder.

107. Attempt to murder.

108. Manslaughter.

109. Abetment of suicide.

110. Infanticide.

111. Abortion, miscarriage and child destruction.

112. Medical termination of pregnancy.

113. Conscientious objection to participation in treatment.

114. Injury to child at birth.

115. Concealment of body of child.

Definitions and Special Provisions Relating to the Matter of this

Title

116. Manslaughter defined.

117. Murder defined.

118. Diminished responsibility.

119. When intentional homicide is reduced to manslaughter.

120. Provocation defined.

121. When provocation shall not be admitted.

122. Mistake as to matter of provocation.

123. Mistake as to the person.

124. Special provisions as to causing death.

125. Special provisions as to abetment.

126. Explanation as to a child.

127. Abortion.

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128. Harm to a child at birth.

129. Concealment of birth.

130. Exceptions as to surgical or medical treatment.

131. Jurisdiction.

TITLE X

Crimes Against Rights to Property

Criminal Damage to Property

132. Destroying or damaging property.

133. Threats to damage or destroy property.

134. Possessing anything with intent to destroy or damage property.

135. Punishment.

136. Without lawful excuse.

137. Meaning of property.

138. Meaning of damage.

TITLE XI

Criminal Misappropriations and Frauds

139. Basic definition of theft.

140. "Dishonestly".

141. "Appropriates".

142. Consent by a wife.

143. "Property".

144. "Belonging to another".

145. "With the intention of permanently depriving the other of it".

146. Theft.

Robbery, burglary, etc.

147. Robbery.

148. Burglary.

149. Aggravated burglary.

150. Removal of articles from places open to the public.

151. Taking motor vehicle or other conveyance without authority.

152. Abstracting of electricity.

153. Obtaining property by deception.

154. Obtaining a money transfer by deception.

155. Dishonestly retaining a wrongful credit.

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156. Obtaining pecuniary advantage by deception.

157. Obtaining services by deception.

158. Evasion of liability deception.

159. Making off without payment.

160. Punishment.

161. Supplementary.

162. False accounting.

163. Liability of company officers for certain offences by company.

164. False statement by company directors, etc.

165. Suppression, etc., of documents.

166. Frauds in sale of land.

167. Boundaries, documents and accounts.

168. Removing goods to evade legal process.

169. Frauds as to tickets, etc.

170. Blackmail.

Offences Relating to Goods Stolen, etc.

171. Handling stolen goods.

172. Scope of offences relating to stolen goods.

Possession of Instrument for Burglary, etc.

173. Going equipped for stealing, etc.

Supplementary

174. Interpretation.

TITLE XII

Forgery

175. Forgery of documents and securities.

176. Forgery of official documents.

177. Forgery above twenty-five dollars.

178. Forgery of passport.

179. Forgery of other documents.

180. Uttering false documents.

181. Claiming upon a forged document.

182. Possessing false documents.

183. Procuring, making, etc., of documents by force, etc.

184. False coin.

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185. Uttering false current coin.

186. Possessing false current coin.

187. Making, mending or having possession of any coining tools a felony.

188. Forged or counterfeit coin, etc., to be delivered to the Governor of the

Central Bank of Belize.

189. Punishment for selling medals resembling current coin.

190. Damaging current coin.

191. Uttering damaged coin.

192. Impairing current coin and unlawful possession of filings, etc.

193. Forgery of currency notes.

194. Imitation of currency notes.

195. Possession of counterfeited or incomplete notes.

196. Possession of paper for notes.

197. Mutilating or defacing currency notes.

198. Making or having in possession paper or implements for forgery.

199. Forging hall-marks.

200. Forging trade-marks.

201. Forgery of dies and stamps.

Definitions and Special Provisions Relating to the Matter of this

Title

202. Forgery explained.

203. Current coin, official document and currency notes defined.

204. Counterfeiting defined.

205. Falsification defined.

206. Defacing defined.

207. Explanation.

208. Imitation need not be perfect.

209. Jurisdiction.

210. Common forger or coiner defined.

211. Trade-mark defined.

TITLE XIII

Crimes Against the Safety of the State

212. Armed force against the Government.

213. Seditious libels and assemblies.

214. Seditious conspiracy.

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215. Seditious intention.

216. On proof of certain facts principal not liable for the acts of his agents.

217. Defaming Her Majesty.

218. Aiding escape of prisoner of war.

219. Abetment of mutiny.

220. Abetment of desertion.

221. Abetment of insubordination.

222. Unlawful training.

223. Evasion of military service.

224. Unlawful oaths.

Definitions and Special Provisions Relating to the Matter of this

Title

225. Interpretation.

TITLE XIV

Crimes Against the Public Peace

226. Riot.

227. Rioting with weapons.

228. Riot and felony.

229. Unlawful assembly.

230. Provocation of riot.

231. Rioting after proclamation.

232. Obstructing proclamation.

233. Assaulting magistrate, etc., in riot.

234. Forcible entry.

235. Forcible detainer.

236. Provocation to fight.

237. Unlawfully carrying arms.

238. Threats of death or grievous harm.

239. Written threats.

240. Violence against judges, witnesses, etc.

241. Disturbance of lawful assemblies.

242. Obstructing public officers.

243. Obstructing lawful acts by violence, etc.

244. Causing public terror.

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Definitions and Special Provisions Relating to the Matter of this

Title

245. Riot defined.

246. Proclamation, how to be made.

247. Dispersion of rioters.

248. Violence defined.

TITLE XV

Perjury and Obstruction of Public Justice

1. Perjury and Other Crimes Relating to Evidence and to Judicial

Proceedings

249. Perjury.

250. Perjury on trial for capital crimes.

251. Perjury on trial for other crimes.

252. False statutory declarations and other false statements without oath.

253. Perjury for the purpose of defrauding by personation.

254. Fabrication of evidence.

255. Contradicting previous evidence.

256. Destruction of evidence.

257. Destruction of will, etc.

258. Destruction of official documents.

259. Fraudulent acknowledgement.

260. Deceit of courts.

261. Fictitious suits.

262. Keeping away witnesses.

263. Suppression of evidence on criminal trial.

264. Disobedience to summons.

265. Hindrance of inquests.

266. Neglect to hold inquests.

267. Disturbance of court.

268. Exciting prejudice as to a trial.

269. Contempt of judicial orders.

2. Rescue, Escape and Compounding of Crime

270. Rescue and escape of criminals.

271. Rescue in other cases.

272. Obstructing executions.

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273. Refusal to aid officers.

274. Harbouring criminals.

275. Compounding crime.

276. Corruptly accepting reward for restoring property, etc.

Definitions and Special Provisions Relating to the Matter of this

Title

277. Perjury defined.

278. Special explanation.

279. Fabrication defined.

280. Compounding defined.

TITLE XVI

Crimes Relating to Public Offices and to Public Elections

281. Refusal of office.

282. False pretence of office.

283. False declarations, etc., for office.

284. Corruption, oppression and extortion.

285. False certificates.

286. Destruction, etc., of documents.

287. Oppression by gaolers.

288. Withholding public money, etc.

289. Bribery of officers.

290. Agreement for influencing officers.

291. Corrupt promises by judicial officers or jurors.

292. Corrupt selection of jurors.

293. Unlawful sale of offices.

294. Disturbance of elections.

295. Corruption, intimidation and personation.

296. Unlawful voting.

297. Falsification, etc., of votes, etc.

298. Falsification of returns.

Definitions and Special Provisions Relating to the Matter of this

Title

299. "Public officer" defined.

300. Corrupt bargains or transactions.

301. Corruption of officer, etc., explained.

302. Corruption by officer, etc., explained.

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303. Corruption in expectation of office.

304. Corrupt agreement for lawful act.

305. Subsequent acceptance.

306. Subsequent promise of bribe.

307. Valuable consideration defined.

308. Intimidation defined.

309. Oppression explained.

310. Extortion explained.

311. Explanation as to withholding public moneys, etc.

312. Explanation as to an election.

TITLE XVII

Bigamy and Unlawful Marriage

313. Punishment for bigamy.

314. Marriage with a person previously married.

315. Fictitious marriage.

316. Personation in marriage.

317. Unlawfully performing marriage ceremony.

318. False declaration, etc., for marriage.

319. False pretence of impediment to marriage.

320. Substitution of child.

Definitions and Special Provisions Relating to the Matter of this

Title

321. Bigamy defined.

322. Proof of marriage or divorce.

TITLE XVIII

Miscellaneous Crimes

323. Obscene publication.

324. Hindering burials, etc.

325. Disturbing markets, etc., by false news.

326. Cruelty to animals.

327. Selling unwholesome food.

328. Noxious trades and other interferences with public rights.

Definitions and Special Provisions Relating to the Matter of this

Title

329. Interpretation.

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330. Obstruction of public way.

331. Explanation as to noxious trades.

CHAPTER 101

CRIMINAL CODE

[1st October, 1981]

PART I

General Provisions

TITLE I

Preliminary

1. This Act may be cited as the Criminal Code, and is in the body

hereof referred to as "this Code".

2.-(1) This Code shall come into operation on a day to be appointed by the

Minister by Order published in the Gazette.

(2) The Criminal Code, Chapter 21 of the Revised Laws 1958 is

repealed with effect from the day on which this Code comes into operation.

3. The following general rules shall be observed in the interpretation of

this Code, namely-

(a) All the provisions of Part I shall be applied to and be

deemed to form part of every provision of Part II, in so

far as they are applicable to the matter of that

provision, and are not expressly or by necessary

implication excluded, limited or modified, with respect

to that matter.

(b) This Code shall not be construed strictly, either as

CAP. 84,

R.E., 1980-1990.

33 of 1980.

4 of 1987.

29 of 1989.

6 of 1994.

28 of 1994.

18 of 1998.

36 of 1999.

Commencement.

S.I. 72 of 1981.

S.I. 48 of 1982.

Short title.

Commencement of

Code.

Ch. 21,

R.L., 1958.

General rules of

construction.

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against Her Majesty or as against a person accused of

any offence, but shall be construed amply and

beneficially for giving effect to the purposes thereof.

(c) In the interpretation of this Code, a court shall not be

bound by any judicial decision or opinion on the

construction of any other statute or of the common law

as to the definition of any crime or of any element of any

crime.

(d) All the provisions of Part I shall be applied to all crimes

punishable under any other statute, in so far as they are

not expressly, or by necessary implication, excluded,

limited or modified with respect to such crimes.

TITLE II

Interpretation and General Explanations

4.-(1) In this Code-

“act” means any act or any omission, or any series of acts or any series of

omissions, or any combination of acts or any combination of acts and

omissions;

“administer”, when used with reference to administering any substance to a

person, means causing the substance to be taken or introduced into any part

of a person's body, whether with or without his knowledge or consent;

“corporation” does not include a corporation sole;

“court” includes any court whether consisting of one or of several judges,

magistrates or arbitrators, and “the court” means the court before whom an

accused person is tried, or which has jurisdiction for the purposes of the

Miscellaneous

definitions.

provision in which the expression is used;

“crime” includes an offence punishable under this Code or under any other

statute;

“dangerous” means likely or calculated to cause dangerous harm;

“deadly” means likely to cause death or which causes death;

“deliver” includes causing a person to receive a thing and permitting a

person to take a thing, whether directly or by any other person;

“document” includes-

(a) any writing which, whether alone or in conjunction with

any other writing or matter, creates or assures or is

evidence of any right, obligation, liability, acquittance or

authority; or

(b) any writing made or issued by any public officer in

pursuance of any duty or authority as such officer; or

(c) any writing verified on oath or attested by a witness; or

(d) any writing which by the law for the time being in force

requires a stamp, whether or not such writing is in fact

stamped according to law;

“document of title to goods” includes any bill of lading, India warrant, dock

warrant, warehouse-keeper's certificate, warrant or order for the delivery or

transfer of any goods or valuable thing, bought or sold note, or any other

document used in the ordinary course of business as proof of the possession

or control of goods, or authorising or purporting to authorise, either by

endorsement or by delivery, the possessor of such document to transfer or

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receive any goods thereby represented or therein mentioned or referred to;

“gaoler” includes the keeper of any prison;

“judicial proceeding” includes any civil or criminal trial, and any inquiry or

investigation held by a judicial officer in pursuance of any duty or authority;

“jury” includes a judge in cases where a judge tries a case without a jury;

“magistrate” includes a justice of the peace;

“night” means the time between the hour of eight in the evening of any day

and the hour of six in the following morning;

“property” includes any description of real and personal property, money,

debts and legacies, and all deeds and instruments relating to or evidencing the

title or right to any property, or giving a right to recover or receive any money

or goods, and also includes not only such property as has been originally in

the possession or under the control of any person, but also any property into

or for which the same has been converted or exchanged, and any thing

acquired by such conversion or exchange, whether immediately or otherwise;

“send” includes causing, or attempting in any manner to cause, a thing to be

received by a person;

“trustee” means a trustee on some express trust created by some deed, will

or instrument in writing, and includes the heir or personal representative of

any such trustee, and any other person upon or to whom the duty of such

trust has devolved or come, and also an executor and administrator, and an

official receiver, assignee, liquidator or other like officer acting under any

present or future Act or other law relating to limited liability companies or

bankruptcy;

“valuable security” includes any writing entitling, or evidencing the title of, any

person to any share or interest in any public stock, annuity, fund or debt of

any country or in any stock, annuity, fund or debt of any body corporate,

company or society, whether within or without the Commonwealth, or to

any deposit in any bank, and also includes any scrip, debenture, bill, note,

warrant, order or other security for the payment of money, or any authority

or request for the payment of money or for the delivery or transfer of goods

or chattels or any accountable receipt, release or discharge or any receipt or

other instrument evidencing the payment of money, or the delivery of any

chattel personal;

“will”, when used with respect to a document, means any testamentary

document, whether the same is formal or informal, complete or incomplete.

(2) Any definition or explanation of a word shall be applied to the

derivatives or different grammatical forms of that word so far as it is

applicable thereto, and shall also be applied in construing any provision of

this Code to the matter of which that definition or explanation is relevant,

although neither that word nor any of its derivatives or different grammatical

forms occur in such provision.

Standard Tests for Questions of Criminal Liability

5.-(1) A court or jury in determining whether a person has committed an

offence which employs one of the words specified in sections 6, 7 and 8

shall use the standard tests under sections 6, 7 and 8 for which that key

word is appropriate when answering any question relating to him specified in

subsection (2), unless the provision creating the offence decides that the

test is not to be used.

(2) The questions mentioned in subsection (1) are-

(a) the question of intention;

(b) the question of knowledge;

Establishment of

standard tests for

certain questions

relating to

criminal liability.

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(c) the question of recklessness as to result; and

(d) the question of recklessness as to circumstances.

(3) In relation to any person-

“the question of intention” means the question whether he intended a

particular result of his conduct;

“the question of knowledge” means the question whether he knew of any

relevant circumstances;

“the question of recklessness as to result” means the question whether he

was reckless as to whether his conduct would have any particular result; and

“the question of recklessness as to circumstances” means the question

whether he was reckless as to whether any relevant circumstances

existed.

(4) The standard tests for the questions specified in subsection (2)

are respectively specified in sections 6, 7, 8 (1) and 8 (2).

The Standard Tests and the Keywords

6.-(1) The standard test of intention is-

Did the person whose conduct is in issue either intend to produce the

result or have no substantial doubt that his conduct would produce it?

(2) The appropriate key words are-

(a) the verb "to intend" in any of its forms; and

(b) “intent”, “intention”, “intentional” and “intentionally”.

Intention.

7.-(1) The standard test of knowledge is-

Did the person whose conduct is in issue know of the relevant

circumstances or have no substantial doubt of their existence?

(2) The appropriate key words are-

(a) the verb "to know" in any of its forms;

(b) "knowledge" and "knowingly"; and

(c) any of the words mentioned in section 6 (2) above, if

used so as to imply that the person whose conduct is in

issue cannot intend to produce a particular result unless

he knows some particular fact or facts.

8.-(1) The standard test of recklessness as to result is-

Did the person whose conduct is in issue foresee that his conduct

might produce the result and, if so, was it unreasonable for him to take the

risk of producing it?

(2) The standard test of recklessness as to circumstances is-

Did the person whose conduct is in issue realise that the

circumstances might exist and, if so, was it unreasonable for him to take the

risk of their existence?

(3) The appropriate key words are “reckless”, "recklessness”

and “recklessly”.

(4) The question whether it was unreasonable for the person to

take the risk is to be answered by an objective assessment of his conduct in

Knowledge.

Recklessness.

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the light of all relevant factors, but on the assumption that any judgment he

may have formed of the degree of risk was correct.

Proof of Intention, etc.

9. A court or jury, in determining whether a person has committed an

offence-

(a) shall not be bound in law to infer that any question

specified in the first column of the Table below is to be

answered in the affirmative by reason only of the

existence of the factor specified in the second column as

appropriate to that question, but

(b) shall treat that factor as relevant to that question, and

decide the question by reference to all the evidence,

drawing such inferences from the evidence as appear

proper in the circumstances.

TABLE

Questions Appropriate factors

1. Whether the person charged with 1. The fact that the result was a

the offence- natural and probable result of

such conduct.

(a) intended to produce a

particular result by his conduct;

(b) was reckless as to whether his

conduct would produce a

particular result;

(c) foresaw that his conduct might

Proof of

intention,

knowledge,

recklessness and

foresight.

produce a particular result.

2. Whether he knew a particular fact. 2. The presence of

circumstances leading to the

inference that a reasonable

man in his situation would

have known the fact.

3. Whether he was reckless as to 3. The presence of

whether particular circumstances circumstances leading to the

existed. inference that a reasonable

man in his situation would

have realised that the

circumstances might exist.

10. A person causes an event negligently, if he fails to a grave degree to

observe the standard of care which he ought reasonably to observe in all

the circumstances of the case.

11.-(1) If a person intentionally or negligently causes any involuntary agent

to cause an event, that person shall be deemed to have caused the event.

(2) “Involuntary agent” means any animal or other thing, and also

any person who is exempted from liability to punishment for causing the

event by reason of infancy, or insanity or otherwise, under the provisions of

Title V.

(3) If an event is caused by the acts of several persons acting

either jointly or independently, each of those persons who has intentionally

or negligently contributed to cause the event shall, subject to subsection (4),

and to the provisions of Title IV with respect to abetment, be deemed to

have caused the event, but any matter of exemption, justification,

extenuation or aggravation which exists in the case of any one of those

persons shall have effect in his case whether it exists or not in the case of

Negligence.

Causing an event.

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any of the other persons.

(4) A person shall not be convicted of having intentionally or

negligently caused an event, if, notwithstanding his act and the acts of any

person acting jointly with him, the event would not have happened but for the

existence of some state of facts or the intervention of some other event or of

some other person, the probability of the existence or intervention of which

other event or person the accused person did not take into consideration,

and had no reason to take into consideration.

(5) Subsection (4) shall not apply where a person is charged with

having caused an event by an omission to perform a duty for averting the

event.

(6) If a person beyond the jurisdiction of the courts causes any

involuntary agent to cause an event within the jurisdiction, he shall be deemed

to have caused the event within the jurisdiction.

(7) Subject to the provisions of this section, and to the special

provisions of any particular Title of this Code, it is a question of fact whether

an event is fairly and reasonably to be ascribed to a person's act as having

been caused thereby.

(8) A person shall not, by reason of anything in this section, be

relieved from any liability in respect of-

(a) an attempt to cause an event;

(b) negligent conduct, if such negligent conduct is punishable

under this Code irrespectively of whether it actually

causes any event.

(9) If a person intending to cause an event with respect to one or

some of several persons or things, or to such indeterminate person or things

as may happen to be affected by his act, cause such event with respect to

any such person or thing, he shall be liable in the same manner as if he had

intended to cause the event with respect to that person or thing.

(10) If a person does an act with intent to assault, harm, kill or

cause any other event to a particular person and his act happen to take

effect, whether completely or incompletely, against a different person, he

shall be liable to be tried and punished as if his intent had been directed

against that different person, but any ground of defence or extenuation shall

be admissible on behalf of the accused person which would have been

admissible if his act had taken effect against the person or in respect of the

thing against whom or in respect of which he intended it to take effect.

12. In construing any provision of this Code by which it is required for a

criminal act or criminal intent that an act should be done or intended to be

done without a person's consent, or by which it is required for a matter of

justification or exemption that an act should be done with a person’s

consent, the following rules should be observed, namely-

(a) A consent shall be void if the person giving it be under

nine years of age, or be by reason of insanity or of

immaturity, or any other permanent or temporary

incapacity, whether from intoxication or any other

cause, unable to understand the nature or consequence

of the act to which he consents.

(b) In the case of an indecent assault upon a female a

consent shall be void if the person giving it be under

fourteen years of age without prejudice to any other

grounds set out in this section.

(c) A consent shall be void if it be obtained by means of

deceit or of duress.

Consent.

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(d) A consent shall be void if it be obtained by the undue

exercise of any official, parental or other authority, and

any such authority which is exercised otherwise than in

good faith for the purposes for which it is allowed by

law shall be deemed to be unduly exercised.

(e) A consent given on behalf of a person by his parent,

guardian, or any other person authorised by law to give

or refuse consent on his behalf shall be void if it be given

otherwise than in good faith for the benefit of the person

on whose behalf it is given.

(f) A consent shall be of no effect if it be given by reason of

a mistake of fact.

(g) A consent shall be deemed to have been obtained by

means of deceit or of duress or of the undue exercise of

authority, or to have been given by reason of a mistake

of fact, if it would have been refused but for such deceit,

exercise of authority or mistake, as the case may be.

(h) For the purposes of this section, exercise of authority is

not limited to exercise of authority by way of command,

but includes influence or advice purporting to be used or

given by virtue of an authority:

Provided that no person shall be prejudiced by the invalidity of any

consent if he did not know and could not by the exercise of reasonable

diligence have known of such invalidity.

13. For the purposes of any provision of this Code by which any forgery,

falsification or other unlawful act is punishable if used or done with intent to

defraud, an intent to defraud means an intent to cause, by means of such

forgery, falsification or other unlawful act, any gain capable of being

Fraud.

measured in money, or the possibility of any such gain, to any person at the

expense or to the loss of any other person.

14.-(1) In this Code "threat" means-

(a) any threat of criminal force or harm; or

(b) any threat of criminal injury to property; or

(c) any threat of libel or of slander, or

(d) any threat that a person shall be prosecuted on a

charge of having committed any crime or offence,

whether such alleged crime or offence is punishable

under this Code or under any other law, and whether it

has or has not been committed.

(2) Any expression in this Code referring to a threat shall also be

deemed to include any offer to abstain from doing, or so procure any other

person to abstain from doing, anything the threat of which is a threat of any

of the kinds in this section beforementioned.

(3) It is immaterial whether a threat be that the matter thereof

shall be executed by the person using the threat, or against or in relation to

the person to whom the threat is used, or by or against or in relation to any

other person.

(4) It is immaterial whether a threat or offer be conveyed to any

person by words or by writing, or in any other manner, and whether it be

conveyed directly or through any other person or in any other manner.

15. “Duress” means any force, harm, constraint or threat, used with

intent to cause a person against his will to do or to abstain from doing any

act.

Threats.

Duress.

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16. “Person” includes a company or corporation, and any number or

association of persons, and for the purposes of any provision of this Code

relating to defrauding a person or to committing any crime against the

property of any person, the Government of Belize or of any other place or

State shall be deemed to be a person.

17. Where in this Code or any other law, provision is made for the

imposition of imprisonment for any offence, such imprisonment may be

imposed with or without labour at the discretion of the court.

TITLE III

Attempts to Commit Crimes

18.-(1) A person who attempts to commit a crime by any means shall not be

acquitted on the ground that by reason of the imperfection or other condition

of the means, or by reason of any circumstances under which they are used,

or by reason of any circumstances effecting the person against whom or the

thing in respect of which the crime is intended to be committed, or by reason

of the absence of such person or thing, the crime could not be committed

according to his intent.

(2) Every person who attempts to commit a crime shall, if the

attempt be frustrated by reason only of accident or of circumstances or

events independent of his will, be deemed guilty of an attempt in the first

degree, and shall (except as in this Code otherwise expressly provided) be

punishable in the same manner as if the crime had been completed.

(3) Every person who is guilty of an attempt other than an attempt

in the first degree shall (except as in this Code otherwise expressly provided)

be liable to any kind of punishment to which he would have been liable if the

crime had been completed, but the court shall mitigate the punishment

according to the circumstances of the case.

Definition of

“person”.

Imprisonment

with or without

labour.

36 of 1999.

Attempts.

(4) Where any act amounts to a complete crime, as defined by

any provision of this Code, and is also an attempt to commit some other

crime, a person who is guilty of it shall be liable to be convicted and

punished either under such provision or under this section.

(5) Any provision of this Code with respect to intent, exemption,

justification or extenuation, or any other matter in the case of any act, shall

apply, with the necessary modifications, to the case of an attempt to do that

act.

(6) Every person who attempts to commit a crime shall be

punishable on indictment or summary conviction, according as he would be

punishable for committing that crime.

19. Every person who prepares or supplies, or has in his possession,

custody or control, or in the possession, custody or control of any other

person on his behalf, any instruments, materials or means, with a purpose

that such instruments, materials or means may be used by him or by any

other person in committing any crime by which life is likely to be

endangered, or any forgery, or any crime relating to coin, or any felony

punishable with imprisonment for ten years or upwards, shall be liable to

punishment in like manner as if he had attempted to commit that crime, and

any such instruments, materials or means shall be forfeited and applied as

the law directs.

TITLE IV

Abetment and Conspiracy

20.-(1) Every person who-

(a) directly or indirectly instigates, commands, counsels,

procures, solicits or in any manner purposely aids,

facilitates, encourages or promotes the commission of

Preparation for

crime.

Abetment of

crimes.

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any crime, whether by his act, presence or otherwise; or

(b) does any act for the purpose of aiding, facilitating,

encouraging or promoting the commission of a crime by

any other person, whether known or unknown, certain

or uncertain,

shall be guilty of abetting that crime and of abetting the other person in respect

of that crime.

(2) Every person who abets a crime shall, if the crime be actually

committed in pursuance or during the continuance of the abetment, be

deemed guilty of that crime.

(3) Every person who abets a crime shall, if the crime be not

actually committed, be punishable as follows, that is to say-

(a) If the commission of the crime be prevented by reason

only of accident, or of circumstances or events

independent of the will of the abettor, the abettor shall,

where the crime abetted was murder, be liable to

imprisonment for life, or shall where the crime abetted

was any crime other than murder, be punishable in the

same manner as if the crime had been actually

committed in pursuance of the abetment.

(b) In any other case the abettor shall, if the crime which he

abetted was a felony, be deemed guilty of a felony, or

shall, if such a crime was a misdemeanour, be deemed

guilty of a misdemeanour.

(4) Every person who abets a crime shall be punishable on

indictment or summary conviction, according as he would be punishable for

committing that crime.

(5) An abettor may be tried before, with or after a person

abetted, and although the person abetted be dead, or be otherwise not

amenable to justice.

(6) An abettor may be tried before, with or after any other

abettor, whether he and such other abettor abetted each other in respect of

the crime or not, and whether they abetted the same or different parts of the

crime.

(7) An abettor shall have the benefit of any matter of exemption,

justification, or extenuation to which he is entitled under this Code,

notwithstanding that the person abetted or any other abettor is not entitled

to the like benefit.

(8) Every person who within the jurisdiction of the court abets

the doing beyond the jurisdiction of an act which if done within the

jurisdiction would be a crime, shall be punishable as if he had abetted that

crime.

21.-(1) Where a person abets a particular crime, or abets a crime against

or in respect of a particular person or thing, and the person abetted actually

commits a different crime, or commits the crime against or in respect of a

different person or thing, or in a manner different from that which was

intended by the abettor, the following provisions shall have effect, namely-

(a) If it appears that the crime actually committed was not

a probable consequence of the endeavour to commit,

nor was substantially the same as the crime which the

abettor intended to abet, nor within the scope of the

abetment, the abettor shall be punishable for his

abetment of the crime which he intended to abet in the

manner provided by this Title for the punishment of

crimes which are not actually committed.

One crime

abetted, another

committed.

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(b) In any other case the abettor shall be deemed to have

abetted the crime which was actually committed, and

shall be liable to punishment accordingly.

(2) If a person abets a riot, or unlawful assembly with the

knowledge that unlawful violence is intended, or is likely to be used, he is

guilty of abetting violence of any kind or degree which is committed by any

other person in executing the purposes of the riot or assembly, although he

did not expressly intend to abet violence of that kind or degree.

22. Every person who, knowing that a person designs to commit or is

committing a felony, fails to use all reasonable means to prevent the

commission or completion thereof, is guilty of a misdemeanour.

23.-(1) If two or more persons agree to commit or abet a crime, or act

together with a common purpose in committing or abetting a crime, whether

with or without any previous concert or deliberation, each of them is guilty of

conspiracy to commit or abet that crime, as the case may be.

(2) If a person abets the commission of a crime by another person,

and such other person in any manner assent to the abetment, each of them is

guilty of conspiracy to commit such crime, although it be not a part of the

design of either of them that the person abetting the other should take any

part in or towards the preparing for or committing such crime.

(3) A person within the jurisdiction of the courts can be guilty of

conspiracy by agreeing with another person who is beyond the jurisdiction

for the commission or abetment of any crime to be committed by them or

either of them, or any other person, either within or beyond the jurisdiction,

and for the purposes of this subsection as to a crime to be committed beyond

the jurisdiction, “crime” means any act which if done within the jurisdiction

would be a crime under this Code or under any other law.

(4) A person shall not be guilty of conspiracy to commit or abet

Duty to prevent

felony.

Conspiracy.

any crime if he is an intended victim of that crime.

(5) A person shall not be guilty of conspiracy to commit or abet

any crime or crimes if the only other person or persons with whom he

agrees are (both initially and at all times during the currency of the

agreement) persons of any one or more of the following descriptions, that is

to say-

(a) his spouse,

(b) a person exempted from criminal liability under section

25 (1),

(c) an intended victim of that crime or each of those

crimes.

24.-(1) If two or more persons are guilty of conspiracy for the commission

or abetment of any crime, each of them shall in case the crime be

committed, be punished as for that crime according to the provisions of this

Code, or shall in case the crime be not committed, be punished as if he had

abetted that crime.

(2) Any court having jurisdiction to try a person for a crime shall

have jurisdiction to try a person or persons charged with conspiracy to

commit or abet that crime.

TITLE V

General Exemption From Criminal Liability

25.-(1) Nothing is a crime which is done by a person under nine years of

age.

(2) Nothing is a crime which is done by a person of nine and

Punishment for

conspiracy.

Infancy.

36 of 1999.

36 of 1999.

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under twelve years of age who has not attained sufficient maturity of

understanding to judge of the nature and consequences of his conduct in the

matter in respect of which he is accused.

26. A person accused of crime shall be deemed to have been insane at

the time he committed the act in respect of which he is accused-

(a) if he was prevented by reason of idiocy, imbecility or

any mental derangement or disease affecting the mind,

from knowing the nature or consequences of the act in

respect of which he is accused;

(b) if he did the act in respect of which he is accused under

the influence of a delusion of such a nature as to render

him, in the opinion of the jury, an unfit subject for

punishment of any kind in respect of such act.

27.-(1) Except as provided in this section, intoxication shall not constitute a

defence to any criminal charge.

(2) (a) Intoxication shall be a defence to any criminal charge, if the

person charged was by reason of intoxication, insane as defined in section

26, at the time he committed the act in respect of which he is accused.

(b) Where the defence under subparagraph (a) is established,

the provisions of sections 127 and 128 of the Indictable Procedure Act shall

apply, unless the state of intoxication rendering the person insane was caused

without his consent by the malicious or negligent act of another person, in

which case the accused person shall be discharged with a verdict of acquittal.

(3) Intoxication shall be taken into account for the purpose of

determining whether the person charged had formed any intention, specific or

otherwise, in the absence of which he would not be guilty of the offence,

provided the state of intoxication was caused without his consent by the

Insanity.

Intoxication.

CAP. 96.

malicious or negligent act of another person.

(4) Voluntary intoxication shall be taken into account for the

purpose of determining whether the person charged had formed any specific

intention in cases where a specific intent is an essential element in the offence

charged.

(5) For the purposes of this section "intoxication" shall be

deemed to include a state produced by narcotics or drugs.

28.-(1) A person shall not be punished for an act which by reason of

ignorance or mistake of fact in good faith he believes to be lawful.

(2) A person shall not, except as in this Code otherwise

expressly provided, be exempt from liability to punishment for any act on

the ground of ignorance that such act is prohibited by law.

29. Any presumption of law that a crime committed by a wife in the

presence of her husband is committed under the coercion of the husband is

hereby abolished.

TITLE VI

Justifiable Force and Harm

30.-(1) For the purposes of this Code, force or harm is justifiable and shall

constitute a defence to any criminal charge when such force or harm is used

or caused in pursuance of such matter of justification, and within such limits

as hereinafter in this Title mentioned.

(2) Throughout the remainder of this Title expressions applying to

the use of force apply also to the causing of harm, although force only be

expressly mentioned.

Ignorance or

mistake of fact or

of law.

Abolition of

presumption of

marital coercion.

Justification for

force or harm.

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31. Force may be justified in the cases and manner, and subject to the

conditions hereinafter in this Title mentioned, on the ground of either of the

following matters, namely-

(a) express authority given by a statute;

(b) authority to execute the lawful sentence or order of a

court;

(c) the authority of an officer to keep the peace, or of a

court to preserve order;

(d) authority to arrest and detain for felony;

(e) authority to arrest, search or detain a person otherwise

than for felony;

(f) necessity for prevention of or defence against crime;

(g) necessity for defence of property or possession, or for

overcoming obstruction to the exercise of lawful rights;

(h) necessity for preserving order on board a vessel;

(i) authority to correct a child, servant or other similar

person, for misconduct;

(j) the consent of the person against whom the force is

used.

32. Notwithstanding the existence of any matter of justification for force,

force cannot be justified as having been used in pursuance of that matter-

(a) which is in excess of the limits hereafter prescribed in the

Grounds on

which force or

harm may be

justified.

General limits of

justifiable force

or harm.

section of this Title relating to that matter; or

(b) which in any case extends beyond the amount and kind

of force reasonably necessary for the purpose for

which force is permitted to be used.

33. Every person who is authorised by the provisions of statute “to use

force” may justify the use of necessary force according to the terms and

conditions of his authority.

34. Every person who is authorised to execute any lawful sentence or

order of a court "may justify the force" mentioned in the sentence or order.

35. Every person who is authorised as a peace officer, or in any judicial

or official capacity, to keep the peace or preserve order at any place, or to

remove or exclude a person from any place, or to use force for any similar

purpose, may justify the execution of his authority by any necessary force,

not extending to a blow, wound or grievous harm.

36.-(1) For the prevention of or for the defence of himself or of any other

person against crime, a person may justify the use of necessary force not

extending to a blow, wound or grievous harm.

(2) For the prevention of or for the defence of himself or of any

other person against any criminal force or harm, a person may justify the use

of necessary force not extending to a wound or grievous harm.

(3) For the prevention of or for the defence of himself or of any

other person against any felony, a person may justify the use of necessary

force not extending to dangerous harm.

(4) For the prevention of or for the defence of himself or of any

other person against any of the following crimes, a person may justify the

use of necessary force or harm, extending in case of extreme necessity even

Authority by

statue.

Execution of a

sentence or order

of a court.

Authority to keep

the peace or to

preserve order.

Prevention of or

defence against

crime.

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to killing, namely

(a) Treason

(b) Piracy

(c) Murder

(d) Manslaughter, except manslaughter by negligence

(e) Robbery

(f) Burglary

(g) Aggravated burglary

(h) Arson of a dwelling-house or vessel

(i) Rape

(j) Forcible unnatural crime

(k) Dangerous or grievous harm.

(5) For the suppression or dispersion of a riotous or unlawful

assembly, force may be justified in the cases and subject to the conditions

specified in this Code with respect to such assemblies.

(6) No force used in an unlawful fight can be justified under any

provision of this Code, and every fight is an unlawful fight in which a person

engages, or which he maintains, otherwise than solely in pursuance of some

of the matters of justification specified in this Title.

(7) Where a person is alleged to have killed another person and

the accused person claims that he did so for the prevention of or for the

defence of himself or of any other person against any of the crimes specified

in subsection (4) of this section, no charge shall be laid or prosecution

commenced against such person for the offence of murder except with the

leave of the Director of Public Prosecutions given in writing.

(8) In considering whether or not to grant leave for the purpose

of subsection (7) above, the Director of Public Prosecutions shall have

regard to all the relevant circumstances including the prevalence of the crime

in respect of which the force was allegedly used and the danger

apprehended by the person using the force.

37. A person may justify the use of force for the defence of property or

possession, or for overcoming an obstruction to the exercise of any legal

right, as follows-

(a) A person in actual possession of a vessel, house, land

or goods, or his servant, or any other person

authorised by him may use such force, not extending to

a wound or grievous harm, as is necessary for repelling

a person who attempts forcibly and unlawfully to enter

such vessel, house or land, or to take possession of

such goods.

(b) A person in actual possession of a house, land or

vessel, or his servant, or any other person authorised

by him, may use such force, not extending to a blow,

wound or grievous harm, as is necessary for removing a

person who being in or on such house, or land or

vessel, and having been lawfully required to depart

therefrom, refuses to depart.

(c) If a person wrongfully takes possession of or detains

28 of 1994.

Defence of

property,

possession or

overcoming

obstruction of

legal right.

28 of 1994.

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goods, any other person who as against him has a present

right to the possession of them may, upon his refusal to

deliver up the goods on demand, use such force, by himself

or by any other person, not extending to a blow, wound or

grievous harm, as is necessary for recovering possession of the

goods.

(d) A person may use such force not amounting to a blow,

wound or grievous harm, as is necessary for overcoming

any obstruction or resistance to the exercise by him of any

legal right.

38. The master of a vessel, or any person acting by his order, may justify

the use of any such force against any person on board the vessel as is

necessary for suppressing any mutiny or disorder on board the vessel,

whether among officers, seamen or passengers, whereby the safety of the

vessel, or of any person therein or about to enter or quitting the same, is

likely to be endangered, or the master is threatened to be subjected to the

commands of any other person, and may kill any person who is guilty of or

abets such mutiny or disorder, if the safety of the vessel or the preservation of

any person as aforesaid cannot by any means be otherwise secured.

39.-(1) A blow or other force not in any case extending to a wound or

grievous harm may be justified for the purpose of correction, as follows-

(a) A parent may correct his child being under sixteen years of

age, or any guardian or person acting as a guardian may

correct his ward being under sixteen years of age, for

misconduct, or for disobedience to any lawful command.

(b) A parent or guardian, or person acting as a guardian

may delegate to any person whom he entrusts

permanently or temporarily with the governance or

custody of his child or ward all his own authority for

Preserving order

on board vessel.

Authority to

correct child, or

other similar

person.

correction, including the power to determine in what

cases correction ought to be inflicted, and such

delegation shall be presumed, except in so far as it is

expressly withheld, in the case of a schoolmaster or

person acting as a schoolmaster in respect of a child or

ward.

(2) A person who is authorised to inflict correction as in this

section mentioned may, in any particular case, delegate to any fit person the

infliction of such correction.

(3) No correction can be justified which is unreasonable in kind

or in degree regard being had to the age and physical and mental condition

of the person on whom it is inflicted, and no correction can be justified in the

case of a person who, by reason of tender years or otherwise, is incapable

of understanding the purpose for which it is inflicted.

40. The use of force against a person may be justified on the ground of

his consent, subject as follows-

(a) The killing of a person cannot be justified on the ground

of consent.

(b) A wound or grievous harm cannot be justified on the

ground of consent, unless the consent is given and the

wound or harm is caused in good faith for the purposes

or in the course of medical or surgical treatment.

(c) A party to a fight, whether lawful or unlawful, cannot

justify on the ground of the consent of another party

any force which he uses with intent to cause harm to

the other party.

(d) A person may revoke any consent which he has given

Consent to the

use of force.

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to the use of force against him, and his consent when so

revoked shall have no effect for justifying force.

(e) Consent to the use of force for the purposes of medical

or surgical treatment does not extend to any improper or

negligent treatment.

(f) Consent to the use of force against a person for

purposes of medical or surgical treatment, or otherwise

for his benefit, may be given against his will by his father

or guardian, or a person acting as his guardian, if he is

under eighteen years of age, or by any person lawfully

having the custody of him if he is insane, or is a prisoner

in any prison or reformatory, and when so given on his

behalf cannot be revoked by him.

(g) If a person is intoxicated or insensible, or is from any cause

unable to give or withhold consent, any force is justifiable

which is used in good faith and without negligence for the

purpose of medical or surgical treatment, or otherwise for

his benefit, unless some person authorised by him or by law

to give or refuse consent on his behalf dissents from the use

of such force.

41. Every person who, in justifiably using force against a person, is

obstructed or resisted by a third person, may in any case use such force

against the third person not extending to a blow, wound or grievous harm, as

is necessary for overcoming the obstruction or resistance, and may, if the

obstruction or resistance amounts to a crime or to abetment of a crime, use

force in accordance with the provisions of this Title with respect to the use of

force in case of necessity for preventing crime.

42. Every person who is authorised to use force of a particular kind

against a person may further use such additional force, not extending to a

Interference by

third persons.

Additional force

and harm.

blow, wound or grievous harm, as is necessary for the execution of his

authority.

43. Every person who aids another person in a justifiable use of force is

justified to the same extent and under the same conditions as the other

person.

PART II

Particular Crimes

TITLE VII

Criminal Force to the Person

1. Assaults

44. Every person who unlawfully commits a common assault upon any

other person shall be guilty of a misdemeanour.

45. Every person who commits an unlawful assault of any of the

following kinds, namely-

(a) assault upon a person acting as a judicial officer or as a

peace officer; or

(b) assault upon a minister of religion acting in the

execution of the duties of his office; or

(c) assault upon a person in any court of justice, or assault

upon a person in order to prevent him from doing, or

on account of his doing or having done, anything as a

party, agent, counsel, or witness, in any judicial

proceeding; or

Aid of other

persons.

Common assault.

Aggravated

assault.

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(d) assault with a purpose to commit, or in committing or

attempting to commit, any other crime; or

(e) assault with any deadly or dangerous instrument or

means; or

(f) indecent assault on any person, whether male or female;

or

(g) assault upon any male child or any female of such a

nature that it cannot in the opinion of the court be

adequately punished under section 44,

shall be guilty of an aggravated assault and, on conviction thereof, be liable

to imprisonment for two years:

Provided that in respect of an indecent assault upon a female or an

aggravated assault upon any male child or any female, a person convicted

under this section shall be liable to imprisonment for three years instead of

two years.

2. Rape and Like Crimes

46. Every person who commits rape or marital rape shall on conviction

on indictment be imprisoned for a term which shall not be less than eight

years but which may extend to imprisonment for life.

47.-(1) Every person who carnally knows a female child under the age of

fourteen years, with or without her consent, shall on conviction on indictment

be imprisoned for a term which shall not be less than twelve years but which

may extend to imprisonment for life.

(2) Every person who-

Rape.

36 of 1999.

Carnal

knowledge of

child, girl under

sixteen years and

female idiot, etc.

36 of 1999.

(a) unlawfully and carnally knows any girl who is of or

above the age of fourteen years but under the age of

sixteen years; or

(b) unlawfully and carnally knows any female idiot or

imbecile woman or girl, under circumstances which do

not amount to rape, but which prove that the offender

knew at the time of the commission of the crime that

the woman or girl was an idiot or imbecile,

shall be guilty of an offence and on conviction thereof be imprisoned for a

term which shall not be less than five years nor more than ten years:

Provided that with regard to paragraph (a) of this subsection-

(i) in the case of an accused person charged with a

crime under that paragraph who is under the

age of eighteen years, the presence of

reasonable cause to believe that the girl was

over the age of sixteen years shall be a valid

defence on the first occasion on which such

accused person is charged with a crime under

that paragraph;

(ii) in the case of an accused person charged with a

crime under that paragraph who is of the age of

eighteen years or over, the presence of

reasonable cause to believe that the girl was

over the age of sixteen years shall be a

mitigating circumstance for the purpose of

sentence on the first occasion on which such

accused person is charged with a crime under

that paragraph, and in any such case the

mandatory minimum sentence of five years

36 of 1999.

36 of 1999.

36 of 1999.

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prescribed above shall not apply.

(iii) no prosecution shall be commenced more than

twelve months after the commission of the crime.

(3) Where a marriage is void in consequence of one of the parties

thereto being under the age of fourteen years, a person charged with a crime

under this section, or with indecent assault upon a girl with whom he went

through the ceremony of marriage, may exonerate himself if he proves that, at

the time when the crime is alleged to have been committed, he had

reasonable cause to believe that the girl in respect of whom it is alleged to

have been committed was his wife.

*48. If, after the commencement of this Act, a person is found guilty of the

offence of rape, or of the offence of carnal knowledge of a female child

under the age of fourteen years, or of the said offences combined together,

on more than two occasions, he shall, notwithstanding anything contained in

this Code or any law to the contrary, be sentenced to a mandatory term of

life imprisonment.

49. Every person who procures or attempts to procure-

(a) any female under eighteen years of age, not being a

common prostitute or of known immoral character, to

have unlawful carnal knowledge either within or without

Belize with any other person or persons; or

(b) any female to become, either within or without Belize, a

common prostitute; or

* Section 48 was added by Act 36 of 1999 and came into force on 24th September, 1999.

Mandatory life

sentence for

habitual sex

offenders.

36 of 1999.

Procuration.

(c) any female to leave Belize, with intent that she may

become an inmate of or frequent a brothel; or

(d) either within or without Belize, any female to leave her

usual place of abode in Belize (such place not being a

brothel), with intent that she may, for the purposes of

prostitution, become an inmate of or frequent a brothel

either within or without Belize,

shall be liable to imprisonment for five years.

50. Every person who-

(a) by threats or intimidation or any other method of

compulsion, procures or attempts to procure any

female to have any unlawful carnal knowledge, either

within or without Belize; or

(b) by false pretence or false representation, procures any

female, not being a common prostitute or of known

immoral character, to have any unlawful carnal

knowledge, either within or without Belize; or

(c) applies, administers to, or causes to be taken by, any

female any drug, matter or thing, with intent to stupefy

or overpower her so as thereby to enable any person

to have unlawful carnal knowledge with such female,

shall be liable to imprisonment for three years.

51. Every person who, being the owner or occupier of any premises, or

having, or acting in, or assisting in, the management or control thereof,

induces or knowingly suffers any female of such age as is in this section

mentioned to resort to be in or upon such premises for the purpose of being

Procuring

defilement of

female by threats

or fraud or

administration of

drugs.

Householder

permitting

defilement of

young females on

his premises.

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unlawfully and carnally known by any man, whether such carnal knowledge is

intended to be with any particular man or generally, shall-

(a) if such female is under the age of twelve years, be guilty

of felony, and being convicted thereof be liable to

imprisonment for life; and

(b) if such female is of or above the age of twelve and under

the age of sixteen years, be liable to imprisonment for

two years.

52. Nothing in sections 47 to 51 shall exempt a person from any liability

to punishment for rape or for attempt to commit rape.

53. Every person who has carnal intercourse against the order of nature

with any person or animal shall be liable to imprisonment for ten years.

3. Kidnapping, Abduction, Forced Marriage, Abandonment and

Incest

54. Every person who kidnaps any person shall on conviction on

indictment be imprisoned for a term which shall not be less than ten years but

which may extend to imprisonment for life.

55. Every person who steals any person under twelve years of age,

whether with or without his consent, shall be liable to imprisonment for ten

years.

56. Every person who is guilty of an abduction of an unmarried female

under eighteen years of age shall be liable to imprisonment for two years.

57. Every person who takes away or detains against her will a female of

any age with intent to marry or carnally know her, or to cause her to be

married or carnally known by any other person, shall be liable to

imprisonment for thirteen years.

Saving as to

rape.

Unnatural crime.

Kidnapping.

4 of 1987.

Child stealing.

Abduction.

Forcible

abduction.

58. Every person who by force or duress causes any person to marry

against his will shall be liable to imprisonment for two years.

59. Every person who, knowing that any of the crimes mentioned in

sections 54 to 58 has been committed in the case of any person, abets the

unlawful detention of such person, or otherwise abets the execution of the

intent with which that crime was committed, shall be deemed guilty of that

crime.

60. Every person who, being bound by law or by virtue of any

agreement or employment to keep charge of or maintain any child under five

years of age, or being unlawfully in possession of any such child, abandons

such child by leaving it at a hospital or workhouse, or at the house of any

person, or in any other manner, shall be liable to imprisonment for two

years.

61. The expressions “brother” and “sister” in sections 62 and 63,

respectively, include half-brother and half-sister, and sections 62 to 64 shall

apply, whether the relationship between the person charged with an offence

is alleged to have been committed is or is not traced through lawful

wedlock.

62.-(1) Any male who carnally knows a female, who is to his knowledge

his granddaughter, daughter, sister or mother, shall on conviction thereof be

liable to imprisonment for seven years:

Provided that if, on an information for that offence, it is alleged in the

information and proved that the female is under the age of twelve years, the

same punishment may be imposed as may be imposed under section 47 for

carnally knowing a female under twelve years of age.

(2) It is immaterial that the carnal knowledge was had with the

consent of the female.

Compulsion of

marriage.

Special provision

as to abetment.

Abandonment of

infant.

Test of

relationship when

incest charged.

Incest by males.

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(3) If any male attempts to commit the offence as aforesaid, he

shall be guilty of a misdemeanour and on conviction thereof be liable to

imprisonment for two years.

(4) On the conviction before any court of any male of an offence

under this section against any female under eighteen years of age, the court

may divest the offender of all authority over that female, and if the offender is

her guardian, remove him from the guardianship and appoint any person or

persons to be her guardian or guardians during her minority or any less

period:

Provided that the court may at any time vary or rescind the order by

the appointment of any other person as the guardian or in any other respect.

63. Any female of or above the age of sixteen years who with consent

permits her grandfather, father, brother or son to have carnal knowledge of

her (knowing him to be her grandfather, father, brother or son, as the case

may be) shall on conviction thereof be liable to imprisonment for seven years.

64.-(1) All proceedings under sections 62 and 63 are to be held in camera

if the court so orders.

(2) No prosecution for any offence under sections 62 and 63 shall

be commenced without the written authority of the Director of Public

Prosecutions.

65.-(1) Where a person is convicted on more than one occasion of a sexual

offence as defined in subsection (2) below, the court shall, in addition to the

penalties prescribed for such offence, order that such person -

(a) undergo mandatory counselling and receive such

medical or psychiatric treatment as the court may

consider appropriate having regard to the facts

of the case; and

Incest by

females of or

over sixteen.

Prosecutions for

incest.

Special

provisions for

treatment and

reporting of sex

offenders.

36 of 1999.

(b) shall not change his residence without prior notification

to the Commissioner of Police and to the Director of

Human Development in the Ministry responsible for

Human Development, Women and Youth, and shall

comply with such other requirements as the

Commissioner of Police may specify for the protection

of the public.

(2) In this section, “sexual offence” means rape, attempted rape,

marital rape, carnal knowledge, forcible abduction, unnatural offence, incest

or indecent assault.

(3) Every person who contravenes or fails to comply with an

order made under subsection (1) above shall be guilty of an offence and

shall be liable on summary conviction to imprisonment for a term not

exceeding one thousand dollars, or to both such fine and imprisonment.

(4) It shall be the duty of the Superintendent of Prisons to notify

the Commissioner of Police and the Director of Human Development as

soon as the person referred to in subsection (1) above is released from the

Prison after serving sentence for a sexual offence.

Definitions and Special Provisions Relating to the Matter of this

Title

1. Assault and battery, imprisonment

66.-(1) “Assault” includes-

(a) assault and battery;

(b) assault without actual battery;

(c) imprisonment.

Kinds of assault.

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(2) Every assault is unlawful unless it is justified on one of the

grounds mentioned in Title VI.

67.-(1) A person makes an assault and battery upon another person if,

without the other person’s consent, and with the intention of causing harm,

pain, fear or annoyance to the other person, or of exciting him to anger, he

forcibly touch the other person, or cause any person, animal or matter, to

forcibly touch him.

(2) This definition is subject to the following provisions-

(a) Where the consent of the other person to be forcibly

touched has been obtained by deceit, it suffices with

respect to intention that the touch is intended to be such

as to cause harm or pain, or is intended to be such as

but for the consent obtained by the deceit would have

been likely to cause fear or annoyance, or to excite

anger.

(b) Where the other person is insensible or unconscious or

insane, or is by reason of infancy, or of any other

circumstance, unable to give or refuse consent, it suffices

with respect to intention, either that the touch is intended

to cause harm, pain, fear or annoyance to him, or that

the touch is intended to be such as would be likely to

cause harm, pain, fear or annoyance to him, or to excite

his anger, if he were able to give or refuse consent, and

were not consenting.

(c) The slightest actual touch suffices for an assault and a

battery if the intention is such as is required by this

section.

Definition of

assault.

(d) A person is touched within the meaning of this section if

his body be touched, or if any clothes or other thing in

contact with his body or with the clothes upon his body

is touched, although his body is not actually touched.

(e) For the purpose of this section, with respect to

intention to cause harm, pain or annoyance, it is

immaterial whether the intention be to cause the harm,

pain, fear, or annoyance, by the force or manner of the

touch itself, or to forcibly expose him, or cause him to

be exposed to harm, pain, fear or annoyance, from any

other cause.

68.-(1) A person makes an assault without actual battery on another person

if, by any act apparently done in commencement of an assault and battery,

he intentionally put the other person in fear of an instant assault and battery.

(2) The definition is subject to the following provisions, namely-

(a) It is not necessary that an actual assault and battery

should be intended, or that the instruments or means by

which the assault and battery is apparently intended to

be made should be, or should by the person using them

be believed to be, of such a kind or in such a condition

as that an assault and battery could be made by means

of them.

(b) A person can make an assault within the meaning of this

section by moving, or causing any person, animal or

matter, to move towards another person, although he,

or such person, animal or matter be not yet within such

a distance from the other person as that an assault and

battery can be made.

Assault without

actual battery.

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(c) An assault can be made on a person within the meaning

of this section although he can avoid actual assault and

battery by retreating or by consenting to do, or to

abstain from doing, any act.

69.-(1) A person imprisons another person if intentionally and without the

other person’s consent he detains the other person in a particular place, of

whatever extent or character, and whether enclosed or not, or compel him to

move or be carried in any particular direction.

(2) Detention or compulsion may be constituted within the

meaning of this section-

(a) by force, or by any physical obstruction to a person's

escape; or

(b) by causing him to believe that he cannot depart from a

place or refuse to move or be carried in a particular

direction without overcoming force or incurring danger

of harm, pain or annoyance; or

(c) by causing him to believe that he is under legal arrest; or

(d) by causing him to believe that he will immediately be

imprisoned if he does not consent to do or abstain from

doing any act.

70. A common assault is an assault not attended with circumstances of

aggravation or intent to commit any other crime.

2. Rape and like crimes-Definitions

71.-(1) Rape is the carnal knowledge of a female of any age without her

consent.

Unlawful

imprisonment.

Definition of

common assault.

Rape defined.

(2) It is hereby declared that if at a trial for rape the jury has to

consider whether a man believed that a woman was consenting to carnal

knowledge the presence or absence of reasonable grounds for such a belief

is a matter to which the jury is to have regard, in conjunction with any other

relevant matters, in considering whether he so believed.

72.-(1) A male spouse commits marital rape against the female spouse if the

first mentioned spouse has sexual intercourse with the other spouse in any of

the circumstances specified in subsection (2):-

(a) without the consent of the female spouse; and

(b) knowing that the female spouse does not consent to

sexual intercourse, or recklessly not caring whether the

female spouse consents or not.

(2) The circumstances referred to in subsection (1) are as

follows:-

(a) the spouses have separated and thereafter have lived

separately and apart within the meaning of the Married

Persons (Protection) Act;

(b) there is in existence a separation agreement in writing

between the spouses;

(c) proceedings for the dissolution of the marriage or for a

decree of nullity of marriage have been instituted;

(d) there has been made or granted against one of the

spouses an order or injunction, as the case may be, for

non-cohabitation, non-molestation, ouster from the

matrimonial home or the personal protection of the

Marital rape

defined.

36 of 1999.

CAP. 175.

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other spouse;

(e) one of the spouses has given an undertaking with regard

to the matters specified in paragraph (d);

(f) the act of sexual intercourse is preceded or

accompanied by or associated with, assault and battery,

harm or injury to the female spouse.

(3) In this section, “spouse” means a party to marriage and does

not include a party to a ‘common law union’.

(4) No prosecution shall be brought for the offence of marital rape

except with the consent of the Director of Public Prosecutions.

73. Whenever, upon the trial for any crime punishable under this Code, it

is necessary to prove carnal knowledge, the carnal knowledge shall be

deemed complete upon proof of any or the least degree of penetration only.

74. If a female be compelled to marry another person by such force or

duress as avoids the marriage or makes it voidable the marriage is of no

effect for the purposes of Part I with respect to consent.

3. Kidnapping, Stealing a Person and Abduction-Definitions

75. A person is guilty of kidnapping-

(a) who unlawfully imprisons any person and takes him out

of the jurisdiction of the courts without his consent; or

(b) who unlawfully imprisons any person within the

jurisdiction of the courts in such a manner as to prevent

him from applying to a court of law or equity for his

release, or from discovering to any other person the

Evidence of rape,

etc.

Avoidance of

marriage.

Kidnapping

defined.

place where he is imprisoned, or in such a manner as to

prevent any person entitled to have access to him from

discovering the place where he is imprisoned.

76.-(1) A person is guilty of stealing another person-

(a) who kidnaps him; or

(b) who unlawfully takes or detains him with intent to

deprive of the possession or control of him any person

entitled thereto, or with intent to steal anything upon or

about his body, or with intent to cause any harm to him.

(2) For the purposes of this section it is not necessary to prove

that the person stolen had been taken from the care, charge or possession

of any person if it be shown that some person other than the accused person

was entitled to the control or possession of the person stolen.

77.-(1) A person is guilty of abduction of a female who, with intent to

deprive of the possession or control of the female, any person entitled

thereto, or with intent to cause her to be married to or carnally known by

any person-

(a) unlawfully takes her from the lawful possession, care or

charge, of any person; or

(b) detains her from returning to the lawful possession, care

or charge, of any person.

(2) The possession, control, care or charge, of a female by a

parent, guardian, or other person, shall be held to continue notwithstanding

that the female is absent from his actual possession, control, care, or charge

if such absence be for a special purpose only and be not intended by the

parent, guardian or other person, to exclude or determine such possession,

Stealing a person.

Abduction

defined.

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control, care or charge, for the time being.

(3) A person is not guilty of abduction by taking or detaining a

female unless he knew or had grounds for believing that the female was in the

possession, control, care or charge, of some other person.

78.-(1) For the purposes of the sections of this Title relating to stealing a

person and abduction-

(a) it is not necessary that the taking or detaining should be

without the consent of the person taken or detained, and

it suffices if the person be persuaded, aided or

encouraged, to depart or not to return;

(b) it is not necessary that there should be an intent

permanently to deprive any person of the possession or

control of the person taken or detained;

(c) a taking or detention is unlawful unless some person

entitled to give consent to the taking or detention of the

person taken or detained for the purposes for which he

is taken or detained, gives consent to the taking or

detention for those purposes;

(d) a person having the temporary possession, care or

charge of another person for a special purpose, as the

attendant, employer or schoolmaster of such person, or

in any other capacity, can be guilty of stealing or

abduction of such person by acts which he is not

authorised to do for such special purpose, and he

cannot give consent to any act by another person which

would be inconsistent with such special purpose.

(2) Notwithstanding the general provisions of Title V with respect

Special

provisions as to

abduction, etc.

to mistake of law, a person is not guilty of stealing or of abduction of

another person by anything which he does in the belief that he is entitled by

law as a parent, guardian, or by virtue of any other legal right, to take or

detain the other person for the purposes for which he takes or detains him:

Provided that this rule shall not be construed to exempt a person from

liability to punishment-

(a) on the plea that he did not know or believe, or had not the

means of knowing that the age of the other person was under

twelve or sixteen years, as the case may be; or

(b) for stealing or abduction if he took or detained the other person

for any immoral purpose.

TITLE VIII

Criminal Harm to the Person

79. Every person who intentionally and unlawfully causes harm to a

person shall be liable to imprisonment for one year.

80. Every person who intentionally and unlawfully causes a wound to a

person shall be liable to imprisonment for two years.

81. Every person who intentionally and unlawfully causes grievous harm

to a person shall be liable to imprisonment for five years.

82. Every person who intentionally and unlawfully causes a maim or any

dangerous harm to a person shall be liable to imprisonment for twenty years.

83. Every person who uses a sword, dagger, bayonet, firearm, poison

or any explosive, corrosive, deadly or destructive means or instrument,

shall-

Intentional harm.

Wounding.

Grevious harm.

Maim and

dangerous harm.

Use of deadly

means of harm.

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(a) if he does so with intent unlawfully to cause harm to a

person, be liable to imprisonment for five years; or

(b) if he does so with intent unlawfully to wound or cause

grievous harm to a person, be liable to imprisonment for

ten years; or

(c) if he does so with intent to maim or to cause dangerous

harm to a person, be liable to imprisonment for twenty

years.

84. Every person who unlawfully and knowingly administers any noxious

matter to a person shall be liable to imprisonment for two years.

85. Every person who commits any of the offences mentioned in sections

79 to 84 of this Title, with intent to facilitate the commission of any crime by

himself or by any other person or with intent to hinder the arrest or detention

of himself or of any other person for any crime, or with intent to hinder the

discovery of any crime, or with intent to enable himself or any other person

to escape from legal custody, whether for a crime or for any other cause,

shall-

(a) if such crime be a felony, be liable to imprisonment for a

term which may exceed by seven years the term for

which he is otherwise liable to such imprisonment; or

(b) in any other case, be liable to imprisonment for a term

which may exceed by five years the term for which he is

otherwise liable to such imprisonment.

86. Every person who, with either of the intents mentioned in section 85,

and by means of choking, suffocating or strangling, or by any other violence,

or by means of any stupefying or overpowering drug, gas or other matter,

renders or attempts to render a person unconscious or insensible or

Administering

noxious matter.

Aggravation.

Garrotting, etc.

physically incapable of resistance, shall be liable to imprisonment for twenty

years.

87. Every person who causes the safety of an engine, carriage or train

upon a railway, or of any vessel whether on the sea, on a river or other

water to be endangered, with intent to cause harm or danger or harm to any

person, shall be liable to imprisonment for twenty years.

88. Every person who causes anything to strike or fall on an engine,

carriage or train, on a railway with intent to cause harm or to endanger any

person therein, shall be liable to imprisonment for five years.

89. Every person who knowingly and without lawful cause places or

leaves any stone, metal, wood or other thing, or causes any animal to go or

be in the way of any engine, carriage or train, upon a railway, whereby such

engine, carriage or train, might be obstructed, shall, although he does not

intend to cause harm or danger of harm to any person be liable to

imprisonment for two years.

90. Every person who in any manner unlawfully interferes with or

obstructs the working of any lighthouse, beacon, buoy, signal or other

apparatus or thing of whatever kind, which is used or maintained for the

safety of navigation, whether on the sea, or on a river or other water, or for

the safe working or using of any railway shall, although he does not intend to

cause harm or danger of harm to any person, be liable to imprisonment for

two years.

91. Every person who-

(a) in constructing or repairing any vessel or any machinery

or fittings for a vessel, or any engine, carriage or

apparatus, to be used on or forming part of a railway,

knowingly uses such materials, or so does any work or

so conceals any defect, as that the safety of the vessel,

Intentionally

endangering train

or vessel.

Throwing, etc., at

a train.

Obstructing

trains.

Interference with

signals, etc.

Frauds

endangering

trains or vessels.

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or of any person on board the vessel or who may use

the railway, is likely to be endangered, shall be liable to

imprisonment for ten years;

(b) supplies for use on board a vessel any medical or

surgical stores or instruments, or any life belt or

apparatus for saving life, of such inferior quality or in

such a condition as to be substantially unfit for the

purposes for which the same are supplied, or as to be

likely to endanger life, shall if he do so knowingly be

liable to imprisonment for five years, or shall if he do so

negligently be liable to imprisonment for two years.

92. Every person who unlawfully exposes or abandons a child under

seven years of age in such a manner that any grievous harm is likely to be

caused to it shall be liable to imprisonment for five years.

93. Every person who negligently and unlawfully causes harm to any

other person shall be liable on conviction either on indictment or summarily to

imprisonment for three months.

94. Every person who negligently and unlawfully causes a wound or

grievous harm to any person shall be liable to imprisonment for one year.

95. Every person who-

(a) being solely or partly in charge of any steam-engine,

ship, boat, horse, or beast, or other dangerous thing or

matter of any kind, or

(b) having undertaken or being engaged in medical or

surgical treatment of any person, or

(c) having undertaken, or being engaged in the dispensing,

Negligence by

persons in

charge of

dangerous

things.

Abandonment

likely to cause

grievous harm.

Negligent harm.

Negligent wound

or grievous

harm.

supplying, selling, administering or giving away of any

medicine or poisonous or dangerous matter,

negligently causes harm to any person, or negligently endangers the life of

any person, shall be liable to imprisonment for two years.

Definitions and Special Provisions Relating to the Matter of this

Title

96. “Harm” means any bodily hurt, disease or disorder, whether

permanent or temporary;

“grievous harm” means any harm which amounts to a maim or dangerous

harm as hereinafter defined, or which seriously or permanently injures health,

or which is likely to injure health, or which extends to permanent disfigurement,

or to any permanent or serious injury to any external or internal organ, member

or sense;

“dangerous harm” means harm endangering life;

“maim” means the destruction or permanent disabling of any external or internal

organ, member or sense;

“wound” means any incision or puncture which divides or pierces any exterior

membrane of the body, and any membrane is exterior for the purposes of

this definition which can be touched without dividing or piercing any other

membrane.

97. Harm is unlawful which is intentionally or negligently caused without

any of the justifications mentioned in Title VI.

98. A person causes harm by an omission within the meaning of this

Code if harm be caused by his omission to perform any such duty for

preventing harm as mentioned in section 99, and in no other case.

Kinds of harm.

Unlawful harm

defined.

Causing harm by

an omission.

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99. A person is under a duty for preventing harm to another person-

(a) if he is under a duty, as mentioned in section 100, to

supply a person with necessaries of health and life; or

(b) if he is otherwise under a duty, by virtue of the

provisions of any statute, or by virtue of any office or

employment, or by virtue of a lawful order of any court

or person or by virtue of any agreement or undertaking,

to do any act for the purpose of thereby averting harm

from any person, whether ascertained or unascertained.

100.-(1) A man is under a duty to supply the necessaries of health and life to

his wife, being actually under his control, and to his legitimate or illegitimate

son or daughter, being actually under his control and not being of such age

and capacity as to be able to obtain such necessaries.

(2) A guardian is under the like duty with respect to his ward,

being actually under his control.

(3) A woman upon being delivered of a child, whether legitimate

or illegitimate, is under a duty, so far as she is able-

(a) to summon assistance, and to do all such other acts as

are necessary and reasonable for preserving the child

from harm by exposure, exhaustion or otherwise by

reason of its condition as a newly born child, and

(b) to support and take reasonable care of the child, being

under her control or in her care or charge, until it can

safely be weaned.

(4) A person who by virtue of office as a gaoler, relieving officer

Duty for

preventing harm

defined.

Duty to supply

necessaries of

health and life.

or otherwise, or by reason of the provisions of any statute, is bound to

supply any of the necessaries of health and life to a person, is under a duty

to supply them accordingly.

(5) A person who wrongfully imprisons another person is under a

duty to supply him with the necessaries of health and life.

(6) A person who has agreed or undertaken to supply any of the

necessaries of health and life to another person, whether as his servant,

apprentice or otherwise is under a duty to supply them accordingly.

(7) If a person is under a duty as hereinbefore in this section

mentioned and he has not the means for performing the duty, and there is

any person or public authority bound to furnish him with such means, he is

under a duty to take all reasonable steps for obtaining such means from such

person or authority.

(8) If a person being under a duty to supply any of the

necessaries of health and life to another person lawfully charge his wife,

servant or any other person, with the supply of such necessaries, and furnish

the means for that purpose, the wife, servant or person so charged is under

a duty to supply such necessaries accordingly.

(9) “Necessaries of health and life” includes proper food,

clothing, shelter, warmth, medical or surgical treatment and any other

matters which are reasonably necessary for the preservation of the life and

health of a person.

101.-(1) Where under the provisions of either section 99 or section 100 a

duty is constituted by an office, employment, agreement or undertaking,

such a duty is sufficiently constituted in the case of a person who is actually

performing the functions belonging to such an office or employment, or who

is acting as if he were under such an agreement or undertaking with respect

to another person.

Explanations as to

office, etc.

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(2) No person is excused from liability for failure to perform a

duty within the meaning of either section 99 or section 100, on the ground

that another person is also under the same duty, whether jointly with him

or independently of him, and whether on the same or on a different

ground.

102. The general provisions of Title II with respect to causing an event are,

in their application to the matters of this Title, subject to the following

explanations and modifications, namely-

(a) A person shall not be deemed to have caused harm to

another person by omitting to supply him with the

necessaries of health and life unless it be proved against

him that the other person, by reason of his age or

physical or mental state, or by reason of control by the

accused person, could not by reasonable exertion have

avoided the harm.

(b) Disease or disorder which a person suffers as the inward

effect of his grief, terror or other emotion, shall not be

deemed to be harm caused by another person, although

such grief, terror or emotion, has been caused by him,

whether with intent to cause harm or otherwise.

(c) Harm which a person suffers by execution of a sentence

of a court in consequence of a prosecution instituted,

prosecuted or procured, or of evidence given or

procured to be given, by another person, whether in

good faith or not, shall not be deemed to have been

caused by that other person.

(d) Except as in this section expressly provided, a person

shall not be excused from liability to punishment for

causing harm to another person or be acquitted of

Exceptions from

general

provisions.

having caused harm to another person, on the ground

that the other person by his own trespass, negligence,

act or omission, contributed to the causing of the harm.

103. Where a person in good faith, for the purposes of surgical or medical

treatment, voluntarily causes harm to another person which, in the exercise

of reasonable skill and precaution according to the circumstances of the

case, he ought to have known to be plainly improper, he shall be liable to

punishment as if he had caused such harm negligently within the meaning of

this Code, and not otherwise.

104. If a person intentionally hinders any other person from a wrecked

vessel, or from lawfully protecting himself or any other person against harm

in any case, he shall be deemed to have intentionally caused any harm which

happens to such other person by reason of his being so hindered.

105. For the purpose of this Code expressions referring to poison, or to

noxious matter, include matter which is poisonous or noxious only by reason

of the quantity taken or administered, or of the circumstances under which it

is taken or administered, or of the state of health, or the peculiar bodily

character, of the person by whom it is taken, or to whom it is administered.

TITLE IX

Criminal Homicide

106.-(1) Every person who commits murder shall suffer death:

Provided that in the case of a Class B murder (but not in the case

of a Class A murder), the court may, where there are special extenuating

circumstances which shall be recorded in writing, and after taking into

consideration any recommendations or plea for mercy which the jury

hearing the case may wish to make in that behalf, refrain from imposing a

death sentence and in lieu thereof shall sentence the convicted person to

Surgical or

medical treatment.

Hindering the

saving of life.

Poison explained.

Murder.

6 of 1994.

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imprisonment for life.

(2) The proviso to subsection (1) above shall have effect

notwithstanding any rule of law or practice which may prohibit a jury from

making recommendations as to the sentence to be awarded to a convicted

person.

(3) For the purpose of this section-

“Class A murder” means:-

(a) any murder committed in the course or furtherance or

theft;

(b) any murder by shooting or by causing an explosion;

(c) any murder done in the course or for the purpose of

resisting or avoiding or preventing a lawful arrest, or of

effecting or assisting an escape or rescue from legal

custody;

(d) any murder of a police officer acting in the execution of

his duty or of a person assisting a police officer so

acting;

(e) in the case of a person who was a prisoner at the time

when he did or was a party to the murder, any murder of

a prison officer acting in the execution of his duty or of a

person assisting a prison officer so acting; or

(f) any murder which is related to illegal drugs or criminal

gang activity;

“Class B murder” means any murder which is not a Class A

murder.

107. Every person who attempts to commit murder shall be liable to

imprisonment for life.

108.-(1) Every person who commits manslaughter-

(a) by negligence shall be liable to imprisonment for five

years;

(b) by any other cause shall be liable to imprisonment for

life.

(2) Every person who causes the death of another by any

careless conduct not amounting to negligence, as defined in this Code, shall

be guilty of an offence and liable to imprisonment for two years.

109. Every person who abets the commission of suicide by any person

shall, whether or not the suicide be actually committed, be liable to

imprisonment for twenty years.

110. Where a woman by any wilful act causes the death of her child

being a child under the age of twelve months, but at the time of the act the

balance of her mind was disturbed by reason of her not having fully

recovered from the effect of giving birth to the child or by reason of the

effect of lactation consequent upon the birth of the child, then,

notwithstanding that the circumstances were such that but for this section the

crime would have amounted to murder, she shall be guilty of felony, to wit,

of infanticide, and may for such crime be dealt with and punished as if she

had been guilty of the crime of manslaughter of the child.

111.-(1) Every person who intentionally and unlawfully causes abortion or

miscarriage shall be liable to imprisonment for fourteen years.

Attempt to

murder.

Manslaughter.

Abetment of

suicide.

Infanticide.

Abortion,

miscarriage and

child destruction.

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(2) Every woman being with child who, with intent to procure her

own miscarriage, unlawfully administers to herself any poison or other

noxious thing, or unlawfully uses any instrument or other means whatever

with the like intent, and every person who, with intent to procure the

miscarriage of any woman, whether she is or is not with child, unlawfully

administers to her or causes to be taken by her any poison or other noxious

thing, or unlawfully uses any instrument or other means whatever with the like

intent, shall be guilty of felony and being convicted thereof shall be liable to

imprisonment for life.

(3) Every person who unlawfully supplies or procures any poison

or other noxious thing, or any instrument or thing whatever, knowing that the

same is intended to be unlawfully used or employed with intent to procure the

miscarriage of any woman whether she is or is not with child, shall be guilty

of a misdemeanour.

(4) Every person who, with intent to destroy the life of a child

capable of being born alive, by any wilful act causes a child to die before it

has an existence independent of its mother, shall be guilty of felony, to wit, of

child destruction, and shall be liable on conviction thereof to imprisonment for

life:

Provided that no person shall be found guilty of a crime under this

subsection unless it is proved that the act which caused the death of the child

was not done in good faith for the purposes only of preserving the life of the

mother.

(5) For the purposes of subsection (4), evidence that a woman

had at any material time been pregnant for a period of twenty-eight weeks or

more shall be prima facie proof that she was at that time pregnant of a child

capable of being born alive.

112.-(1) A person shall be not guilty of an offence under the law relating to

abortion or miscarriage when a pregnancy is terminated by a registered

Medical

termination of

pregnancy.

medical practitioner if two registered medical practitioners are of the

opinion, formed in good faith-

(a) that the continuance of the pregnancy would involve

risk to the life of the pregnant woman, or of injury to

the physical or mental health of the pregnant woman or

any existing children of her family, greater than if the

pregnancy were terminated; or

(b) that there is a substantial risk that if the child were born

it would suffer from such physical or mental

abnormalities as to be seriously handicapped.

(2) In determining whether the continuance of a pregnancy

would involve such risk of injury to health as is mentioned in subsection (1)

(a) account may be taken of the pregnant woman's actual or reasonably

foreseeable environment.

113.-(1) Subject to subsection (2), no person shall be under any duty,

whether by contract or by any statutory or other legal requirements, to

participate in any treatment authorised by section 112 to which he has a

conscientious objection:

Provided that in any legal proceedings the burden of proof of

conscientious objection shall rest upon the person claiming to rely on it.

(2) Nothing in subsection (1) shall affect any duty to participate in

treatment which is necessary to save the life or to prevent grave permanent

injury to the physical or mental health of a pregnant woman.

114. Every person who intentionally and unlawfully causes harm to a

living child during the time of its birth shall be liable to imprisonment for ten

years.

Conscientious

objection to

participation in

treatment.

Injury to child at

birth.

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115. Every person who conceals the body of a child whether such child

was born alive or not, with intent to conceal the fact of its birth, existence or

death, or the manner or cause of its death, shall be liable to imprisonment for

two years.

Definitions and Special Provisions Relating to the Matter of this

Title

116.-(1) Every person who causes the death of another person by any

unlawful harm is guilty of manslaughter.

(2) If the harm was negligently caused, he is guilty only of

manslaughter by negligence.

117. Every person who intentionally causes the death of another person by

any unlawful harm is guilty of murder, unless his crime is reduced to

manslaughter by reason of such extreme provocation, or other matter of

partial excuse as in the next following sections mentioned.

118.-(1) Where a person kills or is a party to the killing of another, he shall

not be convicted of murder if he was suffering from such abnormality of mind

(whether arising from a condition of arrested or retarded development of

mind or any inherent causes or induced by disease or injury) as substantially

impaired his mental responsibility for his acts and omission in doing or being a

party to the killing.

(2) On a charge of murder, it shall be for the defence to prove that

the person charged is by virtue of this section not liable to be convicted of

murder.

(3) A person who but for this section would be liable whether as

principal or as accessory, to be convicted of murder shall be liable instead to

be convicted of manslaughter.

Manslaughter

defined.

Concealment of

body of child.

Murder defined.

Diminished

responsibility.

(4) The fact that one party to a killing is by virtue of this section

not liable to be convicted of murder shall not affect the question whether the

killing amounted to murder in the case of any other party to it.

119. A person who intentionally causes the death of another person by

unlawful harm shall be deemed to be guilty only of manslaughter, and not of

murder, if there is such evidence as raises a reasonable doubt as to whether-

(a) he was deprived of the power of self-control by such

extreme provocation given by the other person as is

mentioned in section 120; or

(b) he was justified in causing some harm to the other

person, and that in causing harm in excess of the harm

which he was justified in causing he acted from such

terror of immediate death or grievous harm as in fact

deprived him, for the time being, of the power of self-

control; or

(c) in causing the death he acted in the belief, in good faith

and on reasonable grounds, that he was under a legal

duty to cause the death or to do the act which he did;

or

(d) in the case of woman who causes the death of her child

recently born, she (while not insane) was deprived of

the power of self-control by a disease or disorder of

mind produced by childbearing.

120. The following matters may amount to extreme provocation to one

person to cause the death of another person, namely-

(a) an unlawful assault or battery committed upon the

accused person by the other person, either in an

When intentional

homicide is

reduced to

manslaughter.

18 of 1998.

Provocation

defined.

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unlawful fight or otherwise, which is of such a kind either

in respect of its violence or by reason of words, gestures

or other circumstances of insult or aggravation, as to be

likely to deprive a person, being of ordinary character,

and being in the circumstances in which the accused

person was, of the power of self-control;

(b) the assumption by the other person, at the

commencement of an unlawful fight, of an attitude

manifesting an intention of instantly attacking the accused

person with deadly or dangerous means or in a deadly

manner;

(c) an act of adultery committed with or by the wife or

husband of the accused person, or the crime of unnatural

carnal knowledge committed upon the accused person's

wife or child;

(d) a violent assault or battery, or any sexual offence,

committed upon the accused person's wife, husband,

child or parent, or upon any other person in the care or

charge of the accused person;

(e) any thing said to the accused person by the other person

or by a third person which were grave enough to make a

reasonable man to lose his self-control.

121.-(1) Notwithstanding the existence of such evidence as is referred to in

section 119 (a), the crime of the accused shall not be deemed to be thereby

reduced to manslaughter if it appears, either from the evidence given on his

behalf, or from evidence given on the part of the prosecution-

(a) that he was not in fact deprived of the power of self-

control by the provocation; or

18 of 1998.

18 of 1998.

18 of 1998.

When

provocation

shall not be

admitted.

18 of 1998.

(b) that he acted wholly or partly from a previous purpose

to cause death or harm, or to engage in an unlawful

fight whether or not he would have acted on that

purpose at the time or in the manner in which he did act

but for the provocation; or

(c) that after the provocation was given, and before he did

the act which caused the harm, such a time elapsed or

such circumstances occurred that a person of ordinary

character might have recovered his self-control; or

(d) that his act was, in respect either of the instrument or

means used, or of the cruel or other manner in which it

was used, greatly in excess of the measure in which a

person of character would have been likely under the

circumstances to be deprived of his self-control by the

provocation.

(2) Where a person in the course of a fight uses any deadly or

dangerous means against an adversary who has not used or commenced to

use any deadly or dangerous means against him, if it appears that the

accused person purposed or prepared to use such means before he had

received any such blow or hurt in the fight as might be a sufficient

provocation to use means of that kind, he shall be presumed to have used

the means from a previous purpose to cause death, notwithstanding that

before the actual use of the means he may have received any such blow or

hurt in the fight as might amount to extreme provocation.

122. A lawful blow, arrest or other violence may be a provocation,

notwithstanding its lawfulness, if the accused person neither believed nor at

the time of his act had reasonable means of knowing or reasonable ground

for supposing that it was lawful.

Mistake to matter

of provocation.

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123. Where a sufficient provocation has been given to the accused person

by one person and he kills another person under the belief on reasonable

grounds that the provocation was given by him, the provocation shall be

admissible for reducing the crime to manslaughter in the same manner as if it

had been given by the person killed, but except as in this section mentioned,

provocation given by one person is not a provocation to kill a different

person.

124. The general provisions of Title II with respect to causing an event are

in their application with respect to the causing of death by harm subject to the

following explanations and modifications, namely-

(a) The death of a person shall be held to have been caused

by harm if by reason of the harm death has happened

otherwise or sooner, by however short a time, than it

would probably have happened but for the harm.

(b) It is immaterial that the harm would not have caused the

person's death but for his infancy, old age, disease,

intoxication or other state of body or mind, at the time

when the harm was caused.

(c) It is immaterial that the harm would not have caused the

person's death but for his refusal or neglect to submit to

or seek proper medical or surgical treatment, or but for

his negligent or improper conduct or manner of living or

of treating the harm, unless it be made to appear that the

person acted as he did with the purpose of causing his

own death.

(d) Death shall be held to have been caused by harm if the

death be caused by the medical or surgical treatment of

the harm, unless such treatment itself amount to murder

or manslaughter.

Mistake as to the

person.

Special

provisions as to

causing death.

125. The general provisions with respect to abetment are in their

application for the purposes of this Title subject to the special provision,

namely, that where a person commands the killing of another person

knowing that the killing will be unlawful, then, although the crime of the

person so commanded be reduced to manslaughter, or to an attempt to

commit manslaughter, by his belief that he was under a legal duty to obey

the command, the person giving the command is guilty of the same crime as

if the person commanded had not believed himself to be under a legal duty

to obey the command.

126.-(1) In order that a child may be such a person that it may be murder

or manslaughter to cause its death, it is necessary that before its death the

child should have been completely brought forth alive from the body of the

mother.

(2) It is not necessary either that a circulation of blood

independent of the mother's circulation, should have commenced in the

child, or that the child should have breathed, or that it should have been

detached from the mother by severance of the umbilical cord, and it is

murder or manslaughter (as the case may be) to cause death to happen to a

child after it becomes a person within the meaning of this section by means

of harm caused to it before it became such a person.

127.-(1) The crime of causing abortion or miscarriage of a woman can

be committed either by that woman or by any other person, and that woman

or any other person can be guilty of using means with intent to commit that

crime, although the woman be not in fact pregnant.

(2) The crime of causing abortion can be committed by causing a

woman to be prematurely delivered of a child with intent unlawfully to cause

or hasten the death of the child.

128. For the purposes of this Title, relating to causing harm to a living

child during the time of its birth-

Special provisions

as to abetment.

Explanation as to

a child.

Abortion.

Harm to a child at

birth.

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(a) where harm is caused to a child during the time of its

birth, or where upon the discovery of the concealed

body of a child harm is found to have been caused to it,

such harm shall be presumed to have been caused to the

child before its death;

(b) the expression "during the time of birth" includes the

whole period from the commencement of labour till the

time when the child so becomes a person as that it may

be murder or manslaughter to cause its death.

129.-(1) Any secret disposition, whether it be intended to be permanent or

not, may be a concealment.

(2) The abandonment of the body of a child in any public street or

place may be a concealment if the body is abandoned for the purpose of

concealing the fact of its birth or existence.

(3) Section 115 shall not apply to the case of a child of less than

six months’ growth before its birth.

(4) The said section shall not apply to the case of intent to conceal

the birth, existence or death of a child, or the manner or cause of its death,

from any particular person or persons only, but it is requisite that there should

be an intent to conceal the same from all persons, except such persons as

abet or consent to the concealment.

(5) The provisions of the said section apply as well to the mother

of the child as to any other person.

Concealment of

child.

130. Where any person does an act in good faith for purposes of surgical

or medical treatment, an intent to cause death shall not be presumed from

the fact that the act was or appeared likely to cause death.

131. Where harm is unlawfully caused to a person within the jurisdiction

of the courts, and his death is thereby caused, but the death happens

beyond the jurisdiction of the courts, any persons guilty of having caused or

abetted the causing of the harm may be tried and punished under the Code

for murder or manslaughter as if the death had happened within the

jurisdiction.

TITLE X

Crimes Against Rights of Property

Criminal Damage to Property

132.-(1) A person who without lawful excuse destroys or damages any

property belonging to another intending to destroy or damage any such

property or being reckless as to whether any such property would be

destroyed or damaged shall be guilty of a crime.

(2) A person who without lawful excuse destroys or damages

any property, whether belonging to himself or another-

(a) intending to destroy or damage any property or being

reckless as to whether any property would be

destroyed or damaged; and

(b) intending by the destruction or damage to endanger the

life of another or being reckless as to whether the life of

another would be thereby endangered,

shall be guilty of a crime.

Jurisdiction.

Destroying or

damaging

property.

Exceptions as to

surgical or

medical treatment.

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(3) A crime committed under this section by destroying or

damaging property by fire or by any explosive matter shall be charged as

arson.

133. A person who without lawful excuse makes to another a threat,

intending that that other person would fear it would be carried out-

(a) to destroy or damage any property belonging to that

other or a third person; or

(b) to destroy or damage his own property in a way which

he knows is likely to endanger the life of that other or a

third person,

shall be guilty of a crime.

134. A person who has anything in his custody or under his control

intending without lawful excuse to use it or cause or permit another to use it-

(a) to destroy or damage any property belonging to some

other person; or

(b) to destroy or damage his own or the user's property in a

way which he knows is likely to endanger the life of

some other person,

shall be guilty of a crime.

135.-(1) A person who is guilty of arson under section 132 or of a crime

under section 132 (2) (whether arson or not) shall be liable to imprisonment

for life.

(2) A person who is guilty of any other crime under this Title shall

be liable on conviction on indictment to imprisonment for a term not

Threats to

destroy or

damage property.

Possessing

anything with

intent to destroy

or damage

property.

Punishment.

exceeding ten years and on summary conviction to imprisonment for a term

not exceeding one year.

136.-(1) This section applies to any crime under section 132 (1) and any

crime under section 133 or section 134 other than one involving a threat by

the person charged to destroy or damage property in a way which he

knows is likely to endanger the life of another or involving an intent by the

person charged to use or cause or permit the use of something in his

custody or under his control so as to destroy or damage property.

(2) A person charged with a crime to which this section applies

shall, whether or not he would be treated for the purposes of this Title as

having a lawful excuse apart from this subsection, be treated for those

purposes as having a lawful excuse-

(a) if at the time of the act or acts alleged to constitute the

crime he believed that the person or persons whom he

believed to be entitled to consent to the destruction of

or damage to the property in question had so

consented, or would have so consented to it if he or

they had known of the destruction or damage and its

circumstances; or

(b) if he destroyed or damaged or threatened to destroy or

damage the property in question or in the case of a

charge of a crime under section 134 above, intended to

use or cause or permit the use of something to destroy

or damage it, in order to protect property belonging to

himself or another or a right or interest in property

which was or which he believed to be vested in himself

or another, and at the time of the act or acts alleged to

constitute the crime he believed-

(i) that the property, right or interest was in

Without lawful

excuse.

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immediate need of protection; and

(ii) that the means of protection adopted or

proposed to be adopted were or would be

reasonable having regard to all the

circumstances.

(3) For the purpose of this section it is immaterial whether a belief

is justified or not if it is honestly held.

(4) For the purpose of subsection (2) a right or interest in property

includes any right or privilege in or over land, whether created by grant,

licence or otherwise.

(5) This section shall not be construed as casting doubt on any

defence recognised by law as a defence to criminal charges.

137.-(1) In this Title “property” means property of a tangible nature,

whether real or personal, including money and-

(a) including wild creatures which have been tamed or are

ordinarily kept in captivity, and any other wild creatures

or their carcasses if, but only if, they have been reduced

into possession which has not been lost or abandoned or

are in the course of being reduced into possession; but

(b) not including flowers, fruits or foliage of a plant growing

wild on any land.

(2) Property shall be treated for the purposes of this Title as

belonging to any person-

(a) having the custody or control of it;

Meaning of

property.

(b) having in it any proprietary right or interest (not being

an equitable interest arising only from an agreement to

transfer or grant an interest); or

(c) having a charge on it.

(3) Where property is subject to a trust, the persons to whom it

belongs shall be so treated as including any person having a right to enforce

the trust.

(4) Property of a corporation sole shall be so treated as

belonging to the corporation notwithstanding a vacancy in the corporation.

138. In this Title “damage” includes not only damage to the matter of a

thing, but also the interruption of the use thereof or any interference

therewith by which the thing becomes temporarily useless, or by which

expense is rendered necessary in order to render the thing fit for the

purposes for which it was used or maintained.

TITLE XI

Criminal Misappropriations and Frauds

Theft

139.-(1) A person is guilty of theft if he dishonestly appropriates property

belonging to another with the intention of permanently depriving the other of

it; and “thief” and “steal” shall be construed accordingly.

(2) It is immaterial whether the appropriation is made with a view

to gain, or is made for the thief's own benefit.

(3) Sections 140 to 145 shall have effect as regards the

interpretation and operation of this section (and, except as otherwise

Meaning of

damage.

Basic definition of

theft.

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provided by this Title, shall apply only for the purposes of this section).

140.-(1) A person’s appropriation of property belonging to another is not to

be regarded as dishonest-

(a) if he appropriates the property in the belief that he has in

law the right to deprive the other of it, on behalf of

himself or of a third person; or

(b) if he appropriates the property in the belief that he

would have the other's consent if the other knew of the

appropriation and the circumstances of it; or

(c) (except where the property came to him as trustee or

personal representative) if he appropriates the property

in the belief that the person to whom the property

belongs cannot be discovered by taking reasonable

steps.

(2) A person’s appropriation of property belonging to another may

be dishonest notwithstanding that he is willing to pay for the property.

141.-(1) Any assumption by a person of the rights of an owner amounts to

an appropriation, and this includes, where he has come by the property

(innocently or not) without stealing it, any later assumption of a right to it by

keeping or dealing with it as owner.

(2) Where property or a right or interest in property is or purports

to be transferred for value to a person acting in good faith, no later

assumption by him of rights which he believed himself to be acquiring shall,

by reason of any defect in the transferor's title, amount to theft of the

property.

142.-(1) If it be proved on behalf of a person accused of having stolen a

“Dishonestly.”

“Appropriates”.

Consent by a

wife.

thing that the wife of the owner of the thing consented to its appropriation by

the accused person, the accused person shall not be convicted unless it be

proved against him that he had notice that the wife had no authority to

consent to the appropriation.

(2) If it appears that he had committed or designed to commit

adultery with the wife, he shall be deemed to have had such notice, but he

shall not in such case be deemed guilty of stealing by reason only of his

appropriation, with the consent of the wife, or of his assisting the wife to

appropriate, any wearing apparel of the wife, or any money or other thing of

which the wife is apparently permitted to have the disposal for her own use.

143.-(1) “Property” includes money and all other property real or personal,

including things in action and other intangible property.

(2) A person cannot steal land, or things forming part of land and

severed from it by him or by his directions, except in the following cases,

that is to say-

(a) when he is a trustee or personal representative, or is

authorised by power of attorney, or as liquidator of a

company, or otherwise, to sell or dispose of land

belonging to another, and he appropriates the land or

anything forming part of it by dealing with it in breach

of the confidence reposed in him; or

(b) when he is not in possession of the land and

appropriates anything forming part of the land by

severing it or causing it to be severed, or after it has

been severed; or

(c) when, being in possession of the land under a tenancy,

he appropriates the whole or part of any fixture or

structure let to be used with the land.

“Property”.

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For purposes of this subsection “land” does not include incorporeal

hereditaments; "tenancy" means a tenancy for years or any less period and

includes an agreement for such a tenancy but a person who after the end of a

tenancy remains in possession as statutory tenant or otherwise is to be

treated as having possession under the tenancy, and "let" shall be construed

accordingly.

(3) A person who picks flowers, fruits or foliage from a plant

growing wild on any land, does not (although not in possession of the land)

steal what he picks, unless he does it for reward or for sale or other

commercial purpose.

(4) Wild creatures, tamed or untamed, shall be regarded as

property; but a person cannot steal a wild creature not tamed nor ordinarily

kept in captivity, or the carcase of any such creature, unless either it has been

reduced into possession by or on behalf of another person and possession to

it has not since been lost or abandoned, or another person is in course of

reducing it into possession.

144.-(1) Property shall be regarded as belonging to any person having

possession or control of it, or having in it any proprietary right or interest (not

being an equitable interest arising only from an agreement to transfer or grant

an interest).

(2) Where property is subject to a trust, the persons to whom it

belongs shall be regarded as including any person having a right to enforce

the trust, and an intention to defeat the trust shall be regarded accordingly as

an intention to deprive of the property any person having that right.

(3) Where a person receives property from or on account of

another, and is under an obligation to the other to retain and deal with that

property or its proceeds in a particular way, the property or proceeds shall

be regarded (as against him) as belonging to the other.

“Belonging to

another”.

(4) Where a person gets property by another's mistake and is

under an obligation to make restoration (in whole or in part) of the property

or its proceeds or of the value thereof, then to the extent of that obligation

the property or proceeds shall be regarded (as against him) as belonging to

the person entitled to restoration and an intention not to make restoration

shall be regarded accordingly as an intention to deprive that person of the

property or proceeds.

(5) Property of a corporation sole shall be regarded as belonging

to the corporation notwithstanding a vacancy in the corporation.

145.-(1) A person appropriating property belonging to another without

meaning the other permanently to lose the thing itself is nevertheless to be

regarded as having the intention of permanently depriving the other of it if his

intention is to treat the thing as his own to dispose of regardless of the

other's rights; and a borrowing or lending of it may amount to so treating it

if, but only if, the borrowing or lending is for a period and in circumstances

making it equivalent to an outright taking or disposal.

(2) Without prejudice to the generality of subsection (1), where a

person, having possession or control (lawfully or not) of property belonging

to another, parts with the property under a condition as to its return which

he may not be able to perform, this (if done for the purposes of his own and

without the other's authority) amounts to treating the property as his own to

dispose of regardless of the other's rights.

146. A person guilty of theft shall on conviction on indictment be liable to

imprisonment for a term not exceeding ten years.

Robbery, burglary, etc.

147.-(1) A person is guilty of robbery if he steals, and immediately before

or at the time of doing so and in order to do so, he uses force on any person

or puts or seeks to put any person in fear of being then and there subjected

“With the

intention to

permanently

depriving the

other of it”.

Theft.

Robbery.

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to force.

(2) A person guilty of robbery, or of attempted robbery, or of

assault with intent to rob, shall be punished as follows:-

(a) on conviction on indictment, to a term of imprisonment

which shall not be less than ten years but which may

extend to life imprisonment;

(b) on summary conviction, to a term of imprisonment

which shall not be less than five years but which may

extend to ten years:

Provided that (whether the case is tried summarily or on indictment) the court

may, in the case of a first time offender who has no previous conviction for

any offence involving dishonesty or violence, refrain from imposing the

minimum mandatory sentence prescribed above if there be special

extenuating circumstances which the court shall record in writing, and in lieu

thereof, pass such other sentence (whether custodial or non-custodial) as the

court shall deem just having regard to the prevalence of the crime and other

relevant factors.

(3) The offence of robbery, or of attempted robbery, or of assault

with intent to rob, may be tried summarily without the consent of the accused

at the discretion of the Director of Public Prosecutions.

(4) The provisions of this section shall have effect notwithstanding

anything to the contrary contained in the Summary Jurisdiction (Offences)

Act.

148.-(1) A person is guilty of burglary if-

(a) he enters any building or part of a building as a

trespasser and with intent to commit any such crime as is

Burglary.

CAP. 98.

28 of 1994.

28 of 1994.

28 of 1994.

mentioned in subsection (2); or

(b) having entered any building or part of a building as a

trespasser he steals or attempts to steal anything in the

building or that part of it or inflicts or attempts to inflict

on any person therein any grievous bodily harm.

(2) The crimes referred to in subsection (1) (a) are the crimes

of stealing anything in the building or part of a building in question, of

inflicting on any person therein any grievous bodily harm or raping any

woman therein, and of doing unlawful damage to the building or anything

therein.

(3) References in subsections (1) and (2) to a building shall apply

also to an inhabited vehicle or vessel, and shall apply to any such vehicle or

vessel at times when the person having a habitation in it is not there as well

as at times when he is.

(4) A person guilty of burglary shall be punished as follows:

(a) on conviction on indictment, to a term of

imprisonment which shall not be less than seven years

but which may extend to fourteen years;

(b) on summary conviction, to a term of imprisonment

which shall not be less than five years but which may

extend to ten years:

Provided that (whether the case is tried summarily or on indictment)

the court may, in the case of a first time offender who has no previous

conviction for any offence involving dishonesty or violence, refrain from

imposing the minimum mandatory sentence prescribed above if there be

special extenuating circumstances which the court shall record in writing,

and in lieu thereof, pass such other sentence (whether custodial or non-

28 of 1994.

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custodial) as the court shall deem just having regard to the prevalence of the

crime and other relevant factors.

(5) The offence of burglary or of attempted burglary may be tried

summarily without the consent of the accused at the discretion of the Director

of Public Prosecutions.

(6) The provisions of this section shall have effect notwithstanding

anything to the contrary contained in the Summary Jurisdiction (Offences)

Act.

149.-(1) A person is guilty of aggravated burglary if he commits any burglary

and at the time has with him any firearm, or imitation firearm, or any weapon

of offence, or any explosive and for this purpose-

(a) “firearm” includes an airgun or air pistol, and “imitation

firearm” means anything which has the appearance of

being a firearm, whether capable of being discharged or

not; and

(b) “weapon of offence” means any article made or adapted

for use for causing injury to or incapacitating a person,

or intended by the person having it with him for such

use; and

(c) “explosive” means any article manufactured for the purpose

of producing a practical effect by explosion, or intended by

the person having it with him for that purpose.

(2) A person guilty of aggravated burglary shall be punished as

follows:-

(a) on conviction on indictment, to a term of imprisonment

which shall not be less than ten years but which may

CAP. 98.

28 of 1994.

28 of 1994.

Aggravated

burglary.

28 of 1994.

extend to imprisonment for life;

(b) on summary conviction, to a term of imprisonment

which shall not be less than seven years but which may

extend to twelve years:

Provided that (whether the case is tried summarily or on indictment)

the court may, in the case of a first time offender who has no previous

conviction for any offence involving dishonesty or violence, refrain from

imposing the minimum mandatory sentence prescribed above if there be

special extenuating circumstances which the court shall record in writing,

and in lieu thereof, pass such other sentence (whether custodial or non-

custodial) as the court shall deem just having regard to the prevalence of the

crime and other relevant factors.

(3) The offence of aggravated burglary may be tried summarily

without the consent of the accused at the discretion of the Director of Public

Prosecutions.

(4) The provisions of this section shall have effect notwithstanding

anything to the contrary contained in the Summary Jurisdiction (Offences)

Act.

150.-(1) Subject to subsections (2) and (3), where the public have access

to a building in order to view the building or part of it, or a collection or part

of a collection housed in it, any person who without lawful authority

removes from the building or its grounds the whole or part of any article

displayed or kept for display to the public in the building or that part of it or

in its grounds shall be guilty of an offence.

For this purpose “collection” includes a collection got together for a

temporary purpose, but references in this section to a collection do not

apply to a collection made or exhibited for the purpose of effecting sales or

other commercial dealings.

CAP. 98.

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28 of 1994.

Removal of

articles from

places open to the

public.

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(2) It is immaterial for purposes of subsection (1) that the public's

access to a building is limited to a particular period or particular occasion; but

where anything removed from a building or its grounds is there otherwise

than as forming part of, or being on loan for exhibition with, a collection

intended for permanent exhibition to the public, the person removing it

does not thereby commit an offence under this section unless he removes

it on a day when the public have access to the building as mentioned in

subsection (1).

(3) A person does not commit an offence under this section if he

believes that he has lawful authority for the removal of the thing in question or

that he would have it if the person entitled to give it knew of the removal and

the circumstances of it.

(4) A person guilty of an offence under this section shall, on

conviction on indictment, be liable to imprisonment for a term not exceeding

five years.

151.-(1) Subject to subsections (4) and (5), a person shall be guilty of a

felony if, without having the consent of the owner or other lawful authority, he

takes any conveyance for his own or another's use or, knowing that any

conveyance has been taken without such authority, drives it or allows himself

to be carried in or on it.

(2) A person guilty of an offence under subsection (1) shall on

conviction on indictment be liable to imprisonment for a term not exceeding

three years.

(3) If on the trial of an indictment for theft the jury are not satisfied

that the accused committed theft, but it is proved that the accused committed

an offence under subsection (1) the jury may find him guilty of the offence

under subsection (1).

(4) Subsection (1) shall not apply in relation to pedal cycles; but

Taking motor

vehicle or other

conveyancy

without

authority.

subject to subsection (5) a person who, without having the consent of the

owner or other lawful authority, takes a pedal cycle for his own or another's

use, or rides a pedal cycle knowing it to have been taken without such

authority, shall on summary conviction be liable to a fine not exceeding two

hundred dollars.

(5) A person does not commit an offence under this section by

anything done in the belief that he has lawful authority to do it or that he

would have the owner's consent if the owner knew of his doing it and the

circumstances of it.

(6) For purposes of this section-

(a) “conveyance” means any conveyance constructed or

adapted for the carriage of a person or persons

whether by land, water or air, except that it does not

include a conveyance, constructed or adapted for use

only under the control of a person not carried in or on

it, and "drive" shall be construed accordingly; and

(b) “owner”, in relation to a conveyance which is the

subject of a hiring agreement or hire-purchase

agreement, means the person in possession of the

conveyance under that agreement.

152. A person who dishonestly uses without due authority, or dishonestly

causes to be wasted or diverted, any electricity shall on conviction on

indictment be liable to imprisonment for a term not exceeding five years.

153.-(1) A person who by any deception dishonestly obtains property

belonging to another, with the intention of permanently depriving the other of

it, shall on conviction on indictment be liable to imprisonment for a term not

exceeding ten years.

Abstracting of

electricity.

Obtaining

property by

deception.

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(2) For purposes of this section a person is to be treated as

obtaining property if he obtains ownership, possession or control of it, and

"obtain" includes obtaining for another or enabling another to obtain or to

retain.

(3) Section 145 shall apply for purposes of this section, with the

necessary adaptation of the reference to appropriating, as it applies for

purposes of section 139.

(4) For purposes of this section “deception” means any deception

(whether deliberate or reckless) by words or conduct as to fact or as to law,

including a deception as to the present intentions of the person using the

deception or any other person.

154.-(1) A person is guilty of an offence if by any deception he dishonestly

obtains a money transfer for himself or another.

(2) A money transfer occurs when -

(a) a debit is made to one account;

(b) a credit is made to another; and

(c) the credit results from the debit or the debit results from

the credit.

(3) References to a credit and to a debit are to a credit of an

amount of money and to a debit of an amount of money.

(4) It is immaterial (in particular) -

(a) whether the amount credited is the same as the amount

debited;

False

accounting.

Obtaining a

money transfer

by deception.

18 of 1998.

(b) whether the money transfer is effected on presentment

of a cheque or by another method;

(c) whether any delay occurs in the process by which the

money transfer is effected;

(d) whether any intermediate credits or debits are made in

the course of the money transfer;

(e) whether either of the accounts is overdrawn before or

after the money transfer is effected.

(5) For the purpose of this section:-

(a) “deception” has the same meaning as in section 153;

(b) “account” means an account kept with-

(i) a bank; or

(ii) a person carrying on a business which falls

within paragraph (c) below;

(c) a business falls within this subsection if -

(i) in the course of the business money received by

way of deposit is lent to others; or

(ii) any other activity of the business is financed

wholly or to any material extent, out of the

capital of or the interest on money received by

way of deposit;

(d) for the purposes of paragraph (c) above-

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(i) all the activities which a person carries on by

way of business shall be regarded as a single

business carried on by him; and

(ii) “money” includes money expressed in a currency

other than the currency of Belize.

(6) A person guilty of an offence under this section shall be liable

on conviction on indictment to imprisonment for a term not exceeding ten

years.

*(7) Nothing in this section shall have effect in relation to anything

done before the day on which this section comes into force.

155.-(1) A person is guilty of an offence if -

(a) a wrongful credit has been made to an account kept by

him or in respect of which he has any right or interest;

(b) he knows or believes that the credit is wrongful; and

(c) he dishonestly fails to take such steps as are reasonable

in the circumstances to secure that the credit is

cancelled.

(2) References to a credit are to a credit of an amount of money.

(3) A credit to an account is wrongful if it is the credit side of a

money transfer obtained contrary to section 154 of this Act.

(4) A credit to an account is also wrongful to the extent that it

derives from:-

Dishonestly

retaining a

wrongful credit.

18 of 1998.

* Section 154 was added by Act 18 1998 as section 159A and came into force on the 1st

day of August, 1998, by virtue of Statutory Instrument 81 of 1998.

(a) theft;

(b) an offence under section 154 of this Act;

(c) blackmail; or

(d) stolen goods.

(5) In determining whether a credit to an account is wrongful, it is

immaterial (in particular) whether the account is overdrawn before or after

the credit is made.

(6) A person guilty of an offence under this section shall be liable

on conviction on indictment to imprisonment for a term not exceeding ten

years.

(7) Subsection (8) below applies for purposes of provisions of

this Act relating to stolen goods (including subsection (4) above).

(8) References to stolen goods include money which is

dishonestly withdrawn from an account to which a wrongful credit has been

made, but only to the extent that the money derives from the credit.

(9) In this section “account” and “money” shall be construed in

accordance with section 154 of this Act.

*(10) This section applies to wrongful credit made on or after the

day on which this section comes into force.

156.-(1) A person who by any deception dishonestly obtains for himself or

another any pecuniary advantage shall on conviction on indictment be liable

to imprisonment for a term not exceeding five years.

* See footnote to section 154 (7) on the date of commencement to this section.

Obtaining

pecuniary

advantage by

deception.

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(2) The cases in which a pecuniary advantage within the meaning

of this section is to be regarded as obtained for a person are cases where-

(a) he is allowed to borrow by way of overdraft, or to take

out any policy of insurance or annuity contract, or

obtains an improvement of the terms on which he is

allowed to do so; or

(b) he is given the opportunity to earn remuneration or

greater remuneration or greater remuneration in an office

or employment, or to win money by betting.

(3) For purposes of this section “deception” has the same meaning

as in section 153.

157.-(1) A person who by any deception dishonestly obtains services from

another shall be guilty of an offence.

(2) It is an obtaining of services where the other is induced to

confer a benefit by doing some act, or causing or permitting some act to be

done, on the understanding that the benefit has been or will be paid for.

(3) Without prejudice to the generality of subsection (2) above, it

is an obtaining of services where the other is induced to make a loan, or to

cause or permit a loan to be made, on the understanding that any payment

(whether by way of interest or otherwise) will be or has been made in

respect of the loan.

158.-(1) Subject to subsection (2), where a person by any deception-

(a) dishonestly secures the remission of the whole or part of

any existing liability to make a payment, whether his own

liability or another's; or

18 of 1998.

Obtaining

services by

deception.

Evasion of

liability by

deception.

(b) with intent to make permanent default in whole or in

part on any existing liability to make a payment, or with

intent to let another do so, dishonestly induces the

creditor or any person claiming payment on behalf of

the creditor to wait for payment (whether or not the

due date for payment is deferred) or to forego

payment; or

(c) dishonestly obtains any exemption from or abatement

of liability to make a payment,

he shall be guilty of an offence.

(2) For purposes of this section “liability” means legally enforceable

liability; and subsection (1) shall not apply in relation to a liability that has not

been accepted or established to pay compensation for a wrongful act or

omission.

(3) For purposes of subsection (1) (b) a person induced to take in

payment a cheque or other security for money by way of conditional satisfaction

of a preexisting liability is to be treated not as being paid but as being induced

to wait for payment.

(4) For purposes of subsection (1) (c) “obtains” includes obtaining

for another or enabling another to obtain.

159.-(1) Subject to subsection (3), a person who, knowing that payment on

the spot for any goods supplied or service done is required or expected from

him, dishonestly makes off without having paid as required or expected and

with intent to avoid payment of the amount due shall be guilty of an offence.

(2) For purposes of this section “payment on the spot” includes

payment at the time of collecting goods on which work has been done or in

respect of which service has been provided.

Making off

without payment.

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(3) Subsection (1) shall not apply where the supply of the goods

or the doing of the service is contrary to law, or where the service done is

such that payment is not legally enforceable.

(4) Any person may arrest without warrant anyone who is, or

whom he, with reasonable cause, suspects to be committing or attempting to

commit an offence under this section.

160.-(1) Offences under sections 157 to 159 shall be punishable either on

conviction on indictment or on summary conviction.

(2) A person convicted on indictment shall be liable-

(a) for an offence under section 157 or section 158, to

imprisonment for a term not exceeding five years; and

(b) for an offence under section 159, to imprisonment for a

term not exceeding two years.

(3) A person convicted summarily shall be liable to imprisonment

for a term not exceeding six months; or to a fine not exceeding five hundred

dollars, or to both such fine and term of imprisonment.

161. For purposes of sections 157 and 158 “deception” has the same

meaning as in section 153, that is to say, it means any deception (whether

deliberate or reckless) by words or conduct as to fact or as to law, including

a deception as to the present intentions of the person using the deception or

any other person, and section 163 (liability of company officers for offences

by the company) shall apply in relation to sections 157 and 158 as it applies

in relation to section 153.

162.-(1) Where a person dishonestly, with a view to gain for himself or

another or with intent to cause loss to another-

Punishments.

Supplementary.

False

accounting.

(a) destroys, defaces, conceals or falsifies any account or

any record or document made or required for any

accounting purposes; or

(b) in furnishing information for any purpose produces or

makes use of any account, or any such record or

document as aforesaid, which to his knowledge is or

may be misleading, false or deceptive in a material

particular,

he shall, on conviction on indictment, be liable to imprisonment for a term

not exceeding seven years.

(2) For purposes of this section a person who makes or concurs

in making in an account or other document an entry which is or may be

misleading, false or deceptive in a material particular, or who omits or

concurs in omitting a material particular from an account or other document,

is to be treated as falsifying the account or document.

163.-(1) Where an offence committed by a body corporate under section

153, 156, or 162 is proved to have been committed with the consent or

connivance of any director, manager, secretary or other certain similar

officer of the body corporate or any person who was purporting to act in

any such capacity, he as well as the body corporate shall be guilty of that

offence, and shall be liable to be proceeded against and punished

accordingly.

(2) Where the affairs of a body corporate are managed by its

members, this section shall apply in relation to the acts and defaults of a

member in connection with his functions of management as if he were a

director of the body corporate.

164.-(1) Where an officer of a body corporate or unincorporated

association (or person purporting to act as such), with intent to deceive

Liability of

company officers

for certain

offences by

company.

False statements

by company

directors, etc.

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members or creditors of the body corporate or association about its affairs,

publishes or concurs in publishing a written statement or account which to his

knowledge is or may be misleading, false or deceptive in a material particular,

he shall on conviction on indictment be liable to imprisonment for a term not

exceeding seven years.

(2) For purposes of this section a person who has entered into a

security for the benefit of a body corporate or association is to be treated as

a creditor of it.

(3) Where the affairs of a body corporate or association are

managed by its members, this section shall apply to any statement which a

member publishes or concurs in publishing in connection with his functions of

management as if he were an officer of the body corporate or association.

165.-(1) A person who dishonestly, with a view to gain for himself or

another or with intent to cause loss to another, destroys, defaces or conceals

any valuable security, any will or other testamentary document or any original

document of or belonging to or filed or deposited in, any court of justice or

any government department shall on conviction on indictment be liable to

imprisonment for a term not exceeding seven years.

(2) A person who dishonestly, with a view to gain for himself or

another or with intent to cause loss to another, by any deception procures the

execution of a valuable security shall on conviction on indictment be liable to

imprisonment for a term not exceeding seven years; and this subsection shall

apply in relation to the making, acceptance, indorsement, alteration,

cancellation or destruction in whole or in part of a valuable security and in

relation to the signing or sealing of any paper or other material in order that it

may be made or converted into, or used or dealt with as a valuable security,

as if that were the execution of a valuable security.

(3) For purposes of this section “deception” has the same meaning

as in section 153, and "valuable security" means any document creating,

Suppression,

etc., of

documents.

transferring, surrendering or releasing any right to, in or over property, or

authorising the payment of money or delivery of any property, or evidencing

the creation, transfer, surrender or release of any such right, or the payment

of money or delivery of any property, or the satisfaction of any obligation.

166. Every person, who, in order to induce a person to become a

purchaser or mortgagee of any land or interest in land, fraudulently conceals

any document which is material to the title to such land or interest, shall be

liable to imprisonment for two years.

167.-(1) Every person, who with intent to defraud removes, injures, alters

or falsifies any boundary mark or thing serving to distinguish the land or

other property of himself or of any person from the land or other property

of any other person, shall be liable to imprisonment for two years.

(2) Nothing in this section shall exempt a person from any liability

to greater or other punishment under any other provision of this Code, or

any statute for the time being in force in Belize, but so that a person is not

twice punishable for the same act.

168. Every person who, knowing that any execution, warrant, or other

process of law has been awarded or issued for the seizure of any thing

belonging to him or in his possession, custody or control, unlawfully

removes, conceals or in any manner disposes of any such thing, with intent

to defeat or evade such execution, warrant or process, is guilty of a

misdemeanour.

169. Every person who does any of the following acts shall be liable, on

summary conviction, to imprisonment for three months, that is to say-

(a) transfers to any other person, or accepts from any

other person, any ticket or pass for travelling in any

vessel, or on any railway or other conveyance, knowing

that such ticket or pass is not transferable; or

Frauds in sale of

land.

Boundaries,

documents and

accounts.

Removing goods

to evade legal

process.

Frauds as to

tickets, etc.

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(b) accepts or offers to accept any money or other property

for or on pretence of using any kind of witchcraft,

sorcery, enchantment or conjuration, or art of telling

fortunes; or

(c) defrauds any person by means of any false weight or

measure, or by any false use of any weight or measure;

or

(d) makes, gives or uses any certificate or testimonial of

health, sickness, character, qualification or competency,

knowing the same to be false in any material particular;

or

(e) knowingly makes any false return or statement of any

matter as to which he is required to make a return or

statement for the purpose of any tax, rate or assessment.

170.-(1) A person is guilty of blackmail if, with a view to gain for himself or

another or with intent to cause loss to another, he makes any unwarranted

demand with menaces; and for this purpose a demand with menaces is

unwarranted unless the person making it does so in the belief-

(a) that he has reasonable grounds for making the demand;

and

(b) that the use of the menaces is a proper means of

reinforcing the demand.

(2) The nature of the act or omission demanded is immaterial, and

it is also immaterial whether the menaces relate to action to be taken by the

person making the demand.

(3) Any person guilty of blackmail shall on conviction on

Blackmail.

4 of 1987.

indictment be imprisoned for a term which shall not be less than seven years

but which may extend to imprisonment for life.

Offences relating to goods stolen, etc.

171.-(1) A person handles stolen goods if (otherwise than in the course of

the stealing) knowing or believing them to be stolen goods he dishonestly

receives the goods, or dishonestly undertakes or assists in their retention,

removal, disposal or realisation by or for the benefit of another person, or if

he arranges to do so.

(2) A person guilty of handling stolen goods shall on conviction

on indictment be liable to imprisonment for a term not exceeding fourteen

years.

172.-(1) The provisions of this Title relating to goods which have been

stolen shall apply whether the stealing occurred in Belize or elsewhere,

provided that the stealing (if not an offence under this Title) amounted to an

offence where and at the time when the goods were stolen; and references

to stolen goods shall be construed accordingly.

(2) For purposes of those provisions references to stolen goods

shall include, in addition to the goods originally stolen and parts of them

(whether in their original state or not)-

(a) any other goods which directly or indirectly represent

or have at any time represented the stolen goods in the

hands of the thief as being the proceeds of any disposal

or realisation of the whole or part of the goods stolen

or of goods so representing the stolen goods; and

(b) any other goods which directly or indirectly represent

or have at any time represented the stolen goods in the

hands of a handler of the stolen goods or any part of

Handling stolen

goods.

Scope of offences

relating to stolen

goods.

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them as being the proceeds of any disposal or realisation

of the whole or part of the stolen goods handled by him

or of goods so representing them.

(3) No goods shall be regarded as having continued to be stolen

goods after they have been restored to the person from whom they were

stolen or to other lawful possession or custody, or after that person and any

other person claiming through him have otherwise ceased as regards those

goods to have any right to restitution in respect of the theft.

(4) For purposes of the provisions of this Title relating to goods

which have been stolen (including subsections (1) to (3)) goods obtained in

Belize or elsewhere either by blackmail or in the circumstances described in

section 153 (1) shall be regarded as stolen; and “steal”, “theft” and “thief”

shall be construed accordingly.

Possession of Instrument for Burglary, etc.

173.-(1) A person shall be guilty of an offence if, when not at his place of

abode, he has with him any article for use in the course of or in connection

with any burglary, theft or cheat.

(2) A person guilty of an offence under this section shall on

conviction on indictment be liable to imprisonment for a term not exceeding

three years.

(3) Where a person is charged with an offence under this section,

proof that he had with him any article made or adapted for use in committing

a burglary, theft or cheat shall be evidence that he had it with him for such

use.

(4) Any person may arrest without warrant anyone who is, or

whom he, with reasonable cause, suspects to be committing an offence under

this section.

Going equipped

for stealing, etc.

(5) For purposes of this section an offence under section 151 (1)

shall be treated as theft, and “cheat” means an offence under section 153.

Supplementary

174.-(1) Sections 143 (1) and 144 (1) shall apply generally for purposes of

this Title as they apply for purposes of section 139.

(2) For purposes of this Title-

(a) “gain” and “loss” are to be construed as extending only

to gain or loss in money or other property, but as

extending to any such gain or loss whether temporary

or permanent; and-

(i) “gain” includes a gain by keeping what one has,

as well as a gain by getting what one has not;

and

(ii) “loss” includes a loss by not getting what one

might get, as well as a loss by parting with what

one has;

(b) "goods", except in so far as the context otherwise

requires, includes money and every other description of

property except land, and includes things severed from

the land by stealing.

TITLE XII

Forgery

175.-(1) Every person who-

Interpretation.

Forgery of

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Criminal Code [CAP. 101

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(a) with intent to defraud, or with intent to defeat, obstruct

or pervert the course of justice, forges any of the

following documents, namely will, document of title to

land, judicial record, power of attorney, bank note, bill

of exchange, promissory note or negotiable instrument,

policy of insurance, cheque or other authority for the

payment of money by a person carrying on business as a

banker or other valuable security; or

(b) with intent to defraud any person or persons to the amount

of one hundred dollars or upwards, forges any document

whatever, not otherwise in this Title expressly mentioned; or

(c) is convicted of being a common forger,

shall be liable to imprisonment for life.

176. Every person who, with intent to defraud, or with intent to defeat,

obstruct or pervert the course of justice or the execution of the law,

forges any judicial or official document, shall be liable to imprisonment for

ten years.

177. Every person who, with intent to defraud any person or persons to

the amount or value of twenty-five dollars or upwards, forges any document

or documents whatever not otherwise in this Title expressly mentioned, shall

be liable to imprisonment for five years.

178. Every person who forges any passport or makes a statement which is

to his knowledge untrue for the purpose of procuring a passport, whether for

himself or any other person, shall be guilty of a misdemeanour, and on

conviction thereof liable to imprisonment for a term not exceeding two years

or a fine not exceeding one thousand dollars, or to both such fine and therm

of imprisonment.

Forgery of

official

documents.

Forgery above

twenty-five

dollars.

Forgery of

passport.

documents and

securities.

179. Every person who forges any stamp or any other document

whatever, not otherwise in this Title expressly mentioned, with intent to

defraud or injure any person, or with intent to defeat, obstruct or

pervert the course of justice or the due execution of the law, or with

intent to evade the requirements of the law, or with intent to commit or

facilitate the commission of any other crime, shall be liable to

imprisonment for two years.

180. Every person who with any of the intents mentioned in this Title

utters, or in any manner deals with or uses, any such document as in this

Title mentioned, knowing it to be forged, counterfeited or falsified (as the

case may be) or knowing the same not to be genuine, shall be liable to the

like punishment as if he had with that intent forged, counterfeited or falsified

(as the case may be) such document.

181. Every person who with intent to defraud, demands or accepts for

himself or for any other person, any money or money's worth as being due

under or by virtue of any document which he knows to be forged, or not to

be genuine, shall be liable to the same punishment as if he had forged such

document with intent to defraud some person or persons of such money or

money's worth.

182. Every person who with any of the intents mentioned in this Title has

in his possession any document which is forged, counterfeited or falsified, or

which he knows not to be genuine, shall be liable to the like punishment as if

he had with that intent forged, counterfeited or falsified (as the case may be)

such document.

183. Every person who with any of the intents mentioned in this Title

causes a person, by force, threats, duress, deceit or in any manner without

his consent, to make, alter, cancel or injure, any such document as in this

Title mentioned, shall be liable to the like punishment as if he had forged

such document with such intent.

Forgery of other

documents.

Uttering false

documents.

Claiming upon a

forged document.

Possessing false

documents.

Procuring,

making, etc., of

documents by

force, etc.

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184.-(1) Every person who-

(a) with intent to defraud counterfeits or falsifies any current

coin, or

(b) imports or exports any counterfeited or falsified current

coin,

shall be liable to imprisonment for ten years.

(2) Every person who is convicted of being a common coiner shall

be liable to imprisonment for life.

185. Every person who with any of the intents mentioned in this Title

utters, or in any manner deals with or uses, any such current coin as in this

Title mentioned, knowing the same to be forged, counterfeited or falsified (as

the case may be) or knowing the same not to be genuine, shall be liable to

the like punishment as if he had with that intent forged, counterfeited or

falsified (as the case may be) such current coin.

186. Every person who with any of the intents mentioned in this Title has in

his possession any current coin which is forged, counterfeited or falsified, or

which he knows not to be genuine, shall be liable to the like punishment as if

he had with that intent forged, counterfeited of falsified (as the case may be)

such current coin.

187. Every person who, without lawful authority or excuse (the proof

whereof shall lie on the party accused)-

(a) knowingly makes or mends, or begins or proceeds to

make or mend, or buys or sells, or has in his custody or

possession, any puncheon, counter puncheon, matrix,

stamp, die, pattern or mould, in or upon which there is

made or impressed, or which will make or impress, or

Uttering false

current coin.

Possessing false

current coin.

Making,

mending or

having

possession of

any coining

tools a felony.

False coin.

which shall be adapted and intended to make or

impress, the figure, stamp or apparent resemblance of

both or either of the sides of any current coin or any

part or parts of both or either of the sides of any

current coin or any part or parts of both or either of

such sides,

(b) makes or mends or begins or proceeds to make or

mend, or buys or sells or has in his custody or

possession, any edger, edging or other tool, collar,

instrument or engine adapted and intended for the

marking of current coin round the edges with letters,

grainings or other marks or figures apparently

resembling those on the edges of any such coin as in

this section aforesaid, knowing the same to be so

adapted and intended as aforesaid, or

(c) makes or mends or begins or proceeds to make or

mend, or buys or sells or has in his custody or

possession, any press for coinage, or any cutting engine

for cutting by force of a screw or of any other

contrivance, round blanks out of gold, silver or other

metal, or mixture of metals, or any other machine,

knowing such press for coinage or knowing such engine

or machine to have been used or to be intended to be

used for or in order to the false making or

counterfeiting of any current coin,

shall be guilty of felony, and being convicted thereof shall be liable to

imprisonment for any term not exceeding five years.

188. Where any-

(a) forged or counterfeit current coin, or any machinery,

Forged or

counterfeited

coin, etc., to be

delivered to the

Governor of the

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implement, utensil or material used or intended to be

used for the forging of current coin, or

(b) forged or counterfeit currency note, or any machinery,

implement, utensil or material used or intended to be

used for the forging of currency notes,

is lawfully seized under a warrant granted in pursuance of this Code or

otherwise, the current coin, currency notes, machinery, implement, utensil or

material as the case may be, shall, notwithstanding anything to the contrary,

be delivered up to the Managing Director of the Governor of the Central

Bank of Belize or to any person authorized by him for the purpose, by order

of the court before which the offender is tried or, if there is no trial, by order

of a magistrate.

189. Every person who, without due authority or excuse (the proof

whereof shall lie on the person accused) makes or has in his possession for

sale, offers for sale, or sells, any medal, cast coin, or other like thing made

wholly or partially of metal or any metallic combination and resembling in

size, figure and colour any current coin, or having thereon a device

resembling any device on any current coin, or being so formed that it can by

gilding, silvering, colouring, washing or other like process, be so dealt with as

to resemble any current coin, shall be guilty of a misdemeanour, and on being

convicted, shall be liable on conviction either on indictment or summarily to

be imprisoned for any term not exceeding one year.

190. Every person who, without lawful authority, defaces any current coin

is guilty of a misdemeanour.

191.-(1) Every person who utters any current coin which has been defaced

shall, on summary conviction, be liable to a fine not exceeding fifty dollars.

(2) No proceedings shall be instituted under this section without

the consent of the Director of Public Prosecutions.

Punishment for

selling medals

resembling

current coin.

Damaging

current coin.

Uttering

damaged coins.

Central Bank of

Belize.

(3) A conviction for an offence under this section shall not be

removed by certiorari into the Supreme Court and shall not be quashed for

want of form.

192. Every person who unlawfully has in his possession any filing or

clipping, or any gold or silver bullion, or any gold or silver in dust, solution

or otherwise, which has been produced or obtained by impairing,

diminishing or lightening any current coin, knowing that it has been so

produced or obtained, shall be guilty of felony and on conviction thereof

liable to imprisonment for a term not exceeding seven years.

193. Every person who forges or counterfeits or alters any currency

notes, or any word, figure, mark, sign, signature or facsimile upon or

attached to any such note, or offers, utters, disposes of or puts off any

currency note, knowing the same to be forged or counterfeited or altered,

shall be guilty of an offence and shall on conviction be liable to imprisonment

for any term not exceeding ten years.

194.-(1) If any person makes or causes to be made or uses for any

purpose whatever or utters any document purporting to be or in any way

resembling or so nearly resembling as to be calculated to deceive any

currency note or any part thereof he shall be liable on summary conviction in

respect of each such document to a fine not exceeding twenty-five dollars

and it shall be lawful for the court to order the document in respect of which

the offence was committed and any copies of that document and any plates,

blocks, dies or other instrument used for or capable of being used for

printing or reproducing any such document, which are in the possession of

such offender, to be destroyed.

(2) If any person whose name appears on any document the

making of which is an offence under this section refuses to disclose to a

police officer the name and address of the person by whom it was printed

or made he shall be liable on summary conviction to a fine not exceeding

fifty dollars.

Impairing current

coin and unlawful

possession of

filings, etc.

Forgery of

currency notes.

Imitation of

currency notes.

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(3) Where the name of any person appears on any document in

respect of which any person is charged with an offence under this Title, or on

any other document used or distributed in connection with that document, it

shall be prima facie evidence that that person caused the document to be

made.

195. Every person who, without lawful authority or excuse (the proof

whereof shall lie on the person accused), has in his possession, knowing the

same to be forged, counterfeited or altered, any forged, counterfeited or

altered currency note or any unfinished or incomplete note shall be guilty of

an offence, and shall on conviction be liable to imprisonment for a term not

exceeding ten years.

196. Every person who, without lawful authority or excuse (the proof

whereof shall lie on the person accused), makes use of or knowingly has in

his possession any paper with any word, figure, device or distinction peculiar

to and appearing in the substance of the paper used for currency notes or

any material upon which the whole or part of any note purporting to resemble

a currency note shall have been engraved or made or any facsimile of the

signature of any person whose signature lawfully appears on notes still in

circulation, shall be guilty of an offence, and shall on conviction be liable to

imprisonment for a term not exceeding five years.

197. Every person who, without lawful authority or excuse (the proof

whereof shall lie on the person accused), mutilates, cuts, tears, or perforates

with holes any currency note or in anyway defaces a currency note whether

by writing, printing, drawing or stamping thereon, or by attaching or affixing

thereto anything in the nature or form of an advertisement shall be liable on

summary conviction to a fine not exceeding two hundred and fifty dollars.

198. Every person who without lawful authority or excuse (the proof

whereof shall lie on the accused)-

(a) makes, uses or knowingly has in his custody or

Possession of

counterfeited or

incomplete

notes.

Possession of

paper for notes.

Mutilating or

defacing

currency notes.

Making or

having in

possession

paper or

implements for

forgery.

possession any paper intended to resemble and pass as

the special paper used in the manufacture of currency

notes;

(b) makes, uses or knowingly has in his custody or

possession, any frame, mould or instrument for making

such paper, or for producing in or on such paper any

words, figures, letters, marks, lines or devices peculiar

to and used in or on any such paper;

(c) engraves or in anywise makes upon any plate, wood,

stone or other material, any words, figures, letters,

marks, lines or devices, the print whereof resembles in

whole or in part any words, figures, letters, marks, lines

or devices peculiar to and used in or on any currency

note;

(d) uses or knowingly has in his custody or possession any

plate, wood, stone, or other material, upon which any

such words, figures, letters, marks, lines or devices

have been engraved or in anywise made as aforesaid;

(e) uses or knowingly has in his custody or possession any

paper upon which any such words, figures, letters,

marks, lines or devices have been printed or in anywise

made as aforesaid,

shall be guilty of an offence, and on conviction thereof be liable to

imprisonment for a term not exceeding five years.

199. Every person who with intent to defraud forges or counterfeits any

hall-mark, or mark appointed under authority of law by any corporation or

public officer, to denote the weight, fineness or age, or place of

manufacture, of any gold or silver plate or bullion, shall be liable to

imprisonment for two years.

Forging hall-

marks.

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200. Every person who forges or counterfeits any trade-mark, or marks

with a forged or counterfeited trade-mark any goods or anything used in or

about or in connection with the sale of any goods, or sells or offers for sale

any goods or such thing so marked, or has in his possession, custody or

control, any goods or such thing so marked, or any materials or means

prepared or contrived for the forging or counterfeiting of any trade-mark, or

for the marking of any goods or thing therewith, intending in any such case as

aforesaid fraudulently to pass off or to enable any other person fraudulently

to pass off any goods as having been lawfully marked with such trade-mark,

or as being of a character signified by such trade-mark shall be liable, on

conviction either on indictment or otherwise, to imprisonment for three

months.

201. Every person who, with intent to defraud, counterfeits or forges any

die, stamp or impression or imports or exports or has in his possession,

custody, power or control any counterfeited or forged die, stamp or

impression used by the Financial Secretary to denote that the duty payable

under any Act, has been paid, shall be liable to imprisonment for any term not

exceeding ten years.

Definitions and Special Provisions Relating to the Matter of this

Title

202.-(1) The following provisions apply with respect to forgery, namely-

(a) A person forges a document if he makes or alters such

document or any material part thereof with intent to

cause it to be believed either-

(i) that such document or part has been so made or

altered by any person who did not in fact so

make or alter it; or

(ii) that such document or part has been so made or

Forging trade-

marks.

Forgery of dies

and stamps.

Forgery

explained.

altered with the authority or consent of any

person who did not in fact give such authority

or consent; or

(iii) that such document or part has been so made

or altered at a time different from that at which

it was in fact so made or altered:

Provided that a person who issues or uses any document which is

exhausted or cancelled, with intent that it may pass or have effect as if it

were not exhausted or cancelled, shall be deemed guilty of forging it.

(b) The making or alteration of a document or part thereof

by a person in his own name may be forgery if the

making or alteration be with either of the intents

mentioned in this section.

(c) The making or alteration of a document or part thereof

by a person in a name which is not his real or ordinary

name is not forgery unless the making or alteration be

with one or other of the intents mentioned in this

section.

(d) It is immaterial whether the person by whom or with

whose authority or consent a document or part thereof

purports to have been made, or is intended to be

believed to have been made, be living or dead or be a

fictitious person.

(e) Every word, letter, figure, mark, seal or thing expressed

on or in a document, or forming part thereof, or

attached thereto, and any colouring, shape or device

used therein which purports to indicate the person by

whom or by whose authority or consent a document or

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part thereof has been made, altered, executed,

delivered, attested, verified, certified or issued, or which

may affect the purport, operation or validity of the

document in any material particular, is a material part of

such document.

(f) "Alteration" includes any cancelling, erasure, severance,

interlineation or transposition, of or in a document, or of

or in any material part thereto, and any other act or

device whereby the purport, operation or validity of the

document may be affected.

(2) All the provisions of this section apply with respect to the

forgery of a stamp or trade-mark in the same manner as with respect to the

forgery of any document.

203. In this Title-

"banknote" includes any note or bill of exchange of the Bank of England or of

any other person, body corporate, or company carrying on the business of

banking in any part of the world, and includes "bank bill", “bank post bill",

"blank bank note", "blank bank bill of exchange" and "blank bank post bill";

"current coin" means any gold or silver coin or any other coin of any metal or

mixed metal coined in or for any of Her Majesty's mints, or lawfully current

by virtue of any proclamation or otherwise in any part of Her Majesty's

dominions, whether within Belize or otherwise or lawfully current in any

foreign country;

"official document" means any document purporting to be made, used or

issued by any public officer for any purpose relating to his office;

"currency notes" means currency notes issued by the Board of

Commissioners of Currency under the provisions of the Currency Notes

Current coin,

official document

and currency not

defined.

Ch. 50,

R.L., 1958.

Ordinance, or by the Directors of the Central Bank of Belize under the

provisions of the Central Bank of Belize Act, and any bank note and any

notes issued by or on behalf of the Government of any country outside

Belize and which are legal tender in the country in which they were issued.

204. A person “counterfeits” a stamp, current coin or mark if he makes

an imitation thereof, or anything which is intended to pass or which may

pass as such stamp, current coin or mark, and if a person makes anything

which is intended to serve as a specimen or pattern or trial of any process

for counterfeiting a stamp, current coin or mark, whether the counterfeiting

has or has not been finished or perfected, he shall be deemed to be guilty of

counterfeiting within the meaning of this Title, although he does not purpose

that any person should be defrauded or injured by, or that any further use

should be made of, such specimen or pattern.

205. A person “falsifies” a current coin of any metal, coinage,

denomination, date or country if he removes or adds thereto any such part

thereof, or if by any means he so alters it, whether permanently or

temporarily, and whether in substance or appearance, as that it may pass for

a current coin of a different metal, coinage, denomination, date or country.

206. A person “defaces” any current coin if he stamps thereon any names

or words, whether the coin is or is not thereby diminished or lightened.

207.-(1) A person possesses or does any act with respect to a document

knowing the same not to be genuine, if he possesses it, or does such act

with respect to it, knowing that it was not in fact made or altered at the time,

or by the person, or with the authority or consent of the person, at which or

by whom, or with whose authority or consent, it purports or is pretended by

him to have been made or altered, and in such case it is immaterial whether

the act of the person who made or altered it was or was not a crime.

(2) In like manner a person possesses or does any act with

respect to a stamp or current coin knowing the same not to be genuine, if he

CAP. 262.

Counterfeiting

defined.

Falsification

defined.

Defacing defined.

Explanation.

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possesses it or does such act with respect to it knowing that it is in fact

counterfeit or falsified, and in such case it is immaterial whether the act of the

person who counterfeited or falsified it was or was not a crime.

208. For the purposes of this Title relating to the forgery, counterfeiting,

falsifying, uttering, dealing with, using or possessing of any document, stamp,

current coin, currency note or trade-mark, it is not necessary that such

document, stamp, current coin, currency note or trade-mark should be so

complete or should be capable of being made so complete, as to be valid or

effectual for any of the purposes of a thing of the kind which it purports or is

intended to be or to represent, or as to deceive a person of ordinary

judgment and observation.

209. For the purposes of the provisions of this Title relating to possessing

or to doing any act with respect to a document, stamp, current coin, currency

note or trade-mark which is forged, counterfeited or falsified, or which is not

genuine, it is immaterial whether such document, stamp, current coin,

currency note, or trade-mark has been forged, counterfeited, falsified, made

or altered beyond or within the jurisdiction of the courts.

210.-(1) A person shall be deemed to be a common forger if he is proved to

have used or abetted the use of any means specially adapted or contrived for

purposes of forgery, or if he be convicted of any forgery punishable on

indictment under this Title, after having been convicted of any crime

punishable on indictment under this Title, or if he is proved to have had in his

possession, custody or control, at the same or at different times, two or more

documents which he knew to have been forged, and by means of which he

purposed to commit any crimes punishable on indictment under this Title.

(2) A person shall be deemed to be a common coiner if he is

proved to have used or abetted the use of any means specially adapted or

contrived for purposes of committing any crime with respect to current coin

or currency notes, or if he is convicted of any crime with respect to current

coin or currency notes, after having been convicted of any crime punishable

Forcible entry.

Imitation need

not be perfect.

Jurisdiction.

Common forger

or coiner

defined.

on indictment under his Title, or if he is proved to have had in his

possession, custody or control, at the same or at different times, three or

more coins or currency notes which he knew to have been counterfeited or

falsified, and by means of which he purposed to commit any crime

punishable under this Title.

211.-(1) “Trade-mark” means any mark, label, ticket or other sign or

devise, lawfully appropriated by any person as a means for denoting that

any article of trade, manufacture, or merchandise is an article of the

manufacture, workmanship, production or merchandise of any person, or is

an article of any peculiar or particular description made or sold by any

person and also means any mark, sign or device which, in pursuance of any

statute relating to registered designs, is to be put or placed upon, or

attached to, any article during the existence or continuance of any copyright

or other peculiar right in respect thereof.

(2) A mark, label, ticket or other sign or device shall not be

deemed to be lawfully appropriated by a person, within the meaning of this

section, unless it be of such a kind and so appropriated as that an injunction

or other process would be granted by the Supreme Court to restrain the use

thereof by a person without the consent of the person by whom it is so

appropriated, or that action might be maintained by such last mentioned

person against any other person making use thereof without his consent.

TITLE XIII

Crimes Against Public Order

Crimes Against the Safety of the State

212. Every person who prepares or endeavours by armed force, or the

show of armed force, to procure an alteration in the Government or laws, or

to resist the execution of the laws, or to compel the Governor-General, or

any member of the National Assembly or the Cabinet, or any person in

Trade-mark

defined.

Armed force

against the

Government.

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command of any Naval, Military or Air Forces, or of any peace officers, to

do or to abstain from doing any act of a public or official character, shall be

liable to imprisonment for life.

213. Every person who is guilty of seditious libel, or of having been a party

to a seditious assembly, shall be liable to imprisonment for two years.

214.-(1) Every person who-

(a) conspires with any other person or persons to do any

act in furtherance of any seditious intention common to

both or all of them; or

(b) publishes any words or document with a seditious

intention; or

(c) without lawful excuse, is found in possession of a

document containing a seditious intention,

shall be liable on conviction on indictment to imprisonment for two years and

on summary conviction to imprisonment for one year.

(2) No proceedings shall be instituted under this section without

the consent of the Director of Public Prosecutions.

(3) For the purposes of this section "publish"-

(a) in the case of spoken words, means to utter words or

reproduce words by mechanical means at a public

gathering or in a public street or any other place to

which the public has access, or in such a way that they

may be heard by persons in any street or place;

(b) in the case of writings, drawings, pictures, photographs

Seditious libels

and assemblies.

Seditious

conspiracy.

or images, means to distribute them to a number of

persons, or exhibit them in such a way that they may be

seen by persons in a public street or in any other place

to which the public has access, or to sell or expose or

offer them for sale in any place.

215.-(1) For the purposes of section 214, a “seditious intention” is an

intention-

(a) to bring into hatred or contempt or to excite

disaffection against the person of Her Majesty, or

against the Governor-General in his official capacity or

the Government of Belize, as by law established or the

administration of justice; or

(b) to incite or excite inhabitants of Belize to attempt to

procure the alteration otherwise than by lawful means

of any matter in Belize by law established; or

(c) to raise discontent or disaffection amongst inhabitants

of Belize; or

(d) to promote feelings of ill-will and hostility between

different sections of the population of Belize.

(2) Words which by inference, suggestion, allusion or implication

are likely to have any of the effects described in subsection (1) shall raise a

presumption that the person by whom such words were published,

published them with a seditious intention, but such presumption may be

rebutted by such person upon proof by him that he had no intention, in

publishing such words, of bringing about any such effect.

(3) For the purposes of proving seditious intention it shall be

lawful for the prosecution to prove that the defendant has published on other

Seditious

intention.

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occasion words which are the same as those alleged to have a seditious

intention or other words having a seditious intention provided that in the latter

case, the words used expressly referred to the same matter as that to which

the words alleged to have a seditious intention refer.

(4) It shall be no defence to a charge under section 214 that the

words alleged to have a seditious intention are true.

(5) It shall be lawful for any person to endeavour in good faith to

show-

(a) that Her Majesty or the Government of Belize have been

misled or mistaken in any of their measures; or

(b) that there are errors or defects in the constitution or

Government of Belize as by law established or in the

administration of justice.

216. On the trial of any person as principal for publication by his agent of

words alleged to have a seditious intention as defined in section 215, such

person shall be entitled to be discharged if he proves that -

(a) the publication was made without his authority, consent

or knowledge; and

(b) the publication did not arise from any want of due care

or caution on his part; and

(c) he did everything in his power to assist in ascertaining

the identity of the person responsible for writing and

publishing respectively such words.

217. Every person who with intent to bring Her Majesty into hatred,

ridicule or contempt, publishes any defamatory or insulting matter, whether by

On proof of

certain facts

principal not

liable for the acts

of his agents.

Defaming Her

Majesty.

writing, print, word of mouth or in any other manner concerning Her

Majesty, is guilty of a misdemeanour.

218. Every person who-

(a) intentionally and unlawfully aids or permits the escape

of prisoner of war shall be liable to imprisonment for

ten years;

(b) negligently and unlawfully permits the escape of a

prisoner of war shall be liable to imprisonment for two

years.

219. Every person who, not being subject to any Articles of War or

Articles of the Navy or the Air Force, abets the commission of mutiny by a

person subject to such Articles, shall be liable to imprisonment for twenty

years.

220. Every person who, not being subject to any Articles of War or

Articles of the Navy or the Air Force, abets the desertion of any person

subject to such Articles, or the commission by any such person of any

assault upon a superior officer being in the execution of his office, shall be

liable to imprisonment for two years.

221. Every person who, not being subject to any Articles of War or

Articles of the Navy or the Air Force, abets any act of insubordination by

any person subject to such Articles, shall be liable on conviction on

indictment or summarily to imprisonment for six months.

222. If three or more persons meet or be together for purposes of

military training or exercise without the permission of the Governor-General,

or of some officer or person authorised by law to give such permission,

each of them is guilty of a misdemeanour.

Aiding escape of

prisoner of war.

Abetment of

mutiny.

Abetment of

desertion.

Abetment of

insubordination.

Unlawful training.

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223. Every person who causes harm to himself, or procures any other

person to cause harm to him, for the purpose of evading any liability to

perform Naval, Military or Air Force service or duty, shall be liable to

imprisonment for two years.

224. Every person who takes, or administers or attempts or offers to

administer to any other person, any unlawful oath, shall be liable to

imprisonment for five years.

Definition and Special Provisions Relating to the Matter of this

Title

225.-(1) For the purposes of this Title-

"escape" includes the departure by a prisoner on parole beyond the limits

within which he is allowed to be at large;

"seditious assembly" is an assembly of five or more persons with a seditious

purpose, or at which any seditious libel is published, or at which any

speeches are made with a seditious purpose;

"seditious libel" is the publication, by print, writing, painting or by any means

otherwise than solely by gestures, spoken words or other sounds, of any

matter with a seditious purpose;

"seditious purpose" means a purpose to excite any of Her Majesty's subjects

to the obtaining by force or other unlawful means of an alteration in the laws

or in the form of Government, or to the commission of any crime punishable

under the first section of this Title or punishable under any law relating to

treason;

"unlawful oath" means any oath or engagement to commit or abet any crime,

or to conceal a design to commit any crime, or to prevent the discovery of

any crime, or the conviction of any person for any crime, and any oath or

Fictitious suits.

Evasion of

military service.

Unlawful oaths.

Interpretation.

29 of 1989.

engagement to conceal the existence, purposes or proceedings of any

association of persons associated for any treasonable or seditious purpose.

(2) A seditious libel cannot be justified on any ground of absolute

or qualified privilege.

TITLE XIV

Crimes Against the Public Peace

226. Every person who takes part in a riot is guilty of a misdemeanour.

227. Every person who takes part in a riot, being armed with any

offensive instrument, shall be liable to imprisonment for two years.

228. Every person who in rioting is guilty of any felony punishable under

any of the Titles VII to IX (both inclusive) or X and XI shall be liable to

imprisonment for a term which may exceed by three years the term to which

he would otherwise be liable under the provisions of that Title.

229. If any persons assemble or be together with a purpose of

committing a riot, each of them is guilty of a misdemeanour.

230. Every person who does any act with intent to provoke a riot is guilty

of a misdemeanour.

231. If a proclamation be made commanding the persons engaged in a

riot, or assembled with the purpose of committing a riot, to disperse, every

person who, at or after the expiration of one hour from the making of such

proclamation, takes or continues to take part in the riot or assembly, shall be

liable to imprisonment for five years.

232. If any person forcibly prevents or obstructs the making of such

proclamation as mentioned in section 231, he shall be liable to imprisonment

Riot.

Rioting with

weapons.

Riot and felony.

Unlawful

assembly.

Provocation of

riot.

Rioting after

proclamation.

Obstructing

proclamation.

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for ten years, and if the making of the proclamation be so prevented, every

person, who, knowing that it has been so prevented, takes part or continues

to take part in the riot or assembly, shall be liable to imprisonment for five

years.

233. Every person who assaults any magistrate, justice of the peace,

officer or person, executing any duty or authority for the suppression of a

riot, or for the dispersion or arrest of any persons engaged in a riot, or

assembled with the purpose of committing a riot, shall be liable to

imprisonment for five years.

234. Every person who with violence makes entry into any building or

land, whether he be entitled to the possession thereof or not, is guilty of a

misdemeanour, unless he do so in pursuance of a warrant or other lawful

authority to use such violence.

235. Every person, who being unlawfully in or upon any building or land

maintains or attempts to maintain his possession or occupation thereof with

violence, is guilty of a misdemeanour.

236. Every person who-

(a) does any act with intent to provoke another person to

fight (whether in a public place or not) with any deadly

or dangerous instrument,

(b) agrees or offers to agree so to fight,

shall be liable to imprisonment for two years.

237. If two or more persons together in any public place openly carry,

without lawful cause, any deadly or dangerous instruments with intent to

cause terror to any member of the public, each of them shall be liable on

summary conviction to imprisonment for one month.

Assaulting

magistrate, etc.,

in riot.

Forcible entry.

Forcible detainer.

Provocation to

fight.

Unlawfully

carrying arms.

238. Every person who threatens any person with death with intent to put

that person in fear of death or grievous harm is guilty of a misdemenour.

239. Every person who by writing threatens any person with death or

grievous harm, shall be liable to imprisonment for five years.

240. Every person who uses any violence with intent to deter any person

from acting in any manner as a judge, magistrate, juror, witness, counsel,

agent, prosecutor or party, in any legal proceeding or inquiry, or from acting

in execution of his duty as a magistrate or peace officer, or in any judicial or

official capacity, or from having recourse to any court or public officer, or on

account of his having so acted or had recourse, is guilty of a misdemeanour,

and shall be liable to imprisonment for two years.

241. Every person who unlawfully and with violence obstructs the

assembly of any persons for any lawful purpose, or disturbs any such

assembly, or with violence disperses or attempts to disperse any such

assembly is guilty of a misdemeanour.

242. Every person who with violence or by deceit hinders or obstructs

any public or peace officer acting or proceeding to act in the execution of

any public office or duty, or in the execution of any warrant or legal process,

is guilty of a misdemeanour.

243. Every person who for the purpose of compelling a person to

conduct himself in a particular manner in respect of his business or

employment, or to do any act, or to abstain from doing any lawful act of any

kind, injures, removes or conceals any tools, materials or other things used

by him in his business or employment, or uses any violence to him or to any

other person, shall be liable on summary conviction to imprisonment for six

months.

244.-(1) Every person who in any public place, or being unlawfully in

Violence against

judges, witnesses,

etc.

Threats of death

or grievous harm.

Written threats.

Disturbance of

lawful assemblies.

Obstructing

public officers.

Obstructing

lawful acts by

violence, etc.

Causing public

terror.

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any place not public, wantonly does any act with intent to cause terror to any

person or persons shall, if harm be thereby caused to any person, or if his act

was of such a character as to be likely to cause harm to any person by terror,

be liable on summary conviction to imprisonment for three months.

(2) For the purposes of this section harm shall in this case be

deemed to have been caused by the act, although the harm be the mere

inward effect of the terror caused by the act.

Definitions and Special Provisions Relating to the Matter of this

Title

245.-(1) If five or more persons together in any public or private place

commence or attempt to do either of the following things, namely-

(a) to execute any common purpose with violence and

without lawful authority to use such violence for that

purpose; or

(b) to execute a common purpose of obstructing or resisting

the execution of any legal process or authority; or

(c) to facilitate by force or by show of force or of numbers

the commission of any crime,

they are guilty of a riot.

(2) Persons are not guilty of a riot by reason only that they, to the

number of five or more, suddenly engage in an unlawful fight, unless five or

more of them fight with a common purpose against some other person or

persons.

246. Any magistrate, or in the absence of any magistrate any

commissioned officer in Her Majesty's Naval, Military or Air Force Service

Riot defined.

Proclamation,

how to be made.

or any police officer above the rank of inspector, in whose view a riot is

being committed, or who apprehends that a riot is about to be committed by

persons being assembled within his view, may make or cause to be made a

proclamation in the Queen's name, in such form as he thinks fit, commanding

the rioters or persons so assembled to disperse peaceably.

247. Upon the expiration of such time (after a proclamation is made, or

after the making of a proclamation has been prevented by force) or such

time as shall be sufficient for persons riotously assembled together to

disperse peaceably, any person authorised to make a proclamation, or any

peace officer, or any other person acting in aid of such person or officer,

may do all things necessary for dispersing the persons so continuing

assembled, or for apprehending them or any of them, and if any person

make resistance, may use all such force as is reasonably necessary for

overcoming such resistance, and shall not be liable in any criminal or civil

proceeding for having by use of such force caused harm or death to any

person.

248. For the purposes of this Title "violence" means any criminal force or

harm to any person, or any criminal damage to any property, or any threat

or offer of such force, harm or damage, or the carrying or use of deadly,

dangerous or offensive instruments in such a manner as that terror is likely to

be caused to any persons, or such conduct as is likely to cause in any

persons a reasonable apprehension of criminal force, harm or damage to

them or their property.

TITLE XV

Perjury and Obstruction of Public Justice

1. Perjury and Other Crimes Relating to Evidence and to

Judicial Proceedings

249. Every person who commits perjury or abets perjury shall be liable

Dispersion of

rioters.

Violence defined.

Perjury.

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to imprisonment for ten years.

250. Every person who commits perjury or abets perjury, with intent to

cause the conviction of any person for a crime punishable with death, shall be

liable to imprisonment for life.

251. Every person who commits perjury or abets perjury, with intent to

cause the conviction of any person for any crime not capital, shall be liable to

imprisonment for fourteen years or for any greater term to which such person

would, on conviction of that crime, be liable.

252. If any person knowingly and wilfully makes (otherwise than on oath)

a statement false in a material particular, and the statement is made-

(a) in a statutory declaration, or

(b) in an abstract, account, application, balance sheet,

book, certificate, declaration, entry, estimate, inventory,

notice, report, return or other document which he is

authorised or required to make, attest, verify or keep or

cause to be kept by, under or in pursuance of any Act or

other law for the time being in force, or

(c) in any oral declaration or oral answer which he is

required to make by, under or in pursuance of any Act

or other law for the time being in force,

he shall be guilty of a misdemeanour and be liable on conviction thereof to

imprisonment for any term not exceeding two years, or to a fine not

exceeding five hundred dollars, or to both such fine and term of

imprisonment.

Perjury on trial

for capital

crimes.

Perjury on trial

for other crimes.

False statutory

declarations and

other false

statements

without oath.

253. Every person who commits perjury or abets perjury, in furtherance

of any purpose or conspiracy to defraud by personation, shall be liable to

imprisonment for life.

254. Every person who fabricates false evidence, with intent to defeat,

obstruct or pervert, the course of justice in any proceeding, shall be liable to

the same penalties as if he had committed perjury in that proceeding.

255.-(1) Every person who, having given evidence on oath at a preliminary

inquiry-

(a) wilfully gives at the trial evidence which contradicts the

evidence given by him upon the same subject-matter at

the preliminary inquiry, or

(b) wilfully varies or alters at the trial the evidence given by

him upon the same subject-matter at the preliminary

inquiry,

with intent unlawfully to shield or injure any person, or to deceive the court

or to defeat, obstruct or pervert the course of justice, shall be guilty of a

misdemeanour punishable either on indictment or summarily:

Provided that the punishment on summary conviction shall not exceed

imprisonment for six months.

(2) Upon the trial of any person for a crime under this section, it

shall not be necessary to prove the falsity of the evidence given either at the

preliminary inquiry or at the trial.

(3) No complaint or information for a crime under this section

shall be laid without the consent in writing of the Director of Public

Prosecutions.

Fabrication of

evidence.

Contradicting

previous

evidence.

Perjury for the

purpose of

defrauding by

personation.

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256. Every person who intentionally and unlawfully falsifies, destroys,

injures, removes or conceals, any public register of marriages, births,

baptisms, deaths or burials, or any other public register or record, with intent

to defeat, obstruct or pervert the course of justice, or to defraud or injure any

person shall be liable to imprisonment for seven years.

257. Every person who intentionally and unlawfully destroys, injures,

removes or conceals, any will, or any document of title to land, with intent to

defeat, obstruct, or pervert the course of justice or to defraud or injure any

person, shall be liable to imprisonment for life.

258. Every person who unlawfully, with intent to defeat, obstruct or

pervert the course of justice, or to defraud or injure any person, removes,

conceals, injures or alters, any instrument or document used or intended to

be used in any judicial proceeding, shall be liable to imprisonment for two

years.

259. Every person who acknowledges or consents to any judgment or

confession or cause of action, or any deed to be enrolled, or any

recognisance or bail (whether the same be filed or not), in the name of any

other person without his consent is guilty of a felony.

260. Every person who with intent to defeat, obstruct or pervert the

course of justice, or to defraud or injure any person, endeavours to deceive

any court or judicial officer by personation, or by any false instrument,

document, seal or signature, shall be liable to imprisonment for two years.

261. Every person who fraudulently brings any action against another

person in a false or fictitious name, having no ground for such action, is guilty

of a misdemeanour.

262. Every person who in any manner wilfully causes any person to disobey

any summons, subpoena or order, for his attendance as a witness in any

proceeding, or for the production by him of any written or other evidence in

Destruction of

will, etc.

Destruction of

official

documents.

Fraudulent

acknowledgement.

Deceit of courts.

Fictitious suits.

Keeping away

witnesses.

Destruction of

evidence.

any judicial proceeding, is guilty of a misdemeanour.

263. Every person who with intent to defeat, obstruct or pervert the course

of justice at the trial of any person for any crime, in any manner causes any

person to refrain from giving evidence at such trial is guilty of a

misdemeanour.

264. Every person who without reasonable excuse makes default in

obeying any warrant, summons, process or order, lawfully issued or made

for requiring his attendance as a witness at any judicial proceeding, or the

production or giving of any evidence or thing at any judicial proceeding, is

guilty of a misdemeanour punishable either on indictment or summarily:

Provided that the punishment on summary conviction shall not

exceed three months' imprisonment.

265. Every person who with intent to prevent, obstruct or delay the

taking of any inquest upon the body or touching the death of any person, or

to defeat the ends of justice, buries or in any manner conceals or disposes

of such body, shall be liable to imprisonment for two years.

266. Every person who being under a duty as a magistrate, coroner,

gaoler, overseer, peace officer or in any other capacity, to give notice or

take any measure in order to the holding of any inquest upon the body or

touching the death of any person, wilfully or negligently fails to perform such

duty, shall be liable to imprisonment for two years.

267. Every person who with force, threats or tumult, hinders, interrupts

or disturbs the proceedings of any court, or wilfully and unlawfully with

force, threats or tumult, hinders any person from entering or quitting any

court, or removes him therefrom, or detains him therein, shall be liable to

imprisonment for two years.

268. Every person who, pending any proceedings in any court, publishes

Disobedience to

summons.

Hindrance of

inquests.

Neglect to hold

inquests.

Disturbance of

court.

Exciting prejudice

as to a trial.

Suppression of

evidence on

criminal trial.

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in writing or otherwise anything concerning such proceedings or any party

thereto, with intent to excite any popular prejudice for or against any party to

such proceedings, is guilty of a misdemeanour.

269. Every person who being bound by law to obey any order, warrant,

summons or process made or issued by any court or magistrate, wilfully

neglects without reasonable excuse to obey the same in any material

particular shall, without prejudice to any other punishment or penalty

provided by law, be liable on summary conviction to imprisonment for three

months.

2. Rescue, Escape and Compounding of Crime

270. Every person who endeavours to resist or prevent the execution of

the law-

(a) by resisting the lawful arrest of himself or of any other

person for crime; or

(b) by escaping or permitting himself to be rescued, from

lawful custody for crime; or

(c) by rescuing any other person or aiding any other person

to escape from lawful custody for crime,

shall be liable to-

(i) if the crime is punishable with death or with

imprisonment for more than seven years,

imprisonment for seven years,

(ii) if the crime is punishable with imprisonment for

not more than seven years, imprisonment for five

years,

Contempt of

judicial orders.

Rescue and

escape of

criminals.

(iii) if the crime is a misdemeanour, imprisonment

for one year.

271. Every person who endeavors to resist or prevent the execution of

the law-

(a) by resisting the lawful arrest of himself or of any other

person for any cause other than crime; or

(b) by escaping or permitting himself to be rescued from

lawful custody for any cause other than crime; or

(c) by rescuing any other person from lawful custody for

any cause other than crime; or

(d) by rescuing any goods or things from any public officer

or peace officer having the possession, custody, or care

thereof under or by virtue of any lawful warrant or

process,

is guilty of a misdemeanour punishable summarily or on indictment:

Provided that the punishment on summary conviction shall not

exceed six months' imprisonment.

272. Every person who endeavours by force to prevent the execution of

a person sentenced to death for murder shall be liable to imprisonment for

life.

273. Every person who being lawfully commanded by any magistrate,

public officer, peace officer or person, to give aid for the prevention of

crime, or for arresting any person, or for preventing the rescue or escape of

any person refuses or neglects to give such aid according to his ability, is

guilty of a misdemeanour.

Obstructing

executions.

Rescue in other

cases.

Refusal to aid

officers.

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274. Every person who, knowing or having reason to believe that any

person has committed or has been convicted of a crime, aids, conceals or

harbours such person with the purpose of enabling him to avoid lawful arrest

or the execution of his sentence, shall-

(a) if the crime is punishable with death or with

imprisonment for fourteen years or upwards, be liable to

imprisonment for five years; or

(b) if the crime is a felony other than as aforesaid, be liable

to imprisonment for two years; or

(c) if the crime is a misdemeanour, be liable to imprisonment

for six months.

An offence under this section is punishable either on indictment or

summarily:

Provided that the punishment on summary conviction shall not

exceed imprisonment for six months.

275.-(1) Every person who without the leave of a court compounds any

crime shall-

(a) if the crime is a felony, be liable to imprisonment for two

years; or

(b) if the crime is a misdemeanour, be liable to imprisonment

for six months.

(2) This section shall not apply to any misdemeanour punishable

only on summary conviction.

Compounding

crime.

Harbouring

criminals.

276. Every person who accepts or agrees or offers to accept reward

under pretence or on account of restoring to any person, or of helping any

person to recover, anything which has been appropriated by any crime

punishable under Title XI, upon the terms or with the understanding that

such crime shall be compounded, shall, if the crime be punishable on

summary conviction, be liable on summary conviction to imprisonment for

three months, or shall in any other case be liable to imprisonment for six

months.

Definitions and Special Provisions Relating to the Matter of this

Title

277.-(1) A person is guilty of perjury if in any written or oral statement

made or verified by him upon oath before any court or public officer, he

states anything which he knows to be false, or which he has no reason to

believe to be true, with intent to defeat, pervert or obstruct the course of

justice or the execution of the law, or with intent to defraud or injure any

person.

(2) "Oath" includes any form of declaration or affirmation

permitted or prescribed by law to be taken as or in lieu of an oath.

(3) A written or oral statement made or verified by a person

upon oath before a commissioner or commissioners, a referee, arbitrator or

umpire or officer of the court appointed by the court under, or acting

pursuant to, any Act or other law shall be deemed to be made or verified

before the court or a public officer within the meaning of subsection (1).

278. A person can be guilty of perjury by swearing that he believes a

thing which he does not in fact believe.

279. A person fabricates false evidence if he causes any circumstances to

exist, or makes any false entry in any book, account or record, or makes

any document containing a false statement, or forges any document, with

Perjury defined.

Special

explanation.

Fabrication

defined.

Corruptly

accepting reward

for restoring

property, etc.

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intent to mislead any public officer, judge or juror, acting in any judicial

proceeding.

280. A person compounds a crime if he offers or agrees to forebear from

prosecuting or giving evidence against a person on a criminal charge in

consideration of money, or of any advantage whatever to himself or to any

other person.

TITLE XVI

Crimes Relating to Public Offices and Public Elections

281. Every person who without lawful excuse refuses to serve in any

public office in which he is bound to serve, and for the refusal to serve, in

which no penalty or punishment is provided by any statute, is guilty of a

misdemeanour.

282. Every person who pretends to be or acts as a public officer or juror,

not being lawfully authorised to act as such officer or juror, is guilty of a

misdemeanour, unless he shows either-

(a) that he so pretended or acted under a mistake of law or

of fact, or

(b) in the case of a person acting as a public officer, that he

so acted in good faith for the public benefit.

283. Every person who in order that he may obtain or be qualified to act

in any public office, or to vote at a public election, makes, signs, publishes or

uses any declaration, statement or oath, required by law in such case, or any

certificate or testimonial as to his conduct or services, or as to any other

matter which is material for the obtaining by him of such office, or for his

qualification to act in such office, or to vote at such election, shall, if he does

so knowing that such declaration, statement, oath, certificate or testimonial is

Compounding

defined.

Refusal of office.

False pretence of

officer.

False

declarations,

etc., for office.

false in any material particular, be liable to imprisonment for two years.

284. Every public officer or juror who is guilty of corruption or of wilful

oppression or of extortion in respect of the duties of his office, shall be liable

to imprisonment for two years.

285. Every public officer, who being bound or authorised as such officer

to attest or certify by writing or otherwise any document or matter, or that

an event has or has not happened, attests or certifies-

(a) such document or matter knowing it to be false in any

material particular; or

(b) that such event has happened or has not happened (as

the case may be) without knowing or having reason to

believe that the same has happened or has not

happened (as the case may be) according to his

attestation or certificate,

shall be liable to imprisonment for two years.

286. Every public officer who unlawfully and intentionally destroys,

injures, falsifies or conceals any document which is in his possession,

custody or control, or to which he has access by virtue of his office, shall be

liable to imprisonment for two years.

287. Every officer of a prison who-

(a) uses any kind of torture to a prisoner,

(b) is guilty of cruelty to a prisoner,

(c) intentionally and unlawfully causes any harm to a

prisoner,

Corruption,

oppression and

extortion.

False certificates.

Destruction, etc.,

of documents.

Oppression by

gaolers.

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shall be liable to imprisonment for two years.

288. If any public officer who is bound as such officer to pay or account

for any moneys or valuable things, or to produce or give up any documents

or other things, fails to pay or account for, produce or give up the same

according to his duty to any other officer or person lawfully demanding it, he

shall (without prejudice to his liability in any civil proceeding, or to his liability

as for any crime punishable under any other Title) be liable on summary

conviction to imprisonment for three months.

289. Every person who corrupts or attempts to corrupt any person in

respect of any duties as a public officer or juror shall be liable to

imprisonment for two years.

290. Every person who accepts or agrees or offers to accept any valuable

consideration under pretence or colour of having unduly influenced, or of

agreeing or being able so to influence, any person in respect of his duties as a

public officer or juror, is guilty of a misdemeanour.

291. Every person who otherwise than in the due execution of his duties

as a judicial officer or juror, makes or offers to make any agreement with any

person as to the judgment or verdict which he will or will not give as a

judicial officer or juror in any pending or future proceeding, is guilty of a

misdemeanour.

292. Every person who with a purpose of procuring any undue advantage

or disadvantage to any party to any judicial proceeding, procures himself or

any other person to be summoned, empanelled or sworn as a juror in such

proceeding, or endeavours to prevent any other person from being

summoned, empanelled or sworn as a juror in such proceeding, is guilty of a

misdemeanour.

293. Every person who is a party to or abets the making of any unlawful

and corrupt bargain or transaction with respect to an appointment to a public

Withholding

public money,

etc.

Bribery of

officers.

Agreement for

influencing

officers.

Corrupt promise

by judicial

officers or jurors.

Corrupt selection

of jurors.

Unlawful sale of

offices.

office, or with respect to the profits of a public office, shall be liable to

imprisonment for two years.

294. Every person who attempts to prevent, obstruct or disturb any

public election by any kind of force, violence or threats or by any act which

is a crime punishable under this Code, shall be liable to imprisonment for

two years.

295. Every person who is guilty of corruption, intimidation or

personation, in respect of a public election, shall be liable to imprisonment

on indictment or otherwise for six months, and shall during seven years from

the date of his conviction be incapable of voting at any public election and of

holding the public office in respect of which the election was held, or any

public office of the same nature.

296. Every person who votes or offers to vote at a public election at

which he knows that he is not entitled so to vote, or in respect of a

qualification in respect of which he knows that he is not entitled so to vote,

shall be liable on conviction, on indictment or otherwise, to imprisonment for

six months.

297. Every person who forges or falsifies, or unlawfully and intentionally

injures or destroys any voting paper or other similar thing, or unlawfully and

intentionally injures or destroys any ballot box, polling booth or other

apparatus or thing used for the purposes of a public election, shall be liable

to imprisonment for two years.

298. Every person who being a public officer charged with the counting

of votes or the making of a return at a public election, wilfully falsifies the

account of such votes or makes a false return, shall be liable to

imprisonment for five years.

Distrubance of

elections.

Corruption,

intimidation and

personation.

Unlawful voting.

Falsification, etc.,

of votes, etc.

Falsification of

returns.

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Definitions and Special Provisions Relating to the Matter of this

Title

299.-(1) "Public officer" means any person holding any of the following

offices, or performing the duties thereof whether as a deputy or otherwise,

namely-

(a) any civil office, including the office of Governor-General

of Belize, the power of appointing a person to which or

of removing a person from which is vested in Her

Majesty, or in the Governor-General of Belize, or in

any public commission or board;

(b) any office to which a person is nominated or appointed

by statute or by public election;

(c) any civil office, including any commissionerships, the

power of appointing to which or of removing from

which is vested in any person or persons holding public

office of any kind included in either paragraph (a) or

(b);

(d) any office of arbitrator or umpire in any proceeding or

matter submitted to arbitration by order or with the

sanction of any court;

(e) any justice of the peace.

(2) A person acting as a minister of religion or ecclesiastical

officer of whatever denomination is a public officer in so far as he performs

functions in respect of the notification of intended marriage, or in respect of

solemnisation of marriage, or in respect of the making or keeping of any

register or certificate of marriage, birth, baptism, death or burial, but not in

any other respect.

“Public Officer”

defined.

(3) "Civil office" means any public office other than an office in

the Naval, Military or Air Force Service of Her Majesty.

(4) "Judicial officer" means any person executing judicial

functions as a public officer.

(5) "Public office" means the office of any public officer.

(6) It is immaterial for the purposes of this section whether a

person is or is not entitled to any salary or other remuneration in respect to

the duties of his office.

(7) "Public election" means any election the qualification for

voting at which, or the mode of voting at which, is determined by or

regulated by law.

300. For the purpose of section 293, "corrupt bargain or transaction"

includes any agreement for the giving or receipt by any person of any

valuable consideration for nominating or appointing a person to an office, or

for procuring, soliciting or recommending the nomination or appointment of

a person to an office, or for resigning or procuring the resignation of an

office, or for any promise, offer or endeavour to do any such act as

hereinbefore in this section mentioned, and includes any agreement for

paying to any person, or permitting any person to retain or receive, the

whole or any part of the salary, fees or other remuneration or benefits of an

office.

301. A person is guilty of corrupting a public officer, juror or voter, in

respect of the duties of his office, or in respect of his vote, if he endeavours

directly or indirectly to influence the conduct of such public officer, juror or

voter in respect of the duties of his office, or in respect of his vote, by the

gift, promise or prospect of any valuable consideration to be received by

such public officer, juror or voter, or by any other person from any person

whoever.

Corrupt bargains

or transactions.

Corruption of

officer, etc.,

explained.

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302. A public officer, juror or voter is guilty of corruption in respect of the

duties of his office or vote if he directly or indirectly agrees or offers to permit

his conduct as such officer, juror or voter to be influenced by the gift,

promise or prospect of any valuable consideration to be received by him or

by any other person from any person whoever.

303. It is immaterial for the purposes of either section 301 or section 302

that the person respecting whose conduct the endeavour, agreement or offer

therein mentioned is made is not yet at the time of the making of such

endeavour, agreement or offer such a public officer, juror or voter if the

endeavour, agreement or offer be made in the expectation that he will or may

become or act as such officer, juror or voter.

304. It is immaterial for the purposes of sections 301 to 303 whether the act

to be done by a person in consideration or in pursuance of any such gift, promise,

prospect, agreement or offer as therein mentioned be in any manner criminal or

wrongful otherwise than by reason of the provisions of the said sections.

305. If after a person has done any act as a public officer, juror or voter,

he secretly accepts or agrees or offers secretly to accept, for himself or for

any other person, any valuable consideration on account of such act, he shall

be presumed, until the contrary is shown, to have been guilty of corruption

within the meaning of this Title in respect of such act before the doing thereof.

306. If after a public officer, juror or voter, has done any act as a public

officer, juror or voter, any other person secretly agrees or offers to give or

procure for him or for any other person any valuable consideration on

account of such act, the person so agreeing or offering shall be presumed,

until the contrary is shown, to have been guilty of having before the doing of

such act corrupted such public officer, juror or voter, in respect of such act.

307. In this Title, "valuable consideration" includes any money, money's

worth or valuable thing, and any office or dignity, and any forbearance to

demand money, or money's worth or any valuable thing, and any private

Corruption in

expectation of

office.

Corrupt

agreement for

lawful act.

Subsequent

acceptance.

Subsequent

promise of bribe.

Valuable

consideration

defined.

Corruption by

officer, etc.,

explained.

advantage of whatever kind.

308. A person is guilty of intimidation at a public election if he

endeavours to influence the conduct of any voter in respect of such election

by a threat of any evil consequence to be caused to him or to any other

person on account of his conduct as such voter.

309. A public officer or juror is guilty of wilful oppression in respect of

the duties of his office if he wilfully commits any excess or abuse of his

authority to the injury of the public or of any person.

310. A public officer is guilty of extortion who under cover of his office

demands or obtains from any person whether for public purposes or for

himself or any other person, any money or valuable consideration which he

knows that he is not lawfully authorised to demand or obtain, or at a time at

which he knows that he is not lawfully authorised to demand it.

311. If a public officer is summarily adjudged to be imprisoned under the

provision of this Title relating to the withholding of moneys, things,

documents, he shall be discharged upon his satisfying the court before

whom he was convicted, or any court of similar jurisdiction, that he has

since his conviction performed the duty for default in performance of which

he was adjudged to be imprisoned.

312. No person shall be relieved from any liability to punishment under

this Title by reason of any irregularity or informality in the proceedings at or

preliminary or subsequent to an election.

TITLE XVII

Bigamy and Unlawful Marriage

313. Every person who is guilty of bigamy shall be liable to imprisonment

for seven years.

Intimidation

defined.

Oppression

explained.

Extortion

explained.

Explanation as to

withholding

public moneys,

etc.

Explanation as to

an election.

Punishment for

bigamy.

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314. Every person who being unmarried, goes through the ceremony of

marriage with a person whom he knows to be married to another person, is

guilty of a misdemeanour, whether the other party to the ceremony has or has

not such knowledge as to be guilty of bigamy.

315. Every person who goes through the ceremony of marriage, or any

ceremony which he represents to be a ceremony of marriage, knowing that

the marriage is void on any ground and that the other person believes it to be

valid, shall be liable to imprisonment for seven years.

316. Every person who personates any other person in marriage, or

marries under a false name or description with intent to deceive the other

party to the marriage shall be liable to imprisonment for seven years.

317. Every person who performs or witnesses as a marriage officer the

ceremony of marriage, knowing that-

(a) he is not duly qualified to do so;

(b) any of the matters required by law for the validity of

such marriage has not happened or been performed;

(c) the marriage is void or unlawful on any ground,

shall be liable to imprisonment for seven years.

318. Every person who in any declaration, certificate, licence, document

or statement, required by law to be made or issued for the purposes of a

marriage, declares, enters, certifies or states, any material matter which is

false shall-

(a) if he does so without having taken reasonable means to

ascertain the truth or falsity of such matter, be liable to

imprisonment for one year;

Marriage with a

person

previously

married.

Fictitious

marriage.

Personation in

marriage.

Unlawfully

performing

marriage

ceremony.

False

declaration, etc.,

for marriage.

(b) if he does so knowing that such matter is false, be liable

to imprisonment for five years.

319. Every person who endeavours to prevent a marriage by pretence

that-

(a) his consent thereto is required by law;

(b) any person whose consent is so required does not

consent,

(c) there is any legal impediment to the performing of such

marriage,

shall if he does so knowing that such pretence is false, or without

having reason to believe that it is true, be liable to imprisonment for

two years.

320. Every person who with intent to defraud or injure any person, or

with intent to pervert, obstruct or defeat the law with respect to inheritance

or succession, falsely pretends that a child, whether living or dead, is a

legitimate child, or substitutes one child, whether living or dead, legitimate or

illegitimate, for another child, whether living or dead, legitimate or

illegitimate, shall be liable to imprisonment for ten years.

Definitions and Special Provisions Relating to the Matter of this

Title

321.-(1) A person commits bigamy who knowing that a marriage subsists

between him and any person goes through the ceremony of marriage with

another person:

Provided that a person accused of bigamy shall be acquitted if at the

time of the subsequent marriage his former husband or wife has been

False pretence of

impediment to

marriage.

Substitution of

child.

Bigamy defined.

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continually absent from him for seven years, and has not been heard of by

him as being alive within that time, and if before the subsequent marriage he

informs the other party thereto of the facts of the case so far as they are

known to him.

(2) Upon proof by the accused person of such continued absence

and information as aforesaid, it shall lie on the prosecution to prove that the

former husband or wife has been heard of as aforesaid.

322.-(1) Where for the purpose of this Title it is requisite to prove a former

marriage of a person, it shall be requisite and sufficient to prove a marriage,

wherever and however celebrated, which would be admitted by the Supreme

Court of Belize as a valid marriage for the purpose of any civil proceeding or

for the purposes of the administration or distribution of the effects of a person

upon his decease.

(2) In like manner, where a person accused of bigamy defends

himself on the ground of a divorce from a former husband or wife, any such

divorce (and no other) shall be deemed sufficient as would be admitted by

the Supreme Court of Belize as a valid divorce from the bond of marriage.

TITLE XVIII

Miscellaneous

323. Every person who publishes or offers for sale any obscene book,

writing or representation, shall be liable to imprisonment for two years.

324. Every person who unlawfully hinders the burial of the dead body of

any person, or without lawful authority, disinters, dissects or harms, the dead

body of any person, or being under a duty to cause the dead body of any

person to be buried fails to perform such duty, is guilty of a misdemeanour.

Proof of marriage

or divorce.

Obscene

publication.

Hindering burial,

etc.

325. Every person who with intent to cause any public alarm or

disturbance, or with intent to disturb or maintain the price of goods, funds,

stocks or other things, in any public market or exchange, publishes or

attempts to cause the publication of any news or telegram which he knows

or believes to be false, is guilty of a misdemeanour punishable either on

indictment or summarily:

Provided that the punishment on summary conviction shall not

exceed imprisonment for six months.

326. Every person who wantonly tortures, or wantonly and cruelly ill-

uses, any animal shall be liable, on indictment or summary conviction, to

imprisonment for six months.

327. Every person who sells, or prepares or offers for sale, as being fit

for consumption as food or drink, anything which he knows or has reason to

believe to be in such a condition from putrefaction, adulteration, or other

cause, as to be likely to be noxious to health, is guilty of a misdemeanour.

328. Every person who without any lawful authority or excuse (the proof

whereof shall lie upon him) commits any of the following nuisances, namely-

(a) so carries on any noxious, offensive or noisy business

at any place, or causes or permits any noxious or

offensive matter to be collected or continue at any

place, or so keeps any animals at any place as to

impair or endanger the health of the public inhabiting or

using the neighbourhood of such place, or as to cause

material damage to the lands, crops or cattle or goods

of such public, or as to cause material interruption to

such public in their lawful business or occupations, or

as to materially affect the value of their property; or

(b) so makes, keeps or uses, any explosive matter or any

Cruelty to

animals.

Selling

unwholesome

food.

Noxious trades

and other

interferences with

public rights.

Disturbing

markets, etc., by

false news.

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collection of water, or any other dangerous or

destructive thing, or any building, excavation, open pit

or other structure, work or place, or so keeps any

animal or permits it to be at large, as to cause danger or

harm or damage to the persons or property of the

public; or

(c) causes damage to or any obstruction to the public use of

any public way or work, or of any navigable water, well,

spring or reservoir, so as to deprive the public of the

benefit thereof; or

(d) being under a legal duty to provide for the construction,

maintenance or repair of any public way or work fails to

perform such duty, or

(e) corrupts or fouls the water of any public well, tank,

spring or reservoir,

shall be liable on summary conviction to a fine not exceeding two hundred

dollars, and shall, upon conviction for a continuance or repetition of any such

offence, be liable to imprisonment for six months.

Definitions and Special Provisions Relating to the Matter of this

Title

329. For the purpose of this Title-

(a) expressions referring to the “the public” refer not only to

the whole of Her Majesty’s subjects within the

jurisdiction of the courts, but also to the persons

inhabiting or using any particular place or any number of

such persons, and also to such indeterminate persons as

may happen to be affected by the conduct with

Interpretation.

reference to which such expressions are used;

(b) acts are done “publicly”-

(i) if they are so done or spoken in any public

place or premises as to be likely to be seen by

any person or persons, whether such person or

persons are or are not in a public place or

public premises; or

(ii) if they are so done in any place or premises, not

being a public place or public premises, as to

be likely to be seen by any person or persons in

any public place or public premises;

(c) "public way" includes any highway, market place,

street, bridge or other way which is lawfully used by

the public;

(d) "public place or public premises" includes any public

way, building, place or conveyance, to which for the

time being the public are entitled or permitted to have

access, either without any condition or upon condition

of making any payment, and any building or place

which is for the time being used for any public or

religious meeting or assembly, or as an open court.

330. A person shall not be deemed to be guilty, within the meaning of this

Title, of obstructing the public use of any public way or work by reason only

of his being a party to any meeting or assembled in or upon or near any

public way or work, unless the purposes of such assembly be or include the

obstruction of the public by force or threats or show of force.

331. The following provisions shall have effect with respect to the

Obstruction of

public way.

Explanation as to

noxious trades.

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nuisance of carrying on a noxious, offensive, or noisy business at any place,

or of causing or permitting noxious or offensive matter to be collected or

continue at any place, or of keeping animals at any place as mentioned in this

Title, namely-

(a) “business” includes not only any trade, manufacture,

work, business or occupation, carried on for gain, but

also any continued or frequent repetition of any act or

series of acts of any kinds.

(b) it is necessary in order that a person may be punishable

in respect of any such nuisance, that the prejudice of

danger caused thereby should extend to persons

inhabiting or occupying, under separate tenancies, not

less than three houses or other tenements.