Ace the 2026 HSC Legal Studies LCMID Test – Unlock Your Inner Legal Eagle!

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Which option best describes the mitigating circumstances in R v Dawes [2004]?

Guilty of manslaughter of her 10-year-old autistic son

Tried to kill herself as well

Given 5-year good behaviour bond

Remorseful and severely depressed at the time due to lack of support services

Mitigating circumstances are factors that can lessen a defendant’s moral blameworthiness and influence the sentence. In R v Dawes, the court acknowledged the defendant’s genuine remorse and her severe depression, which were caused or worsened by a lack of adequate social support services. This combination shows she was acting under significant psychological distress and vulnerability, circumstances that reduce culpability in the eyes of the law. Because of that, these factors were treated as mitigating, supporting a lighter response than might otherwise be warranted.

The other options describe outcomes or actions (the verdict, an attempted self-harm, or the actual punishment) rather than explaining why her mental state and social context served to lessen responsibility.

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