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Considerations to be made before a court can infer the guilt of an accused person from circumstantial evidence

Effect of failure to prove all the particulars of an offence

How the court can infer the guilt of an accused person other than by direct evidence

Persons that can be held guilty of an offence

Position of the law where there exists doubt in the minds of the court as to the guilt of an accused

Relationship between guilt and intention

The guideline on ascertaining the innocence or guilt of an accused where the defence involved a choice between the assertion of the accused and the denial of the same by the prosecution

The principle that in matters involving administrative sanctions against an accused person, the ascertainment of guilt can only be done by a trial court

Whether a person can be held guilty by mere association with a criminal or by mere presence at a scene of crime

Whether a person can be tainted with criminality where he has not been tried and proved guilty

Whether every issue or fact testified on is essential to the guilt of the accused

Whether evidence of the flight of the accused person is proof of his guilt

Whether the court can presume the guilt of an accused person before hearing him in his defence

Whether the fact of a person running away from the locus criminis is conclusive proof of his guilt

Whether the fact of lying is evidence of the commission of an offence

Whether the fact that an accused has made a confession which is subsequently excluded from consideration his a good ground for inferring his guilt

Whether the fact that an accused person lies in his evidence means that he is guilty of an offence with which he is charged

Whether the judge can infer the guilt or innocence of an accused person from facts proved and other facts necessary

Whether the mere fact that an accused person lied is proof that he is guilty

Whether the mere fact that an accused person told a lie in his statement to the police or his testimony before the court is conclusive evidence that he committed the crime alleged

Whether the mere presence of an accused person at the scene of a crime is evidence that he committed the offence

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