Conspiracy to defraud

Published by a UUֱ Corporate Crime expert
Practice notes

Conspiracy to defraud

Published by a UUֱ Corporate Crime expert

Practice notes
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Offence of conspiracy to defraud

Conspiracy to defraud is a common law offence which was expressly preserved by section 5(2) of the Criminal Law Act 1977 (CLA 1977) and is triable only on indictment.

The offence requires that two or more individuals dishonestly conspire to commit a fraud against a victim. It is a very wide offence and catches conduct that might not constitute an offence but which, by reason of two or more people agreeing to do it with the requisite intent, it becomes an offence.

Common law conspiracy is therefore wider than statutory conspiracy because it does not require the agreement to be in respect of the commission of a substantive criminal offence.

The statutory offence of conspiracy is found in CLA 1977, s 1. The statutory offence requires a conspiracy that will necessarily amount to or involve the commission of an offence by one or more of the parties to the agreement, or would do so, but for the existence of facts that render the commission of the offence or any of the offences impossible.

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Jurisdiction(s):
United Kingdom
Key definition:
Conspiracy definition
What does Conspiracy mean?

An agreement between two or more persons to commit an offence, or which necessarily involves committing an offence, or which falls within the ambit of “conspiracy to defraud” or “conspiracy to corrupt public morals/outrage public decency”.

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