Joint Enterprise 

Quick Overview

Joint Enterprise — Key Facts

Joint enterprise — properly known as secondary or accessory liability — is the doctrine under which a person can be convicted of a criminal offence committed by another. Since R v Jogee [2016], the prosecution must prove the defendant intended to assist or encourage the primary offence, not merely that they foresaw it might occur.

  • The Jogee Standard: Following R v Jogee [2016] UKSC 8, the prosecution must prove that the defendant intended to assist or encourage the primary offender — not merely that they foresaw that a crime might be committed.
  • Presence is Not Enough: Being at the scene of a crime does not make a person guilty under joint enterprise. The prosecution must prove an act of assistance or encouragement and the requisite intent.
  • Association vs Participation: Evidence of gang membership, social media connections, or association with those involved does not establish participation in a specific criminal act.
  • Conditional Intent: Where a co-defendant used a weapon in a way that was not within the scope of the common plan, the accessory may not be guilty of the same offence as the principal.
  • Life Sentence Risk: A conviction for murder under joint enterprise principles carries the same mandatory life sentence as a conviction for murder as the principal offender.

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The Jogee Ruling — The Law Since 2016

Prior to the Supreme Court's decision in R v Jogee [2016] UKSC 8, a defendant could be convicted of murder if they simply foresaw that a co-defendant might kill someone in the course of a joint enterprise. The Supreme Court held that this represented a departure from correct legal principle and restored the orthodox position. The prosecution must now prove that the defendant intended to assist or encourage the specific act committed by the principal, and that they shared the relevant intent — for murder, an intention that the victim be killed or that grievous bodily harm be caused. Foresight that a crime might be committed is evidence from which intent may be inferred, but it is not sufficient on its own.

What the Prosecution Must Prove

For every defendant charged under joint enterprise principles, the prosecution must establish two elements. The physical element — that the defendant assisted or encouraged the commission of the offence, for example by providing a weapon, acting as a lookout, preventing the victim from escaping, or offering verbal encouragement. And the mental element — that the defendant intended to assist or encourage, and shared the intent that serious harm or death be caused to the victim.

Conditional Intent and Weapons

Where a defendant joined a group to carry out one type of offence and a co-defendant went further and used a weapon, the question arises whether the accessory can properly be convicted of murder. The answer depends on whether the use of the weapon was within the scope of the agreement and the defendant's intent. If the defendant foresaw that a co-defendant might produce a weapon and conditionally assented to this, they may be convicted of murder. If the use of the weapon was genuinely outside the scope of the plan, the defendant may be guilty of a lesser offence or no offence at all.

Challenging Association Evidence

In many joint enterprise prosecutions involving groups of young people, the prosecution uses association evidence to establish common purpose. This may include social media content, music videos, group chats, and evidence of prior contact between defendants. Challenging this evidence — by demonstrating that association with others does not establish participation in a specific plan — is frequently a central element of the defence.

Withdrawal

A person who was party to a joint enterprise may in some circumstances be able to demonstrate that they withdrew from it before the fatal act was committed. Withdrawal requires more than simply walking away — it requires some communication or action that makes clear to the other participants that the defendant is no longer party to the plan. Evidence of withdrawal, or of an attempt to discourage the violence, is relevant to whether the defendant can properly be convicted.

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Joint Enterprise FAQ

What did the Jogee case change?
Before Jogee, a defendant could be convicted of murder under joint enterprise if they merely foresaw that a co-defendant might kill. The Supreme Court held this was wrong. The prosecution must now prove the defendant intended to assist or encourage the specific act — intent, not foresight, is now the test.
Can I be convicted if I didn't touch the victim?
Yes, if the prosecution can prove you assisted or encouraged the attack with the requisite intent. However, the prosecution must establish a specific act of assistance or encouragement — being at the scene is not enough on its own. The distinction between being present at and being a participant in a criminal act can be decisive.
How is association evidence challenged?
We examine social media content, group chats, music videos, and any other association evidence relied upon by the prosecution. The key challenge is demonstrating that a defendant's association with others does not establish participation in a specific criminal plan — these are distinct things, and the prosecution must prove the latter.
What is withdrawal from a joint enterprise?
A person who was party to a joint enterprise may be able to demonstrate that they withdrew from it before the fatal act. Withdrawal requires more than simply leaving — it requires some communication or action making clear to the other participants that the defendant is no longer party to the plan. Evidence of a genuine attempt to discourage the violence is relevant to this argument.
Serious Crime

Joint Enterprise

Facing this allegation is serious — and often unexpected. Early specialist advice makes all the difference to the outcome.

Quick Overview
Joint Enterprise — Key Facts

Joint enterprise — properly known as secondary or accessory liability — is the doctrine under which a person can be convicted of a criminal offence committed by another. Since R v Jogee [2016], the prosecution must prove the defendant intended to assist or encourage the primary offence, not merely that they foresaw it might occur.

  • The Jogee StandardFollowing R v Jogee [2016] UKSC 8, the prosecution must prove that the defendant intended to assist or encourage the primary offender — not merely that they foresaw that a crime might be committed.
  • Presence is Not EnoughBeing at the scene of a crime does not make a person guilty under joint enterprise. The prosecution must prove an act of assistance or encouragement and the requisite intent.
  • Association vs ParticipationEvidence of gang membership, social media connections, or association with those involved does not establish participation in a specific criminal act.
  • Conditional IntentWhere a co-defendant used a weapon in a way that was not within the scope of the common plan, the accessory may not be guilty of the same offence as the principal.
  • Life Sentence RiskA conviction for murder under joint enterprise principles carries the same mandatory life sentence as a conviction for murder as the principal offender.
Full article below ↓

The Jogee Ruling — The Law Since 2016

Prior to the Supreme Court's decision in R v Jogee [2016] UKSC 8, a defendant could be convicted of murder if they simply foresaw that a co-defendant might kill someone in the course of a joint enterprise. The Supreme Court held that this represented a departure from correct legal principle and restored the orthodox position. The prosecution must now prove that the defendant intended to assist or encourage the specific act committed by the principal, and that they shared the relevant intent — for murder, an intention that the victim be killed or that grievous bodily harm be caused. Foresight that a crime might be committed is evidence from which intent may be inferred, but it is not sufficient on its own.

What the Prosecution Must Prove

For every defendant charged under joint enterprise principles, the prosecution must establish two elements. The physical element — that the defendant assisted or encouraged the commission of the offence, for example by providing a weapon, acting as a lookout, preventing the victim from escaping, or offering verbal encouragement. And the mental element — that the defendant intended to assist or encourage, and shared the intent that serious harm or death be caused to the victim.

Conditional Intent and Weapons

Where a defendant joined a group to carry out one type of offence and a co-defendant went further and used a weapon, the question arises whether the accessory can properly be convicted of murder. The answer depends on whether the use of the weapon was within the scope of the agreement and the defendant's intent. If the defendant foresaw that a co-defendant might produce a weapon and conditionally assented to this, they may be convicted of murder. If the use of the weapon was genuinely outside the scope of the plan, the defendant may be guilty of a lesser offence or no offence at all.

Challenging Association Evidence

In many joint enterprise prosecutions involving groups of young people, the prosecution uses association evidence to establish common purpose. This may include social media content, music videos, group chats, and evidence of prior contact between defendants. Challenging this evidence — by demonstrating that association with others does not establish participation in a specific plan — is frequently a central element of the defence.

Withdrawal

A person who was party to a joint enterprise may in some circumstances be able to demonstrate that they withdrew from it before the fatal act was committed. Withdrawal requires more than simply walking away — it requires some communication or action that makes clear to the other participants that the defendant is no longer party to the plan. Evidence of withdrawal, or of an attempt to discourage the violence, is relevant to whether the defendant can properly be convicted.

"Being present at a crime is not enough for a joint enterprise conviction. Since Jogee, the prosecution must prove intention to assist or encourage — not merely foresight. This distinction is frequently decisive."

— Lostock Legal Solicitors
Charged with murder or GBH on a joint enterprise basis?
Presence is not the same as participation.

We scrutinise the evidence of your specific role, challenge association evidence, and examine every element of the prosecution's case to identify where the Jogee intent standard has not been met.

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Common questions

Joint Enterprise FAQ

Before Jogee, a defendant could be convicted of murder under joint enterprise if they merely foresaw that a co-defendant might kill. The Supreme Court held this was wrong. The prosecution must now prove the defendant intended to assist or encourage the specific act — intent, not foresight, is now the test.

Yes, if the prosecution can prove you assisted or encouraged the attack with the requisite intent. However, the prosecution must establish a specific act of assistance or encouragement — being at the scene is not enough on its own. The distinction between being present at and being a participant in a criminal act can be decisive.

We examine social media content, group chats, music videos, and any other association evidence relied upon by the prosecution. The key challenge is demonstrating that a defendant's association with others does not establish participation in a specific criminal plan — these are distinct things, and the prosecution must prove the latter.

A person who was party to a joint enterprise may be able to demonstrate that they withdrew from it before the fatal act. Withdrawal requires more than simply leaving — it requires some communication or action making clear to the other participants that the defendant is no longer party to the plan. Evidence of a genuine attempt to discourage the violence is relevant to this argument.