“When I was a kid I put a tooth under my pillow, went to sleep, and in the morning there was money there. That tangible evidence was more than enough proof to make me believe in the tooth fairy. To find out how far I could take that premise, I set up a large flash-mob style social experiment all to convince one guy he had turned invisible.” – Justin Willman. Magic For Humans is now streaming on Netflix.

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Magic for Humans | Justin Willman Makes This Guy Think He’s Invisible | Netflix
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B (a minor) v. Director of Public Prosecutions | 1 All E.R. 833 (2000)

Many statutes that define crimes describe only the acts that constitute the offense. They often don’t speak of a mental element, or what we often call the mens rea. Does that mean that these offenses don’t have a mental element? The British House of Lords considered that question in B versus Director of Public Prosecutions.

Fifteen-year-old B sat down next to a thirteen-year-old girl on a bus and asked her several times to perform oral sex on him. The girl refused. B was charged in Great Britain’s version of juvenile court with inciting a child under fourteen years old to commit an act of gross indecency, in violation of section 1(1) of the Indecency with Children Act 1960.

B pleaded not guilty. At trial, he offered evidence that he honestly believed the girl to be over fourteen. Had she been fourteen or older, B wouldn’t have been guilty of the charged offense. The trial court ruled that B’s state of mind didn’t constitute a defense to the charge. B then changed his plea to guilty and was duly convicted. B appealed to the Divisional Court, which affirmed. B then appealed to the House of Lords.

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