Criminal Code of the Principality of Kaharagia
The Criminal Code gives effect to the constitutional principles of criminal justice established in the Fundamental Laws, defining offences against the State, against persons and their dignity, and against property and digital systems. As a landless sovereignty exercising personal jurisdiction, the Code provides exclusively non-custodial sanctions and focuses on conduct that the State can meaningfully prosecute through personal and consensual jurisdiction.
- Title I — General Provisions establishes the scope, definitions, jurisdictional basis, fundamental principles of criminal law, and the rules on criminal responsibility.
- Title II — Sanctions sets out the catalogue of non-custodial sanctions, sentencing principles, the fine scale in United States dollars, and the rules on execution, prescription, and extinction of sanctions.
- Title III — Offences Against the State and Public Order defines offences against sovereign authority and State instruments, against the administration of justice, and against public order.
- Title IV — Offences Against Persons and Dignity defines offences against life, liberty, and dignity, against honour and privacy, and sexual offences.
- Title V — Offences Against Property and Digital Systems defines offences against property, against digital systems, and contains the commencement and transitional provisions.
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