Title: "Execution of Sentence in the Soviet Criminal Process"
("Исполнение Приговора в Советском Уголовном Процессе")
Author(s)/ Editor(s): I. Perlov (Перлов И. Д.)
Language: Russian (Русский)
Publisher: "Yuridicheskaya luteratura " (Издательство "Юридическая литература")
Place: Moscow, Russia (USSR) (Москва, СССР)
Year: 1963; Pages: 228; Copies: 10,000; Sizes: 15 (W) x 22.5 (H) cm
Condition: Good Vintage Condition: Cover has couple spots. Edge of the front cover has minor defects. For more information regarding book's condition- check provided images or ask us.
Item's Code: XR-107
ABOUT:
Contents: Enforcement of the sentence is a independent stage of the Soviet criminal process. The execution. Resolution of doubts and ambiguities that arise when reducing the verdict. And early parole from the verdict. Early release from punishment due to illness. Replacing the punishment verdict, on other punishment. Execution of the sentence if there are other outstanding sentences. Premature withdrawal and cancellation of conviction.
--------------------------------------------------
Содержание: Исполнение приговора-самостоятельная стадия советского уголовного процесса. Приведение приговора в исполнение. Разрешение сомнений и неясностей, возникающих при приведении приговора в исполнение. Досрочное и условно-досрочное освобождение от отбывания наказания. Досрочное освобождение от отбывания наказания по болезни. Замена наказания, назначенного приговором суда, другим наказанием. Исполнение приговора при наличии других неисполненных приговоров. Досрочное снятие и погашение судимости.
VISIT OUR EBAY STORE AGAIN- SINCE WE ADD NEW BOOKS & OTHER ITEMS REGURALRY!
ADDITIONAL INFO
Soviet law
from the Encyclopædia Britannica
Soviet law, also called Socialist law, law developed in Russia after the communist seizure of power in 1917 and imposed throughout the Soviet Union in the 1920s. After World War II, the Soviet legal model also was imposed on Soviet-dominated regimes in eastern and central Europe. Later, ruling communist parties in China, Cuba, North Korea, and Vietnam adopted variations of Soviet law. Soviet law, which changed radically during its more than 70 years of development in the Soviet Union, revived certain features of earlier tsarist law, shared key elements with the law of other dictatorships, and introduced public ownership of the means of production and subordination of the legal system to the Soviet Communist Party.
Criminal procedure
Criminal procedure was weighted heavily in favour of the state and party. Although the system generally followed the continental European model, which called for extensive preliminary investigation, the investigator in cases of serious crimes was not a judicial official, as in western Europe, but instead was an official of the procuracy, which also was in charge of prosecution. The investigator could hold a suspect without contact with legal counsel for months. From time to time, high party officials initiated campaigns against particular types of crimes, telling prosecutors whom to prosecute and forcing the courts to convict defendants. Starting in the late 1940s, there was severe pressure from the party hierarchy to secure a 100 percent conviction rate, with the result that thereafter there were almost no acquittals.