The Zodiac Killer has not been officially identified or apprehended, so there is no specific law that they would necessarily be punished under. However, if the Zodiac Killer were to be caught today, they could potentially be prosecuted for multiple counts of murder and other related crimes.
The government passed an ex post facto law that made an action illegal after it had already been committed, creating a situation where people were being punished for actions that were legal at the time they were carried out.
The Fugitive Slave Act of 1850 allowed slave owners to pursue escaped slaves into free states, where Northerners who aided the slaves could be fined or imprisoned. This law was part of a series of legislation that aimed to maintain the institution of slavery in the United States.
Highwaymen in the past were often punished by hanging, transportation to penal colonies, or imprisonment. These punishments were meant to deter others from committing similar crimes and to maintain law and order on the highways.
If I have the chance to change a law in the Philippines that would be the juvenile act or the law that protects the minors who commit crime or the juvenile crime perpetrators... due to increasing number of crimes committed by this minors...they are aware that they cannot be punished by the authorities no matter what crime they will commit and in my opinion rehabilitation is not the answer for this kids because thay keep on repeating breaking the law... What the Law-provider bodies should do is to make this kids know the punishment of their action... In short they can be imprisoned but notmixed with the adult prisoners. Thank you for the opportunity to state my opinion in this particular section.
Some recommended books on evidence law are "Weinstein's Federal Evidence: Commentary on Rules of Evidence for the United States Courts" by Jack B. Weinstein and Margaret A. Berger, "Evidence: Practice Under the Rules" by Christopher B. Mueller and Laird C. Kirkpatrick, and "Principles of Evidence" by Cleary, Graham, and Ham.
Not that I have ever heard. Both of Graysmith's Zodiac books were New York Times bestsellers, causing big ripples in law enforcement and the general public. If either of the books were banned anywhere it would have made the news, hence would have been common knowledge.
the lords owened a village. the peasants would live in the village and would grow food. the lord would keep order and law. if you broke the law the lord would punished you and it could be death. the lord would say if you were to be killed or punished. the law says that the baker was the only one that was able to bake bread. if you were caught baking bread you would be punished. i hope you got info on what Lords do.
they would put people in prison, or have them killed depending on what they did.
Polyphemus was punished because he did not obey the guest-law
Romans valued loyalty and justice. People who broke the law would be severely punished, just as the king was punished
they get punished traditional of course
All colonists who broke the law, including the leaders, would be punished
All colonists who broke the law, including the leaders, would be punished
vigilantes punished law breakers
Law that you MUST obey or be severely punished.
They were punished according to the law. In the related links box below, I posted the Hammurabi code.
omissions punished by law example