Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
With the abolition of the death penalty in 2006, the highest penalty currently possible under the Revised Penal Code is reclusión perpetua, which ranges from 20 years and 1 day to 40 years' imprisonment. [3] [5] [6] The penalty of life imprisonment is not provided for in the Revised Penal Code, although it is imposed by other penal statutes ...
This work is in the public domain in the Philippines and possibly other jurisdictions because it is a work created by an officer or employee of the Government of the Philippines or any of its subdivisions and instrumentalities, including government-owned and/or controlled corporations, as part of their regularly prescribed official duties ...
Eventually, the Philippine legal system emerged in such a way that while the practice of codification remained popular, the courts were not barred from invoking principles developed under the common law, [1] or from employing methods of statutory construction in order to arrive at an interpretation of the codal provisions that would be binding ...
This work is in the public domain in the Philippines and possibly other jurisdictions because it is a work created by an officer or employee of the Government of the Philippines or any of its subdivisions and instrumentalities, including government-owned and/or controlled corporations, as part of their regularly prescribed official duties ...
Republic Act No. 386, the Civil Code of the Philippines (1949). Act No. 3815, the Revised Penal Code of the Philippines (1930). The 1987 Constitution of the Republic of the Philippines. Luis B. Reyes, The Revised Penal Code: Criminal Law 20 (1998, 14th ed.). Antonio L. Gregorio, Fundamentals of Criminal Law Review 50-51 (1997).
Download as PDF; Printable version; In other projects ... Penal Code (South Korea) Philippine criminal law ... Text is available under the Creative Commons ...
Philippine police at the gate of Kingdom of Jesus Christ Compound At 4:00 a.m. of August 24, [ 27 ] a composite police team, led by regional police chief Torre [ 13 ] and composed of 2,000 personnel from Regions XI, XII and XIII , [ 27 ] initiated another search in the KOJC compound in an attempt to arrest Quiboloy and four others.
The offending religious feelings provision is stated in article 133 of the Revised Penal Code of 1930 which came into effect in 1932. [3] There is a second religious offense under the same law which is interruption of religious worship stated in Article 132. [4] Offending the religious feelings.