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The Penal Procedure Code of Romania (Romanian: Codul de procedură penală al României) is the basic document governing criminal procedure in Romania. The current code came into force on 1 February 2014, alongside a new Penal Code.
The Penal Code of Romania (Codul penal al României) is a document providing the legal basis regarding criminal law in Romania. The Code contains 446 articles. The Code contains 446 articles. The articles mention aspects such as the national boundaries of law and the crimes that fall under the incidence of penal law. [ 1 ]
The Office of the Prosecutor General of Moldova (Romanian: Procuratura Generală a Republicii Moldova) is a government institution in Moldova, that works within the judicial power. It carries out and promotes observance of the rule of law, justice, protection of the rights and legitimate interests of the individual and society in criminal and ...
The National Agency for Fiscal Administration (Romanian: Agenția Națională de Administrare Fiscală, ANAF) is the revenue service of the Government of Romania. ANAF was established on October 1, 2003, under the Ministry of Public Finance and became operational in January 2004. [1] [2]
ANAF may refer to: National Agency for Fiscal Administration, a Romanian government agency; Army, Navy and Air Force Veterans in Canada This page was last edited on ...
A demarcation line roughly along the Loire River evolved, where south of the Loire the law depended on a version of customary Roman law and was known as the "land of written law" (le pays de droit écrit), whereas north of the Loire, it depended more on laws of Germanic origin and was known as the "land of customary law" (le pays de droit ...
Lurking house-trespass (Section 454 of the Indian Penal Code) and house-breaking (Section 456 of the Penal Code) at night. Insult with an intent to provoke a breach of peace under Section 504 and criminal intimidation under Section 506 of the penal code. Abetting of any of the above-mentioned offences.
One year after the starting of The Holocaust in Romania, Ion Antonescu ordered surveys to assess the Romani population in Romania. The results estimated 208,700 people of Romani ethnicity, out of whom the ones without fixed residence and those deemed "dangerous" - for example those who had previous criminal convictions or even those who were jobless - fell under the criteria for deportation.