Capital punishment around the world: Difference between revisions

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| align="center" |2027
| align="center" |2027
| align="center" |In effect
| align="center" |In effect
|Death sentences in Faneria are generally reserved for cases involving murder, treason, violent rape, and occasionally the systematic abuse of dependents. While the practice of branding or tattooing felons for these crimes is far more common alongside prison time, the death penalty is still exercised on occasion for homicides, terrorism, and conspiracy against the state.
|Faneria practices capital punishment as an accepted punishment for multiple-murders, and in select cases applies for systematic crimes such as repeated, violent sexual predation, single murders of younger minors, or other violent crimes of notable extremity. Nonviolent crimes or crimes committed as a minor are never eligible for capital punishment, and death penalties may not be assigned without reaching the highest threshold of evidence recognized in criminal law (Actual Fact, as opposed to Assumed Fact, which is equivalent to 'beyond a reasonable doubt' in other countries, and requires overwhelming physical, video, or other evidence). A minimum wait period of six years before an execution may be carried out. In the last decade, Faneria executed between seven and thirty-three people a year.
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