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VII. Law |
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7.13 Restitution of Law |
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Article 319-Absolution |
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Canon 3322 |
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Absolution is the forgiveness and formal pronouncement of setting free a guilty person of all their crimes by a certain date upon their acknowledgment of genuine remorse and reform of character. Absolution is one of only two forms of valid Punishment, the other being Penitence. |
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Canon 3323 |
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Where an offender willingly shows remorse upon the first opportunity of hearing of certain charge(s) against them and at such a plea does offer a reply of "guilty" to charges brought against them, then such a man or woman shall be eligible to minimum penalty known as absolution. |
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Canon 3324 |
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Where an offender does not offer a guilty plea to a charge brought before them at their pre-trial hearing, then they cannot be eligible for absolution regarding that charge, regardless of any revised plea at trial or later date. |
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Canon 3325 |
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The punishment associated with Absolution must be devised so that upon the Offender completing their punishment all ongoing suffering, punishment, stigma is expunged consistent with the notion of absolution. Thus, such a punishment gives those most willing to reform and never re-offend the greatest opportunity of redemption. |
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Canon 3326 |
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Any Jurdic society person that denies absolution and redemption within its statutes automatically injures the law. By definition, justice is absent in any society where either absolution or redemption are unobtainable. |
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