Régimen de hipercualificación del delito de asesinato en el derecho español contemporáneo

The regulation of crimes against independent human life in Spain suffered an important modification  through  the   Organic   Laws 1/2015  and  2/2015.  The  most  remarkable  was the consideration of one  of  the  modalities of hyper-qualified murder which led to the imperative application of one p...

Descripción completa

Guardado en:
Detalles bibliográficos
Autor principal: Fernández García, Gabriel
Formato: Artículo
Idioma:Castellano
Publicado: 2019
Acceso en línea:https://dialnet.unirioja.es/servlet/oaiart?codigo=7026531
Fuente:Misión Jurídica: Revista de derecho y ciencias sociales, ISSN 1794-600X, Vol. 12, Nº. 16, 2019, pags. 163-195
Etiquetas: Añadir etiqueta
Sin etiquetas: Sea el primero en etiquetar este registro
Sumario: The regulation of crimes against independent human life in Spain suffered an important modification  through  the   Organic   Laws 1/2015  and  2/2015.  The  most  remarkable  was the consideration of one  of  the  modalities of hyper-qualified murder which led to the imperative application of one penalty  with  major repercussions: revisable permanent imprisonment. A review on the chronology  of  the most relevant murders before the reform attests on how the popular parliamentary group benefitted from the occasional social alert to turn the reform of these precepts and, thus this penalty, into an authentic electoral slogan. Precisely, the haste and opportunism that accompanied these laws turned out into a flawed regulation of homicide and murder and their correspondent qualifications, contaminated by a moralization of the unfair that had been allegedly surpassed, disturbingly inexcusable vinculation  of penal intervention to the identifiable legal assets, plagued of terminological imprecisions, devoided of systematic completion and susceptible to numerous problems on proceedings. Furthermore, the solutions that have been wielded against this legislative gibberish have not always been peaceably shared by the doctrine and legal practitioners. For all that, it can be concluded that only a return to a sober and systematic regulation of this penal types is possible, free of prejudices without an empiric basis and that adjusts the legislative technique with the proper political-criminal principles and Criminal Guarantees that take hold in the Constitution of our social and democratic State of law.