crime capital - significado y definición. Qué es crime capital
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Qué (quién) es crime capital - definición

BRAZILIAN CRIMINAL ORGANIZATION
First Command of the Capital; First command of the capital; First Capital Command; Primeiro comando da capital; Party of Crime
  • Sites in [[São Paulo State]] attacked by PCC in 2006.

capital crime         
  • Article 2 of the [[Charter of Fundamental Rights of the European Union]] affirms the prohibition on capital punishment in the EU.
  • Anarchist [[Auguste Vaillant]] about to be guillotined in France in 1894
  • ''Antiporta'']] of ''Dei delitti e delle pene'' (''On Crimes and Punishments''), 1766 ed.
  • Sign at the [[Taiwan Taoyuan International Airport]] warning that drug trafficking is a capital crime in the Republic of China (2005)
  • Retentionist countries: 53}}
  • [[The Death of Socrates]] (1787), in the [[Metropolitan Museum of Art]] in New York City
  • States without the death penalty}}
  • [[Emperor Shōmu]] banned the death penalty in Japan in 724.
  • Nazi-occupied Poland]], 1944
  • Signatories to the Second Optional Protocol to the ICCPR: parties in dark green, signatories in light green, non-members in grey
  • Roman]] [[Circus Maximus]].
  • The [[breaking wheel]] was used during the Middle Ages and was still in use into the 19th century.
  • his realm]] in 1786, making it the first country in modern history to do so.
  • Mother Catherine Cauchés (center) and her two daughters Guillemine Gilbert (left) and Perotine Massey (right) with her infant son burning for heresy
  • Mexican execution by [[firing squad]], 1916
  • Number of abolitionist countries}}
  • The burning of Jakob Rohrbach, a leader of the peasants during the [[German Peasants' War]]
  • 1918 Finnish Civil War]].
  • A gurney at [[San Quentin State Prison]] in California formerly used for executions by [[lethal injection]]
  • John Christie]]. The case was considered vital in bolstering opposition, which limited the scope of the penalty in 1957 and abolished it completely for murder in 1965.
  • Death penalty in legislation, but not applied}}
LEGAL PROCESS WHEREBY A PERSON IS PUT TO DEATH BY THE STATE AS A PUNISHMENT FOR AN ACTUAL OR SUPPOSED CRIME
Judicial execution; Capital crime; Executed; Sentenced to death; Capital Punishment; Execution (legal); Capital offense; Legal execution; Penalty of death; Executions; Put to death; Capital punishment debate; Capital Offence; Death-penalty; Death sentance; Captial punishment; Death Penalty Debate; Death penalties; Capital offence; Human execution; The death penalty; Anti-death penalty; Sentence of death; Capital case; Mass execution; Prohibition of the death penalty; Capital punishments; Death sentences; Executes; Executing; Death-penalties; Death penalty; Execution; Punishable by death; Capital punish; Capital punishing; State murder; Death penaty; Condemned prisoner; Capital defendant; Padding fair; Condemned Prisoner; War capital punishment; Opposition to the death penalty; Opposition to capital punishment; Death penalty for a crime; Punished by death; Abolition of capital punishment; Place of execution; Death sentence; Juvenile execution; Child execution; Criticism of capital punishment; Abolitionism (capital punishment); Abolition of the death penalty; Excecution; Death-sentence; Racial bias in capital punishment; Race and the death penalty; Juvenile death penalty; Capital punishment for juvenile offenders; Capital crimes; Sentenced to die; Capital felony; Capital felon; Race and capital punishment; Racism and capital punishment; History of capital punishment; Capital punishment in ancient Rome; Capital punishment in ancient Greece; Capital punishment in ancient China; Capital punishment in the Middle Ages; Judicial homicide; Penalty is death; Capital charge
Crime punishable with death.
Capital Crimes         
  • Article 2 of the [[Charter of Fundamental Rights of the European Union]] affirms the prohibition on capital punishment in the EU.
  • Anarchist [[Auguste Vaillant]] about to be guillotined in France in 1894
  • ''Antiporta'']] of ''Dei delitti e delle pene'' (''On Crimes and Punishments''), 1766 ed.
  • Sign at the [[Taiwan Taoyuan International Airport]] warning that drug trafficking is a capital crime in the Republic of China (2005)
  • Retentionist countries: 53}}
  • [[The Death of Socrates]] (1787), in the [[Metropolitan Museum of Art]] in New York City
  • States without the death penalty}}
  • [[Emperor Shōmu]] banned the death penalty in Japan in 724.
  • Nazi-occupied Poland]], 1944
  • Signatories to the Second Optional Protocol to the ICCPR: parties in dark green, signatories in light green, non-members in grey
  • Roman]] [[Circus Maximus]].
  • The [[breaking wheel]] was used during the Middle Ages and was still in use into the 19th century.
  • his realm]] in 1786, making it the first country in modern history to do so.
  • Mother Catherine Cauchés (center) and her two daughters Guillemine Gilbert (left) and Perotine Massey (right) with her infant son burning for heresy
  • Mexican execution by [[firing squad]], 1916
  • Number of abolitionist countries}}
  • The burning of Jakob Rohrbach, a leader of the peasants during the [[German Peasants' War]]
  • 1918 Finnish Civil War]].
  • A gurney at [[San Quentin State Prison]] in California formerly used for executions by [[lethal injection]]
  • John Christie]]. The case was considered vital in bolstering opposition, which limited the scope of the penalty in 1957 and abolished it completely for murder in 1965.
  • Death penalty in legislation, but not applied}}
LEGAL PROCESS WHEREBY A PERSON IS PUT TO DEATH BY THE STATE AS A PUNISHMENT FOR AN ACTUAL OR SUPPOSED CRIME
Judicial execution; Capital crime; Executed; Sentenced to death; Capital Punishment; Execution (legal); Capital offense; Legal execution; Penalty of death; Executions; Put to death; Capital punishment debate; Capital Offence; Death-penalty; Death sentance; Captial punishment; Death Penalty Debate; Death penalties; Capital offence; Human execution; The death penalty; Anti-death penalty; Sentence of death; Capital case; Mass execution; Prohibition of the death penalty; Capital punishments; Death sentences; Executes; Executing; Death-penalties; Death penalty; Execution; Punishable by death; Capital punish; Capital punishing; State murder; Death penaty; Condemned prisoner; Capital defendant; Padding fair; Condemned Prisoner; War capital punishment; Opposition to the death penalty; Opposition to capital punishment; Death penalty for a crime; Punished by death; Abolition of capital punishment; Place of execution; Death sentence; Juvenile execution; Child execution; Criticism of capital punishment; Abolitionism (capital punishment); Abolition of the death penalty; Excecution; Death-sentence; Racial bias in capital punishment; Race and the death penalty; Juvenile death penalty; Capital punishment for juvenile offenders; Capital crimes; Sentenced to die; Capital felony; Capital felon; Race and capital punishment; Racism and capital punishment; History of capital punishment; Capital punishment in ancient Rome; Capital punishment in ancient Greece; Capital punishment in ancient China; Capital punishment in the Middle Ages; Judicial homicide; Penalty is death; Capital charge
Capital Crimes is the sixth novel in the Will Lee series by Stuart Woods. It was first published in 2003 by Putnam Publishing.
Capital requirement         
REQUIRED AMOUNT OF CAPITAL NEEDED BY FINANCIAL INSTITUTIONS
Total Risk-Based Capital; Risk capital; Capital adequacy; Capital requirements; Capital Requirement; Regulatory Capital; Required capital; Regulatory capital; Minimum capital requirement; Capital adequacy management; Capital adequacy guidelines
A capital requirement (also known as regulatory capital, capital adequacy or capital base) is the amount of capital a bank or other financial institution has to have as required by its financial regulator. This is usually expressed as a capital adequacy ratio of equity as a percentage of risk-weighted assets.

Wikipedia

Primeiro Comando da Capital

Primeiro Comando da Capital (PCC; "First Command of the Capital", Portuguese pronunciation: [pɾiˈmejɾu koˈmɐ̃du da kapiˈtaw], 1533) is, according to a 2012 Brazilian Government report, the largest Brazilian criminal organization, with a membership of almost 20,000 members, 6,000 of whom are in prison.

The criminal organization is based largely in the state of São Paulo and is active in at least 22 of the country's 27 states, as well as in Peru, Venezuela, Ecuador, Paraguay, Bolivia, Chile and the United States Since its inception, PCC has been responsible for several criminal activities such as murders, prison breaks, prison riots, drug trafficking, bank robberies, highway robberies, protection rackets, pimping, kidnappings-for-ransom, money laundering, bribery, coercion, narco-terrorism, and obstruction of justice. The name refers to the state capital, city of São Paulo.

In 2012, a wave of violence in São Paulo killed upwards of 100 people including many police officers allegedly following the breakdown of an informal truce between the gang and the police.

Ejemplos de uso de crime capital
1. The city was named crime capital of Britain in a report last month – with Manchester ranked fifth.
2. "I began with the city that was the crime capital of America," Giuliani, now a candidate for president, recently told Fox‘s Chris Wallace.
3. Agencies Tuesday May 23, 2006 Nottingham was today labelled the crime capital of England and Wales, prompting a furious response from the city‘s leaders.
4. Tolyatti, a city of about 700,000 people on the Volga River, was known as Russia‘s crime capital in the early part of the decade, when contract killings occurred almost weekly, many of them related to the auto industry.
5. New Delhi, October 1': Delhi today lived up to its dubious image of "crime capital" of India, with four rapes and four murders reported from various parts of the city.