Capital punishment in Liechtenstein
Capital punishment was abolished in Liechtenstein for murder in 1987 and for treason in 1989.[1]
The last death sentence was pronounced in 1977, when a 42-year-old man was sentenced to be hanged for the 1976 murders of his wife and two children; the sentence was later commuted by Franz Josef II to 15 years of imprisonment.
The last execution was carried out in 1785, when Barbara Erni, a 42-year-old homeless woman from Altenstadt in Feldkirch was beheaded for burglary and theft.[2]
References
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- Background
- Werdenberg
- Liechtenstein Castle
- Vaduz Castle
- Princely family
- Military history
- Confederation of the Rhine
- German Confederation
- 1862 Constitution
- 1918 putsch
- 1928 embezzlement scandal
- 1939 failed putsch
- 1992 crisis
- 2008 tax affair
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