High treason

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High treason is criminal disloyalty to one's government. Participating in a war against one's native country, attempting to overthrow its government, spying on its military, its diplomats, or its secret services for a hostile and foreign power, or attempting to kill its head of state are perhaps the best known examples of high treason. High treason requires that the alleged traitor have obligations of loyalty in the state he or she betrayed, such as citizenship, although presence in the state at the time is sufficient. Foreign spies, assassins, and saboteurs, though not suffering the dishonor associated with conviction for high treason, may still be tried and punished judicially for acts of espionage, assassination, or sabotage, though in contemporary times, foreign spies and saboteurs are usually repatriated following capture.[citation needed] High treason is generally considered a very serious crime. Most countries in the European Union no longer practice capital punishment.

Historically, in common law countries high treason was differentiated from petty treason, which was the act of killing a lawful superior (such as a servant killing his or her master or mistress). It was, in effect, considered a more serious degree of murder. As jurisdictions around the world abolished petty treason, the concept of petty treason gradually faded, and today use of the word "treason" generally refers to "high treason."

[edit] Canadian law

In Canadian law, however, there are two separate offences of treason and high treason, but both of these, in fact, fall in the historical category of high treason.[1] In Canada, the main difference in law between treason and high treason depends on whether the nation is at war or not. Most acts (attempting to overthrow the government, spying for a foreign power, revealing state secrets, etc.) are considered in peacetime to constitute the crime of “treason”.[2] The same acts, committed in wartime, however, constitute the crime of “high treason”.[3] Only the act of attempting to assassinate the Queen is legally considered “high treason” during times of peace.[4] The practical distinction between the two offenses is, however, minimal.[5] The punishment for high treason in Canadian law is mandatory life imprisonment. The punishment for treason is imprisonment up to life,[6] except where the treasonable offence is the betrayal of scientific or military state secrets. The punishment in this situation is life imprisonment during wartime (high treason),[7] but imprisonment of a term not exceeding fourteen years in peacetime (treason).[8]

[edit] See also

[edit] References

  1. ^ Criminal Code of Canada, section 46.
  2. ^ Criminal Code of Canada: Section 46; part 2, (a) through (e), inclusive.
  3. ^ Criminal Code of Canada: Section 46; part 1, (b) and (c).
  4. ^ Criminal Code of Canada: Section 46; part 1, (a). The section reads, “...kills or attempts to kill Her Majesty...” but that should be understood to mean also her heirs and successors. Section 46 does not, however, address the assassination of the Governor General in any way.
  5. ^ Criminal Code of Canada: Section 47.
  6. ^ Criminal Code of Canada: Section 47; part 1, for cases of high treason; part 2, (a) for cases of treason.
  7. ^ Criminal Code of Canada: Section 47; part 2, (b).
  8. ^ Criminal Code of Canada: Section 47; part 2, (c).
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