Social dangerousness is a category of anti-social behaviour on the basis of detectors of dangerousness that enable the judicial authorities to justify the need for a particular control by the police authorities.
17-812: Gorki may refer to: Gorki Águila (b. 1968), Cuban rock musician Gorki (band) , a Belgian band of Luc De Vos Gorki (Kazan Metro) , a station of the Kazan Metro, Kazan, Russia Gorki Ridge , a ridge in Antarctica Gorki, Russia , several inhabited localities in Russia Horki , a town in Belarus See also [ edit ] Górki (disambiguation) , several locations in Poland Gorky (disambiguation) Horki (disambiguation) Topics referred to by
34-532: A comprehensive analysis that involves both the tendency to commit crimes and the sphere of the moral conduct of an individual. In United Kingdom , they were foreseen by Anti-social Behaviour Act 2003 as injunctions; in United States many States apply civil confinement to some antisocial behaviour. On the opposite side, some governments links this analysis directly to prison terms, not complying to nulla poena sine lege principle. The rule of law requires
51-471: Is a failure. A total failure. Please. Leftists of the world -- improve your capitalism." In August 2008, Águila was arrested by the Cuban police with the charge of " dangerousness ", which allows them to detain people whom they think they are likely to commit crimes. The charge carries a penalty of one up to four years in prison. Signs of a "dangerousness state" are habitual drunkness and anti-social behaviour. He
68-413: Is clarified and determined to be compatible with Misplaced Pages's content license , the problematic text and revisions or the entire page may be deleted one week after the time of its listing (i.e. after 02:02, 13 May 2024 (UTC)). Porno para Ricardo was initially featured on television, but as his lyrics became bolder, he was banned from performing in public, so the songs were put on the internet with
85-498: Is different from Wikidata All article disambiguation pages All disambiguation pages Gorki %C3%81guila Gorki Águila (born November 11, 1968) is a Cuban rock musician and leads the punk rock band Porno para Ricardo . He is known for his opposition to Communism and to Cuba's Castro administration. Águila lives with his father in a small apartment in Marianao , where he also has been recording his songs with
102-634: The Constitutional Court of Italy "set out a number of fundamental principles: (a) preventive measures limiting personal freedom are allowed within the limits imposed by article 13 of the Constitution; (b) preventive measures restrictive of freedom of movement can be applied by the administrative authority for reasons of public security in the cases prescribed by law, subject to subsequent judicial review; (c) such measures, properly motivated, must be based on facts (and not suspicions) and must be issued in
119-401: The authorities to detain people who they think are likely to commit crimes. The charge carries a penalty of up to four years in prison. The Cuban government has been accused by Amnesty International of using the charge almost exclusively against critics of the government. People that have been imprisoned under this charge include: In 2008, the punk rock singer and dissident Gorki Águila
136-464: The band since they were forbidden to have concerts. His mother and sister live in Mexico . Águila has an 11-year-old daughter, Gabriela. The purported copyright violation copies text from http://edition.cnn.com/2008/WORLD/americas/08/26/cuba.singer/ ( Copyvios report ) ; as such, this page has been listed on the copyright problems page . Unless the copyright status of the text of this page or section
153-442: The disorderly conduct statutes, regulations, and ordinances of many states, cities, and counties in the United States . These sanctions are plainly preemptive strikes against those seen as likely to be disturbing, disruptive, or dangerous. Included in this group would be "suspicious persons" ordinances, "stop and frisk," and public drunkenness laws". As Pre-criminal danger to society is a legal charge under Cuban law which allows
170-518: The help of a friend from abroad. In 2003, Águila was jailed on drug charges after a policewoman posed as a fan and asked him for amphetamines , after which he gave her two pills. He argues this was entrapment and an attempt to silence him. After serving 4 and a half years in Cuba's 5½ Kilo Prison, Aguila became an even more outspoken critic of the Cuban government, his lyrics growing more political. In an interview with CNN in 2007, Aguila said that "Communism
187-711: The respect of the judicial guarantees". Punishment "should not be imposed, nor the term of punishment extended, by virtue of a prediction of dangerousness, beyond that which would be justified as a deserved punishment independently of that prediction". In the Elizabethan period, in England "came the Vagrancy Acts , providing sanctions against sturdy rogues and vagabonds, those wandering abroad without lawful or visible means of support, those loitering with intent, and those falling within similar arcane phraseology which still underpins
SECTION 10
#1732852324101204-445: The same term [REDACTED] This disambiguation page lists articles associated with the title Gorki . If an internal link led you here, you may wish to change the link to point directly to the intended article. Retrieved from " https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Gorki&oldid=992367343 " Categories : Disambiguation pages Place name disambiguation pages Hidden categories: Short description
221-614: The social dangerousness to be assessed “on the basis of factual elements” Also in Addington v. Texas , the Supreme Court "held without dissent that in a civil commitment hearing the due process clause of the Fourteenth Amendment requires a standard of proof on the issues of the patient's mental illness and of his danger to himself or to others equal to or greater than "clear and convincing" evidence". The judgment no. 2 of 1956 of
238-497: The state to impose "pre-criminal measures," including surveillance by the National Revolutionary Police and re-education for periods of one-to-four years. The state may detain the person during this time. The law also provides for "therapeutic measures," including detention in a psychiatric hospital, that are continued "until the dangerousness disappears from the subject." The open-ended nature of this punishment affords
255-468: Was arrested by police on a charge of social dangerousness. He was eventually ordered to pay a $ 30 fine for the lesser offence of public disorder, after prosecutors dropped the charge of social dangerousness. In 2007, political protester Ramón Velásquez was arrested for the charge of social dangerousness. Velásquez was participating in a march across Cuba that highlighted what it viewed as human rights violations and freedom for "political prisoners". Velásquez
272-536: Was eventually ordered to pay a $ 30 fine for the lesser offence of public disorder, after prosecutors dropped the more serious charge. He has stated in an interview in 2008: "Capitalism is very problematic, as are Communism and socialism. . . . [F]or me, defending my anti-Castro ideas doesn’t mean an implicit defence of capitalism." Social dangerousness These measures differ from country to country: in Italy they are called preventive measures , which are derived from
289-521: Was then tried in a closed hearing and sentenced to three years in prison. Velásquez was released in January 2010. Cuban law defines dangerousness (el estado peligroso) as "the special proclivity of a person to commit crimes, demonstrated by conduct that is observed to be in manifest contradiction with the norms of socialist morality." ... If Cuba determines that someone is dangerous, the Criminal Code allows
#100899