Space Law is a collection of rules and regulations enacted by Nanotrasen which has oversight through CentCom and is enforced by the Security Officers on the station. Space Law applies to all ranks and positions on station, from the lowliest Assistant to the highest Captain, all are equal under the eyes of the Law and ultimately answer to it.
It is highly recommended to read the Standard Operating Procedures and more specifically the following:
- Jurisdiction
- Sentencing
- Trial Procedures
- Treatment of Prisoners
- Paroles and Pardons
- Synthetics and Sophonts
Sentences
Capital
- Execution: Termination of the convict’s life.
- Whenever any execution is performed, regardless of trial or not, a general announcement must be made detailing who was executed and for what reason.
- The convict may select from one of four methods of execution, depending on availability: firing squad, lethal injection, electric shock, or asphyxiation. If the convict does not make a choice after being given ample opportunity, the sentencing officer or other relevant authority may select the method that is most appropriate. Convicts may request alternate methods of execution that may be approved or denied at the discretion of the individual passing the sentence.
- The executed’s corpse must be burned, stored in the morgue, or processed by medical staff using the biomass reclaimer.
- Exfiltration: Immediate retrieval of the convict via a CentComm- or GALPOL-dispatched transport.
- The prisoner may be held in a temporary cell until the transport arrives.
- If a transport cannot be arranged, default to other capital sentences.
- Decorporealisation: Stripping the convict’s mind from their body into a more restricting form.
- Soul crystals, golems, and cyborgs are all permissible forms.
- Permanent Brig, Permabrig, or Extended Confinement: Placing the convict into the permanent brig until the end of the shift, where they are to be transported to Central Command for processing.
- The convict has the same rights as any other prisoner within the permabrig, whether they arrived by transport or were sentenced to Extended confinement.
Standard
- Brigging: Placing the convict into a temporary holding cell. See Treatment of Prisoners (SOP).
- Catch & Release: Taking the convict to Security, processing them, searching them, and then releasing them. See Jurisdiction (SOP)
- Demotion: Downgrading the convict’s employment contract and revoking their access accordingly, with permission from or when ordered by the convict’s head of department. May be applied when the convict has committed a crime relating to their employment within their department or with NanoTrasen as a whole. See Unbecoming Conduct (Company Policy)
- Licence restriction: Downgrading or suspending the convict’s armament licence and confiscating possessions accordingly. May be applied when the convict is guilty of possession or a crime involving a weapon they were lawfully permitted to carry.
- Mindbreaking: Removal of the convict’s psionic power by use of mindbreaker toxin or any other means. May be applied when the convict is guilty of a crime in which they use psionics.
Crime Modifiers
Sentencing modifiers are to be applied by the sentencing officer, judge, or arbiter. Aggravating modifiers may not extend a sentence beyond the specified limit, while extenuating modifiers may not reduce a sentence below the specified limit.
Aggravating
- Solicitation
- Any sophont found guilty of encouraging, bribing, requesting, or instructing someone to commit a crime, with the intent that the sophont being solicited commit the crime, will receive for the crimes they solicited in full.
- Accessory
- Any sophont found guilty of assisting in the commission of a crime, without participating in the crime itself, knowing that a crime will be, has been, or is being committed, will receive the sentence for the crimes in which they took part in full.
- Attempts
- Any sophont found guilty of attempting to commit a crime, with the intent to carry out that crime, will receive the sentence for the crimes they attempted in full.
- Conspiracy
- Any sophont found guilty of planning to commit a crime, with the intent to carry out that crime eventually, and having committed an overt act pursuant to that end, will receive the sentence for the crimes they conspired towards in full.
- Deadly weapon
- Any sophont found guilty of committing a crime, utilising any object used offensively for the purpose of inflicting mortal or great bodily harm, will receive an additional modifier of, at most, 150% of the original sentence.
- Aggravation
- Any sophont found guilty of committing a crime with reckless abandon, evident signs of lack of regret or remorse, or blatant disregard for potential collateral damage, will receive an additional modifier of, at most, 150% of the original sentence.
- Discriminatory intent
- Any sophont found guilty of committing a crime based fully or in part based on the victim or affected party’s appearance, gender, psionics, religion, ability/disability, place of origin or habitation, culture, or other immutable feature or quality, will receive an additional modifier of, at most,150% of the original sentence.
- Recidivism
- Any sophont convicted of the same criminal charge multiple times within one shift will receive an additional modifier of, at most, 200% of the original sentence.
- Solicitation
Extenuating
- Cooperation
- Any sophont who shares actionable intelligence with the authorities, turns oneself in, testifies against accomplices, confesses to their crime, or otherwise aids the prosecution, may have their sentence reduced to no less than 50% of the original sentence.
- Dire Emergency
- Any sophont found to have committed a crime in the process of absolutely necessary and reasonable actions, taken with the intent to resolve or mitigate the effects of a dire emergency on one’s vessel or habitat, may have their sentence reduced by any amount, or completely waived.
- Self-Defence
- Any sophont found to have committed a crime or crimes in protection of oneself or another, and only to the necessary extent to avert a direct and imminent threat to the health and life of innocent persons, may have their sentence reduced by any amount, or completely waived.
- Good Behaviour
- Any convict who peacefully complies with the authorities, displays clear signs of remorse concerning the committed crime, and/or conducts themselves peacefully while imprisoned, may be paroled as outlined in the Standard Operating Procedures.
- Cooperation
Crimes
Capital Crimes
Name | Time | Description |
---|---|---|
Murder | Capital | To kill a sophont with malicious intent and premeditation. |
Decorporealisation | Capital | To unlawfully, maliciously, and permanently strip a sophont’s mind from their body. |
Terrorism | Capital | To commit an act with the intent to cause injury or death, or to take hostages, in order to provoke a state of terror in, intimidate, or compel a group of sophonts to do or to abstain from doing any act. |
Grand Sabotage | Capital | To engage in malicious actions that directly or indirectly make uninhabitable or inoperable a vessel or its part, or irreversibly modify and/or damage technology one is not authorised to access, causing severe bodily harm or death to multiple sophonts. |
Kidnapping | Capital | To unlawfully confine or restrict the free movement of a sophont against their will. |
Sedition | Capital | To act to overthrow a lawfully established Chain of Command or governing body without lawful or legitimate cause. |
Sexual Harassment | Capital | To sexually harass, attempt to coerce into sexual relations, or effect unwanted sexual contact with an unwilling sophont. |
Felonies
Name | Time | Description |
---|---|---|
Manslaughter | 8 minutes | To effect violence upon a sophont, resulting in their death, without the apparent intent to kill them. |
Grand Theft | 8 minutes | To unlawfully take highly restricted, dangerous, valuable, or highly sensitive property or items without consent. |
Black Marketeering | 6 minutes | To sell, distribute, or otherwise circulate restricted items or substances to unauthorised sophonts or entities. |
Sabotage | 6 minutes | To engage in malicious actions that directly or indirectly hinder the operation of a vessel or its part, modify and/or damage technology one is not authorised to access, or endanger multiple sophonts. |
Mindbreaking | 5 minutes | To unlawfully and maliciously rid a psionic sophont of their powers. |
Assault | 5 minutes | To cause physical harm or to effect unwanted physical contact on a sophont, without the apparent intent to kill them, or to threaten such actions with both capability and intent to do so. |
Abuse of Power | 5 minutes | To intentionally misuse or wrongfully exercise one’s own authority, influence, or control, resulting in harm, unjust treatment, or demonstrable loss to a separate party due to violation of ethical and professional standards. |
Possession | Up to 5 minutes | To be in unauthorised possession of restricted items or items of particular danger. See Controlled Substances/Items, Controlled Armaments. |
Endangerment | 4 minutes | To recklessly abandon obligations involving the continued wellbeing and/or protection of life and property, through malpractice, action, or inaction. |
Breaking and Entering | 4 minutes | To break and enter into a high security area where one is not authorised nor invited, with intent to commit a crime within. |
Rioting | 4 minutes | To partake in an unauthorised riotous, tumultuous, and disruptive public assembly that refuses to disperse after warning. |
Contempt of Court | 4 minutes | To conduct oneself disruptively and disrespectfully before the court. |
Perjury or False Report | 3 minutes | To wilfully and maliciously tell an untruth either in court or in the process of making an actionable report to law enforcement. |
Obstruction of Justice | 2 minutes | To wilfully disobey, interfere with, or refuse a decree of the court, warrant, or arrest. |
Misdemeanours
Name | Time | Description |
---|---|---|
Animal Cruelty | 3 minutes | To inflict unnecessary suffering on a sapient being with malicious intent. |
Trespass | 2 minutes | To enter into an area where one is not authorised nor invited. |
Theft | 2 minutes | To unlawfully take property or items without consent. |
Vandalism | 2 minutes | To deface or superficially damage public property, or property belonging to another person. |
Hooliganism | As necessary | To intentionally and maliciously engage in disruptive conduct, where one refuses to cease. |