Crimes Ordinance

The Crimes Ordinance (Cap. 200), last amended in 1972, is a law relating to certain consolidated penal enactments. Like Macau, penal/criminal law in Hong Kong is different from what is applied in China.

Crimes Ordinance
Legislative Council of Hong Kong
CitationCap. 200
Enacted byLegislative Council of Hong Kong
Enacted22 October 1971
Legislative history
Bill published on19 November 1971
Introduced byAttorney General Denys Tudor Emil Roberts
First reading3 November 1971
Second reading3 November 1971
Third reading17 November 1971
Related legislation
Coinage Offences Ordinance 1964
Criminal Intimidation Ordinance 1964
Explosive Substances Ordinance 1966
False Personation Ordinance 1964
Falsification of Documents Ordinance 1964
Forgery Ordinance 1964
Perjury Ordinance 1970
Punishment of Incest Ordinance 1964
Sedition Ordinance 1970
Status: Current legislation

History

The ordinance consolidated the original Crimes Ordinance of 1971 with several others ordinances:

  • Coinage Offences Ordinance 1964 (Cap. 204)
  • Criminal Intimidation Ordinance 1964 (Cap. 205)
  • Explosive Substances Ordinance 1966 (Cap. 206)
  • False Personation Ordinance 1964 (Cap. 207)
  • Falsification of Documents Ordinance 1964 (Cap. 208)
  • Forgery Ordinance 1964 (Cap. 209)
  • Perjury Ordinance 1970 (Cap. 214)
  • Punishment of Incest Ordinance 1964 (Cap. 216)
  • Sedition Ordinance 1970 (Cap. 217)

Current version

The current provisions of the ordinance includes:

  • Treason
  • Other offences against the state
  • Piracy
  • Intimidation
  • Perjury
  • Incest
  • Explosive substances
  • Unmarked Plastic Explosives
  • Criminal Damage to Property
  • Forgery and related offences
  • False Certification and personation
  • Counterfeiting and kindred offences
  • Sexual and Related Offences
  • Preliminary offences
  • Miscellaneous Offences

See also

Penal/criminal codes from other parts of China:

Penal/criminal codes from similar Common law jurisdictions:

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.