Instituto de Estudios Políticos y Derecho Público "Dr. Humberto J. La Roche"
de la Facultad de Ciencias Jurídicas y Políticas de la Universidad del Zulia
Maracaibo, Venezuela
Esta publicación cientíca en formato digital es continuidad de la revista impresa
ISSN-Versión Impresa 0798-1406 / ISSN-Versión on line 2542-3185Depósito legal pp
197402ZU34
ppi 201502ZU4645
Vol.41 N° 79
Octubre
Diciembre
2023
Recibido 12/07/23 Aceptado el 09/09/23
ISSN 0798- 1406 ~ De pó si to le gal pp 198502ZU132
Cues tio nes Po lí ti cas
La re vis ta Cues tio nes Po lí ti cas, es una pu bli ca cn aus pi cia da por el Ins ti tu to
de Es tu dios Po lí ti cos y De re cho Pú bli co Dr. Hum ber to J. La Ro che” (IEPDP) de la Fa-
cul tad de Cien cias Ju rí di cas y Po ti cas de la Uni ver si dad del Zu lia.
En tre sus ob je ti vos fi gu ran: con tri buir con el pro gre so cien tí fi co de las Cien cias
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ti ga do res; es ti mu lar la in ves ti ga ción en es tas áreas del sa ber; y pro pi ciar la pre sen ta-
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Cues tio nes Po lí ti cas apa re ce dos ve ces al o y pu bli ca tra ba jos ori gi na les con
avan ces o re sul ta dos de in ves ti ga ción en las áreas de Cien cia Po lí ti ca y De re cho Pú bli-
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cul tad de Cien cias Ju rí di cas y Po lí ti cas. Ins ti tu to de Es tu dios Po lí ti cos y De re cho Pú bli co
Dr. Hum ber to J. La Ro che. Ma ra cai bo, Ve ne zue la. E- mail: cues tio nes po li ti cas@gmail.
com ~ loi chi ri nos por til lo@gmail.com. Te le fax: 58- 0261- 4127018.
Vol. 41, Nº 79 (2023), 509-523
IEPDP-Facultad de Ciencias Jurídicas y Políticas - LUZ
A Special Status Victim: Criminal
Liability for Assaulting a Government
Ocial in Ukraine and Other Countries
DOI: https://doi.org/10.46398/cuestpol.4179.35
Andrii Borovyk *
Iryna Tkachenko **
Bohdana-Yuliya Ivchenko ***
Petro Mandzyk ****
Eduard Solovyov *****
Abstract
The paper discusses some emerging issues of criminal liability
for assaults against public ocials in various jurisdictions.
Emphasis is placed both on the comparative approach to analyzing
the relevant criminal statutes and on the specic legal framework
for the protection of the life and health of law enforcement ocers.
Based on the provisions of statutory criminal law and the case law of several
countries, it is shown that the life, health and property of law enforcement
ocers enjoy a higher level of protection. This is explained by the fact that
such persons are direct representatives of the state, perform their duties
in public, remain under public scrutiny and, therefore, may become an
easier target for assault crimes. In the conclusions of the research, it has
been argued that the determination of the legal grounds, scope and limits
of protection of public ocials by criminal law should be carried out at
the national level (or state level in a federal jurisdiction), based on the
orientations and principles of the domestic criminal law policy and program
of a given nation.
Keywords: assault; criminal liability; public ocial; ocer of authority;
damage caused by a crime.
* Candidate of Legal Sciences, Docent, Vice President of the Scientic Institute of Public Law (Kyiv,
Ukraine). ORCID ID: https://orcid.org/0000-0003-1834-404X. Email: aborovychok@gmail.com
** Candidate of Legal Sciences, Lecturer of Criminal Law Department, National Academy of Internal
Aairs (Kyiv, Ukraine). ORCID ID: http://orcid.org/0000-0002-0144-0708. Email: kachur00ira@
ukr.net
*** Candidate of Legal Sciences, Inspector of the Department of educational and methodical work at
Kharkiv National University of Internal Aairs (Sumy, Ukraine). ORCID ID: https://orcid.org/0000-
0002-5810-6065. Email: iuv15ukr.net@gmail.com
**** Candidate of Legal Sciences, Researcher of the Scientic Institute of Public Law (Kyiv, Ukraine).
ORCID ID: https://orcid.org/0009-0000-3337-543X. Email: institutelaw@sipl.com.ua
***** Chief of the Investigation Department of the Main Directorate of the National Police in Mykolaiv
region (Mykolaiv, Ukraine). ORCID ID: https://orcid.org/0000-0001-6433-004Х. Email: ddt99@i.ua
510
Andrii Borovyk, Iryna Tkachenko, Bohdana-Yuliya Ivchenko Petro Mandzyk y Eduard Solovyov
A Special Status Victim: Criminal Liability for Assaulting a Government Ocial in Ukraine and
Other Countries
Una víctima de estatus especial: Responsabilidad
penal por agredir a un funcionario del gobierno en
Ucrania y otros países
Resumen
El documento analiza algunas cuestiones emergentes de la
responsabilidad penal por agresiones contra funcionarios públicos en
diversas jurisdicciones. Se hace hincapié tanto en el enfoque comparativo
para analizar los estatutos penales pertinentes, como en el marco
jurídico especíco para la protección de la vida y la salud de los agentes
del orden. Basándose en las disposiciones del derecho penal estatutario
y en la jurisprudencia de varios países, se ha demostrado que la vida, la
salud y la propiedad de los funcionarios públicos gozan de un mayor nivel
de protección. Esto se explica por el hecho de que dichas personas son
representantes directos del Estado, desempeñan sus funciones en público,
permanecen bajo el escrutinio público y, por lo tanto, pueden convertirse en
un objetivo más fácil para los delitos de agresión. En las conclusiones de la
investigación se ha argumentado que la determinación de los fundamentos
jurídicos, el alcance y los límites de la protección de los funcionarios
públicos por medio del derecho penal debe llevarse a cabo a nivel nacional
(o estatal en una jurisdicción federal), sobre la base de las orientaciones y
los principios de la política y el programa internos de derecho penal de una
nación determinada.
Palabras clave: agresión; responsabilidad penal; funcionario público;
agente de la autoridad; daños causados por un delito.
Introduction
Comparative analyses between dierent countries and systems has
brought us extensive knowledge about crime and criminal justice in the
modern world. Particularly fruitful have been comparisons between the
world’s two major legal systems the so-called Anglo-American common
law system and the continental civil law system.
Indeed, legal comparative analyses can cover various areas of criminal
law regulation. The systems of public service are not an exception here.
Public ocials are required to make important policy decisions as part of
their daily service to the communities. Such decisions are often unpopular
and, in many cases, politicians and public ocials may become targets of
threats and even physical attacks.
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Vol. 41 Nº 79 (2023): 509-523
Nowadays, in almost any world jurisdiction assaulting a public ocer
constitutes a serious criminal oense. The penalties imposed by the court
will depend on: classication of the oense (summary or indictable), nature
and circumstances surrounding the oense and the injuries sustained by
the public ocer as a result of such oence. The bottom-line rule is this:
government ocials are out there to serve and protect, they are always on
display for their activities, for both their achievements and mistakes; thus,
their life, health and property require enhanced approach toward criminal
law protection.
1. Methodology
This paper incorporates several research methods used for the purposes
of comprehensive analyses and critical elaboration of conclusive remarks.
The comparative law method, which has been used as the leading one
throughout our research, has enabled to research legal grounds and specic
forms criminal liability for assaulting public ocials in various jurisdictions
and to compare various liability frameworks in several jurisdictions. Overall,
the comparative method remains the leading one in legal scholarship.
The observation method also made it possible to identify current
legislative trends throughout the world with regard to formulating and
enforcing crimes of assault against public victims. The observation method
has also revealed some issues related to the need for further academic
research in this emerging area of criminal law regulation and enforcement.
The philosophical (dialectical) method allowed to fully understand
research issues at hand, their methodological grounds, to structure this
research project properly and also to comprehend the object of the study on
a step-by-step basis (Movchan et al., 2022).
The system-structural method has been employed to analyze relevant
criminal statutes and their structural positions in the national criminal laws
of several world nations. In particular, this method has allowed to reveal
the place of assault-related statutes within the criminal laws of several
states, thus showing the underlying links (or their absence) between various
criminal provisions.
As for the statistical method of collecting and summarizing material, it
has been partially used in order to demonstrate data on annual number of
relevant criminal prosecutions in a given country.
512
Andrii Borovyk, Iryna Tkachenko, Bohdana-Yuliya Ivchenko Petro Mandzyk y Eduard Solovyov
A Special Status Victim: Criminal Liability for Assaulting a Government Ocial in Ukraine and
Other Countries
2. Discussion
From the very start, it is worth to point out that lawmaking and law-
enforcement experience of any nation, including Ukraine, in terms of
criminal law regulation and enforcement can be potentially useful for other
countries.
On the one hand, public ocials themselves are not immune from
crimes and regularly commit oenses related to corruption and oce
abuse. For example, in Ukraine scholars have recently formulated specic
elements, which determine the need to criminalize intentional failure to le
a declaration and declare inaccurate information.
On the other hand, ocials can and actually do become victims of
various crimes aimed against them. This includes such serious oenses
as murder, assault or robbery while in oce. As one commentator put it,
analysis of foreign experience of criminal law regulation in the discussed
area is distinguished by the principle of national specicity, which is based
on the priorities of state policy, legal traditions of a certain state, and the
level of development of democratic institutions and institutions of civil
society.
Thus, specic features in developed European countries are: a smaller
number of criminal law norms that provide for socially dangerous acts
against law enforcement ocers and other public ocials; recognition of
protection of life, health and property of government representatives as
distinct areas of prioritized criminal law regulation; criminalization of use
of physical violence and attacks on such persons, and not mere threats to
commit them (Criminal Codes of Austria, Denmark, Belgium, etc.); criminal
liability is not provided for assaulting relatives of government ocials
in connection with the performance of their ocial powers (Criminal
Codes of Germany, Georgia, Latvia, Lithuania, France, Sweden, Estonia);
recognition of a person (persons) who assist a public ocial in the course
their legal duty or on the request of such a person (Criminal Codes of the
Netherlands, Israel etc.) (Kirbyatyev, 2021).
Several among the authors of this paper have recently researched
some controversial issues related to public ocial as a victim of criminal
insult and defamation (Borovyk et al., 2023). Now we move on to analyze
more dangerous oenses, which involve assaults on representatives of the
government public ocials. Our analyses will include several jurisdictions
– United States of America, Australia, Germany and Ukraine.
United States of America
Various types of oenses against public ocials related to their duties
are criminalized both on federal and state levels in the United States.
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CUESTIONES POLÍTICAS
Vol. 41 Nº 79 (2023): 509-523
On the federal level, 18 U.S. Code (the Title 18 is also unocially called
the U.S. Criminal Code) Chapter 7 “Assault” deals with various criminal
types of assault against domestic and foreign ocials as well as lay citizens.
For example, 18 U.S.C. § 111 “Assaulting, resisting, or impeding certain
ocers or employees” provides that “whoever (1) forcibly assaults, resists,
opposes, impedes, intimidates, or interferes with any person designated in
section 1114 of this title while engaged in or on account of the performance
of ocial duties; or (2) forcibly assaults or intimidates any person who
formerly served as a person designated in section 1114 on account of the
performance of ocial duties during such person’s term of service, shall,
where the acts in violation of this section constitute only simple assault, be
ned under this title or imprisoned for not more than one year, or both, and
where such acts involve physical contact with the victim of that assault or
the intent to commit another felony, be ned under this title or imprisoned
not more than 8 years, or both”.
In case a deadly or dangerous weapon (including a weapon intended
to cause death or danger but that fails to do so by reason of a defective
component) was used or a bodily injury was inicted, oender shall be ned
under this title or imprisoned not more than 20 years, or both (18 U.S. Code
§ 111).
The following provision, 18 U.S.C. § 111 “Protection of foreign ocials,
ocial guests, and internationally protected persons”, states that “whoever
assaults, strikes, wounds, imprisons, or oers violence to a foreign ocial,
ocial guest, or internationally protected person or makes any other violent
attack upon the person or liberty of such person, or, if likely to endanger his
person or liberty, makes a violent attack upon his ocial premises, private
accommodation, or means of transport or attempts to commit any of the
foregoing shall be ned under this title or imprisoned not more than three
years, or both. Whoever in the commission of any such act uses a deadly or
dangerous weapon, or inicts bodily injury, shall be ned under this title or
imprisoned not more than ten years, or both” (18 U.S. Code § 112).
Thus, one can see that attacking a public ocial in America is a “serious
business” with harsh legal consequences for the attacker.
As a good example on the state level, we can refer to the relevant
Californian statute.
Section 217.1(a) of the Californian Penal Code provides, in particular:
every person who commits any assault upon the President or Vice President
of the United States, the Governor of any state or territory, any justice,
judge, or former judge of any local, state, or federal court of record, any
commissioner, referee, or other subordinate judicial ocer of any court of
record, the secretary or director of any executive agency or department of
the United States or any state or territory, or any other ocial of the United
514
Andrii Borovyk, Iryna Tkachenko, Bohdana-Yuliya Ivchenko Petro Mandzyk y Eduard Solovyov
A Special Status Victim: Criminal Liability for Assaulting a Government Ocial in Ukraine and
Other Countries
States or any state or territory holding elective oce, any mayor, city council
member, county supervisor, sheri, district attorney, prosecutor or assistant
prosecutor of any local, state, or federal prosecutor’s oce, a former
prosecutor or assistant prosecutor of any local, state, or federal prosecutor’s
oce, public defender or assistant public defender of any local, state, or
federal public defender’s oce, a former public defender or assistant public
defender of any local, state, or federal public defender’s oce, the chief of
police of any municipal police department, any peace ocer, any juror in any
local, state, or federal court of record, or the immediate family of any of these
ocials, in retaliation for or to prevent the performance of the victim’s ocial
duties, shall be punished by imprisonment in the county jail not exceeding
one year or by imprisonment pursuant to subdivision (h) of Section 1170.
As one may observe from this statutory provision, Californian criminal
law contains a rather extensive list of both “in oce” and former government
ocials (including federal ones) and also immediate family members, who
are recognized as potential victims of criminal assaults.
Anyone who tries to commit murder against an individual mentioned
in subsection (a) with the intention of retaliating against or obstructing the
victim’s execution of their ocial responsibilities will face imprisonment in a
state penitentiary for a duration ranging from 15 years to life, as outlined in
Section 217.1(a) of the Californian Penal Code.
Indeed, murder of a public ocial is an even more ‘serious business’,
which triggers much more severe criminal sanctions.
In order to prove that a defendant committed the oense of assault on a
public ocial, a prosecutor must be able to establish the following elements:
1) the defendant committed an assault with a deadly weapon or by means of
force likely to produce great bodily injury; 2) the defendant committed an
assault on the person of a government ocial, former government ocial,
or the immediate family of any of these ocials; and 3) the defendant acted
in retaliation for or to prevent the performance of the victim’s ocial duties
(California Penal Code, 2023).
In the United States, among the signicant factors contributing to
murders of law enforcement agents are gun laws and the right to wear a
concealed weapon in particular.
In his well-written paper “Assault of Police” D. Bierie makes a good
point: violent attacks against police represent a particularly important form
of violence for social scientists and policymakers to understand. He then
provides three arguments for the necessity of qualied research of such
crimes of violence: 1) unique risks for ocers, agencies, and the community
– ocers may experience a greater level of injury than other types of victims
(all else held constant); 2) attacks against ocers also can lead to important
costs for agencies and thus taxpayers this includes medical treatment for
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CUESTIONES POLÍTICAS
Vol. 41 Nº 79 (2023): 509-523
injuries, time spent completing paperwork and holding hearings on the use of
force, and reduced or disrupted resources when ocers are placed on leave;
3) such form of violence is important to understand because such illegal acts
reect, to some degree, an attack on the rule of law and deance of the justice
system itself. The American commentator makes a conclusion that primarily
for those reasons, police, policymakers, and the public would benet from a
deeper understanding of violence directed at police (Bierie, 2017).
Based on the results of his own in-depth research, American scholar
D. Mustard observes that those states, which enact concealed carry laws
have a slightly higher likelihood of having a felonious police death and also
slightly higher rates of felonious police deaths prior to the law’s passage.
After passage of the right-to-carry laws, states exhibit a reduced likelihood of
having a felonious police death rate and slightly lower rates of police deaths.
He also suggests that those who believe allowing private citizens to carry
concealed weapons will endanger the lives of law enforcement ocials do not
even have anecdotal evidence to support them. Professor Mustard found no
examples of law-abiding citizens with concealed weapons permits assaulting
police ocers. In contrast, there is at least one example of such a citizen
coming to the aid of an ocer (Mustard, 2001).
Thus, the widely spread opinion that gun laws always contribute to deadly
and non-deadly assaults on police ocers is a biased one, at least in the case
of the U.S. policing and gun regulations.
Australia.
The oence of assaulting a public ocer is considered a serious assault
in Australia. The penalties imposed will also vary depending on the injuries
sustained by the public ocer because of the assault.
Since Australia is a federal state, it has local Criminal Codes (those of six
states) and a federal Criminal Code – the regularly compiled Criminal Code
Act of 1995 (as of March 28, 2021). Due to space limitations for this research
paper, we will focus on the relevant federal criminal law provisions.
According to Section 147.1, “Inicting harm upon a Commonwealth
public ocial, etc.” within the Australian Criminal Code, inicting harm
upon a Commonwealth public ocial is considered a federal oense. An
individual (referred to as the rst person) commits an oense under this
provision if:
(a) The rst person engages in certain behavior;
(b) The rst person’s behavior results in harm to a public ocial;
(c) The rst person has the intention to cause harm to the ocial through
their behavior;
516
Andrii Borovyk, Iryna Tkachenko, Bohdana-Yuliya Ivchenko Petro Mandzyk y Eduard Solovyov
A Special Status Victim: Criminal Liability for Assaulting a Government Ocial in Ukraine and
Other Countries
(d) The harm is caused without the ocial’s consent; and
(e) The rst person engages in this behavior due to one of the following
reasons:
(i) The ocial’s status as a public ocial; or
(ii) Any actions taken by the ocial in their capacity as a public ocial.
The discussed Section provides for the following penalties: (f) if the
ocial is a Commonwealth judicial ocer or a Commonwealth law
enforcement ocer – imprisonment for 13 years; or (g) in any other case—
imprisonment for 10 years.
In a quite unique legislative approach (dierent from other jurisdictions)
Sec. 147.1 of the Australian Criminal Code separately recognizes such form
of criminal activity as causing harm to a former Governor-General, former
Minister or former Parliamentary Secretary. Thus, a person (the rst
person) commits an oense if: (a) the rst person engages in conduct; and
(b) the rst person’s conduct causes harm to another person; and also (c)
the other individual is a former Governor-General, ex-Minister, or former
Parliamentary Secretary; and (d) the rst person has the intent for their
actions to result in harm to the other individual; (e) the harm is inicted
without the consent of the other individual; and (f) the rst person’s actions
are motivated by one of the following factors:
(i) the other individual’s past status as a former Governor-General,
former Minister, or former Parliamentary Secretary; or
(ii) any actions carried out by the other individual in their previous role
as a Governor-General, Minister, or Parliamentary Secretary.
Furthermore, Australian criminal law is designed to prosecute not only
actual assaults on government ocials but also threats of potential assaults
against such persons. Thus, under Sec. 147.2 “Threatening to cause harm
to a Commonwealth public ocial etc.” of the Australian Criminal Code:
(1) An individual (referred to as the rst person) commits an oense
if: (a) The rst person directs a threat towards another individual (the
second person) or a third party, intending to cause serious harm; (b) The
second person or the third party targeted by the threat holds a public oce
(c) The rst person either: (i) Has the intention of causing the second
person to genuinely fear that the threat will be carried out; or (ii) Acts
recklessly, disregarding the potential fear caused in the second person due
to the threat; and (d) The rst person issues the threat based on one of the
following reasons: (i) The ocial’s status as a public ocial; or (ii) Any
actions performed by the ocial in their capacity as a public ocial.
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CUESTIONES POLÍTICAS
Vol. 41 Nº 79 (2023): 509-523
The penalty is as follows: (e) If the ocial targeted is a Commonwealth
judicial ocer or a Commonwealth law enforcement ocer, the oender
may face imprisonment for a duration of 9 years; or (f) In all other cases,
imprisonment for a period of 7 years.
The criminal law statute establishes that in a prosecution for an oense
against this section, it is not necessary to prove that the person threatened
actually feared that the threat would be carried out (Criminal Code Act,
1995).
Based on the above-mentioned provisions, we can make an interim
conclusion that Australia has introduced its own special legislative
approach to holding those who attack public ocials as criminally liable. In
addition, the criminal penalties imposed are clearly dened thus courts
cannot impose any lower sentence under mitigating circumstances. This
is dierent from Ukrainian legislative approach, which usually provides
for a range of sanctions from minimum to maximum ones. Also, the
statutes, (based on their ocial language) are quite cumbersome they
are extensive and complicated, potentially with too lengthy descriptions of
criminal behavior parameters.
A brief example on West Australian criminal law approach to
criminalizing oenses against public ocials.
Assaulting a public ocer is recognized as a severe oense in Western
Australia. Section 318(1)(d) of the state Criminal Code denes this oense:
“Any individual who assaults a public ocer in the course of their ocial
duties or due to their role as an ocer is guilty of a crime.” In cases where
the oender pleads not guilty, the prosecution must prove all required
oense elements beyond a reasonable doubt.
Potential penalties, as determined by the court, hinge on whether the
case is heard in the Western Australia District Court or the Magistrates
Court. Additionally, the severity of penalties depends on the extent of
injuries sustained by the public ocer due to the assault.
This oense can only be tried as a summary oense (in the Magistrates
Court), if the perpetrator was not armed with a dangerous or oensive
weapon and was not in the company of others immediately before or
after the alleged oense. When tried in the Magistrates Court of Western
Australia, if the oender is found guilty, the court may impose a maximum
ne of up to $36,000. Additionally, the court can prescribe a maximum
prison term of up to three years.
If the oender causes injuries to a public ocer, such as a police ocer,
aecting their well-being and comfort, the court is obligated to impose a
mandatory prison sentence of at least six months. It is worth noting that
the injuries inicted on the ocer must go beyond mere pain or discomfort
experienced during the assault.
518
Andrii Borovyk, Iryna Tkachenko, Bohdana-Yuliya Ivchenko Petro Mandzyk y Eduard Solovyov
A Special Status Victim: Criminal Liability for Assaulting a Government Ocial in Ukraine and
Other Countries
If the oender causes a public ocer, like a police ocer, to sustain
bodily injuries that endanger life or are likely to result in permanent health
damage (i.e., grievous bodily harm), the court must impose a mandatory
prison term of no less than twelve months (Assaulting a police ocer,
2023).
As a matter of proper illustration, the following diagram presents annual
statistics on the number of police ocers assaulted in the United Kingdom.
Fig. 1. Number of police ocers assaulted in the year ending March 2021,
England and Wales (statistical data)6
Germany.
We will now turn to the relevant statutes in “agship” criminal law
jurisdiction within in the civil law jurisdictions namely Germany.
Indeed, for over two hundred years now, German Criminal Code has been
a landmark document, which was closely read, interpreted and to some
extent incorporated into national criminal laws of many other European
(and beyond) states.
6 Source: Annex: Statistics on the number of police ocers assaulted in the year ending March 2021,
England and Wales. Updated 30 March 2022. https://www.gov.uk/government/statistics/police-
workforce-england-and-wales-31-march-2021/annex-statistics-on-the-number-of-police-officers-
assaulted-in-the-year-ending-march-2021-england-and-wales.
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Division 6 “Resistance to state authority” of the German Criminal Code
deals explicitly with both resistance-related and assault-related oenses
against public ocials in general and law enforcement agents in particular.
Section 113 of the German Criminal Code, titled “Resistance to
Enforcement Ocers,” outlines the following provisions:
Anyone who uses force or threatens to use force to oppose a public
ocial or a soldier in the Federal Armed Forces carrying out their ocial
duties, which include enforcing laws, statutory instruments, judgments,
judicial decisions, or directives, may face a penalty of imprisonment for up
to three years or a ne.
In especially serious cases, the penalty can range from six months to ve
years. Such serious cases are typically characterized by one or more of the
following conditions:
a) The oender or another person involved in the oense possesses a
weapon or another dangerous object.
b) The oender, through an act of violence, puts the assaulted person at
risk of death or serious harm.
c) The act is committed in collaboration with another oender.
This provision does not apply if the ocial act is unlawful. The same
exception applies if the oender mistakenly believes that the ocial act is
lawful.
Section 114, titled “Assault of Enforcement Ocers,” states:
Anyone who physically assaults a public ocial or a soldier in the
Federal Armed Forces assigned to enforce laws, statutory instruments,
judgments, judicial decisions, or directives during the performance of their
ocial duties may be sentenced to imprisonment for a duration ranging
from three months to ve years.
Additionally, Section 115, titled “Resistance to or Assault of Persons
Equal to Enforcement Ocers,” species the following provisions:
Sections 113 and 114 are applicable to safeguard individuals vested with
the powers and responsibilities equivalent to police ocers or who serve as
investigators in the public prosecution service without being public ocials.
Sections 113 and 114 also apply to protect individuals called upon to
aid in the execution of ocial duties. Section 113 also applies to persons
who, in the case of accidents, a common danger or an emergency, use
force or the threat of force to hinder members of the re brigade, the civil
protection service, one of the rescue services or emergency medical services
or a hospital emergency department who are rendering assistance. Persons
520
Andrii Borovyk, Iryna Tkachenko, Bohdana-Yuliya Ivchenko Petro Mandzyk y Eduard Solovyov
A Special Status Victim: Criminal Liability for Assaulting a Government Ocial in Ukraine and
Other Countries
who assault those rendering assistance in such situations incur a penalty
pursuant to section 114 (German Criminal Code, 2021).
Based on our interpretation of the relevant German criminal law
provisions, we can synthesize the following observations: 1) German
legislator is primarily focused on protecting law enforcement agents and
military service members and, to a lesser degree, other public ocials; 2) it
has to be proven that a competent government agent victim of assault
was acting in ocial capacity and in a lawful manner; 3) criminal law
provides for aggravated forms of assaults and also prescribes rather severe
penalties.
Ukraine.
Finally, we turn to the “ocial assault” related section of Ukrainian
criminal law. As described in domestic academic literature on the
issue, proper functioning of any state is impossible without public (or
government) management, i.e., regulated inuence on both individuals and
organizations by legal acts in order to ensure law and order and achieve
other socially benecial results. Thus, provisions on the most dangerous
forms of obstruction of normal activities of state authorities, local self-
government bodies, citizens’ associations and their representatives in the
Criminal Code are concentrated in Chapter XV of its Special Part under
the title “Criminal oenses against the authority of state authorities, local
self-government bodies, citizens’ associations and criminal oenses against
journalists” (Borovyk, 2022).
Section XV of the national Criminal Code contains several relevant
provisions: interference in the activities of a law enforcement ocer,
forensic expert, employee of the state executive service, private executor
(Art. 343); interference with activity of a statesman (Art. 344); threats or
violence against a law enforcement ocer (Art. 345); threats or violence
against a statesman or a public gure (Art. 346); intended destruction or
damage to property of a law enforcement ocer, an employee of a state
executive service body or a private executor (Art. 347); trespass against
life of a law enforcement ocer, a member of a community formation for
the protection of public order, or a military servant (Art. 348); threats
or violence against an ocial or a citizen who performs his/her public
duty (Art. 350); interference with activity of a Member of Parliament of
Ukraine or a council or of a local council (Art. 351); intended destruction or
impairment of property owned by an ocial or a citizen who performs his/
her public duty (Art. 352).
As one might see, Ukrainian criminal law distinguishes among various
forms of criminal behavior against life, health and property of public
ocials. Such legal dierentiation seems both logical and pragmatic; it
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allows to protect basic rights of government representatives. In addition,
when compared to German criminal liability model, provisions of the
Criminal Code of Ukraine in many aspects remind codied statutes of other
European countries. This serves as an indirect argument for the common
legal framework in Europe, including somewhat similar Criminal Codes.
As an example, we will refer to Art. 350 of the Criminal Code of Ukraine,
which sanctions threats or violence against an ocial or a citizen who
performs his/her public duty. This legal norm provides:
1. Making threats of murder, serious physical harm, or signicant
property damage using globally harmful methods, directed towards
an ocial, their close relatives, or a citizen carrying out their public
duties, with the intent to hinder the ocial’s or the citizen’s public
responsibilities or alter them for the advantage of the person making
the threats, is subject to a penalty of up to six months of arrest or up
to three years of restricted liberty.
2. Deliberate physical assault or causing minor or moderately severe
bodily harm to an ocial or a citizen performing their public duties
related to ocial or public activities, and such actions carried out
against their close associates, may result in a penalty of three to ve
years of restricted liberty or imprisonment for the same duration.
3. Intentionally causing severe bodily harm to an ocial or a citizen
performing their public duties related to ocial or public activities,
and such actions committed against their close associates, can lead
to imprisonment for a period ranging from ve to twelve years”
(Criminal Code of Ukraine, 2021).
Thus, we conclude that mere threats are recognized as a minor
criminal oense; instead, intentional assaults on public ocials constitute
aggravated forms of criminal behavior with much more severe penalties.
Conclusions
Based on our research, the following set of conclusions can be formulated.
Determination of the legal grounds, scope and limits of the protection
of government ocials by means of criminal law should be carried out
at the national (or state) level, based on the directions and principles of
the internal criminal law policy and agenda of a given nation. Thus, an
elaborated system of general and special measures of state protection of
public gures against obstruction of the performance of their ocially
imposed duties and exercising their rights, as well as from encroachments
on the life, health, housing and property of such persons in ocial capacity
and their close relatives should be established and vigorously protected.
522
Andrii Borovyk, Iryna Tkachenko, Bohdana-Yuliya Ivchenko Petro Mandzyk y Eduard Solovyov
A Special Status Victim: Criminal Liability for Assaulting a Government Ocial in Ukraine and
Other Countries
It is necessary to emphasize that the new era of socio-political
developments in various world jurisdictions, including Ukraine, is
constantly testing the strength and resourcefulness of many government
institutions, including law enforcement system. Thus, establishing a
just balance between the duties of government ocials and their rights,
including the right to eective criminal protection, should be recognized as
a guarantee of the eectiveness of the reforms initiated therein.
It has been proven that public ocials in any given jurisdiction and at
any given time are required to make important policy decisions as part
of their daily responsibilities. Thus, in many cases, politicians and public
ocials become targets of threats, physical attacks and even murders.
Nowadays, in almost any world jurisdiction assaulting a public ocer
constitutes a serious criminal oense. The penalties imposed by the court
will depend on: classication of the oense (summary or indictable), nature
and circumstances surrounding the oense and the injuries sustained by
the public ocer as a result of such oence. The bottom-line rule is this:
government ocials are out there to serve and protect, they are always on
display for their activities, for both their achievements and mistakes; thus,
their life, health and property require enhanced approach toward criminal
law protection.
Finally, within this research paper it has been proven once again that
comparative method becomes a major one when conducting in-depth
analyses of criminal law in several jurisdictions at once. Thus, being able
to compare foreign law with the domestic one in a professional and critical
manner, to be able to draw important scientic conclusions becomes a
major goal for such types of academic projects.
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Esta revista fue editada en formato digital y publicada
en octubre de 2023, por el Fondo Editorial Serbiluz,
Universidad del Zulia. Maracaibo-Venezuela
Vol.41 Nº 79