Abstract

The article analyzes the problems of imposing and enforcing criminal penalties against foreign citizens and stateless persons. The problems of implementing criminal liability in relation to foreign citizens and stateless persons have always been relevant from the standpoint of the theory of criminal and penal law, and, especially, of judicial and law enforcement practice. Every year the Russian Federation records a fairly high level of pendulum migration, which inevitably entails an increase in crime. When a criminal penalty is imposed, the absence of the citizenship of the Russian Federation significantly reduces the possibilities of the court. The extradition of convicts, as an institution of international law, is not in demand. The discrepancy between certain provisions of the criminal and penal legislation of a number of countries and the Russian Federation may ultimately create prerequisites for the release of a deported person from criminal liability.

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