Abstract

A criminal record as a consequence of convicting a person for committing a crime with imposition of punishment results in criminal legal and a significant number of general legal consequences. Furthermore, if the mechanism of criminal legal consequences is developed adequately, the application of general legal consequences of a criminal record triggers many questions. The latter are set forth by a large number of federal laws of a different non-criminal legal profile and are valid even when the criminal record is cancelled or released and the criminal legal relations are terminated accordingly. The authors consider the disorganized, numerous and fundamentally life-long restrictions (specifically on the human right to dispose of the abilities for work freely) do not correspond to the fundamental principles of the legal status of an individual in a democratic society, and they do contradict the very concept of a criminal record as a temporary legal status of a convicted body, and they do violate the principle of justice.

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