Volume 6 is about the sanctions of the church. This is the criminal law of the church. It stipulates the power of the church to punish sin, those who can receive punishment, sins that can be punished, and punishment for these sins. Finding this in Canon code may surprise a lot of people, but every organization has discipline. However, in our law, the objective is to revise the scandal, restore justice, and reform criminals. Therefore, in addition to simply punishing the crime, there are more. Volume 7 is about the process. This book includes trials, procedures, judges, court organization methods, rights of the parties and appeals. People who are watching "law and order" on television will find that church judgment is not so excited. Normally, incidents are handled in documentaries. We will never meet in a courtroom where both sides are rarely held. While this may surprise us, in reality it is the standard in many other jurisdictions of the world that is affected by Roman law.
Crimes against humanity such as genocide are usually punished by death sentencing in the country under the death penalty. At the Nuremberg trial in 1946 and the Tokyo trial in 1948, the death penalty was imposed and enforced against such crimes, but the current international criminal court does not use the death penalty. The greatest punishment that the International Criminal Court can impose is life imprisonment. Other crimes that may be sentenced to death in some countries include terrorism, treason, spy, crime against the state (most countries that impose death), rape (China, India, Iran, Saudi Arabia, Brunei and other Hudood crimes such as economic crime (China), kidnapping (China), separationism (China), infidelity (Saudi Arabia, Iran, Qatar, Brunei, etc.), Sodomie (Saudi Arabia, Iran, Brunei etc.) and religious apostasy (Saudi Arabia , Iran, Sudan, etc.)