Youtube

Go to The Main Page Add Youtube to favorite!

Custodial sentence 

Scales of justice
Criminal procedure
 
Criminal trials and convictions
Rights of the accused
Fair trial · Speedy trial · Jury trial
Counsel · Presumption of innocence
Exclusionary rule1
Self-incrimination · Double jeopardy2
Verdict
Conviction · Acquittal
Not proven3 · Directed verdict
Sentencing
Mandatory · Suspended · Custodial
Dangerous offender4, 5
Capital punishment · Execution warrant
Cruel and unusual punishment
Post-sentencing
Parole · Probation
Tariff6 · Life licence6
Miscarriage of justice
Exoneration · Pardon
Related areas of law
Criminal defenses · Criminal law
Evidence · Civil procedure
Portals
Law · Criminal justice
1 U.S. courts.
2 Not in English/Welsh courts.
3 Scottish courts.
4 English/Welsh courts.
5 Canadian courts.
6 UK courts.
v  d  e

A custodial sentence is a judicial sentence, imposing a punishment (and hence the resulting punishment itself) consisting of mandatory custody of the convict, either in prison (incarceration) or in some other closed therapeutic and/or (re)educational institution, such as a reformatory, (maximum security) psychiatry or drug detoxication (especially cold turkey).

Although usually not labeled as such (at hence not in the legal sense) it can be considered a type of corporal punishment, even if no further physical punishments are practiced within the institution (these can also be informal, without any rights of defense), since it constitutes a physical coercion. Indeed the technical term duress is equally used for loss of liberty and for coercion.

The concept of penal harm (see that article) often induces additional elements of physical endurance.

Every other sentence and punishment is non-custodial, such as fines, judicial beatings, various mandatory but 'open' therapy and courses, restriction orders, loss or suspension of civil rights, or even suspended sentences.

Could not update stat
UP