Capital punishment in Liechtenstein explained

Capital punishment was abolished in Liechtenstein for murder in 1987 and for treason in 1989.[1]

The last death sentence was pronounced in 1977, when a 42-year-old man was sentenced to be hanged for the 1976 murders of his wife and two children; the sentence was later commuted by Franz Josef II to 15 years of imprisonment.

The last execution was carried out in 1785, when Barbara Erni, a 42-year-old homeless woman from Altenstadt in Feldkirch was beheaded for burglary and theft.[2]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Today in Capital Punishment History. 2008-06-04. NCAPD. https://web.archive.org/web/20080510150450/http://ncadp.org/todayInHistory.cfm#. 2008-05-10. dead.
  2. Web site: Todesstrafe: Gar nicht so lange her. 2017-08-20. Saiten. 2016-08-30.