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AS
Alonso Sala
CRIMINAL LAWYERS
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Criminal Law Search

Search for criminal law terms, concepts, regulations and references

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What can you search here?

The search engine queries seven internal corpora in real time — more than 2,500 records of criminal legislation, terminology and practical content — and groups the results by category:

Frequent searches

Common queries on this search engine. The term launches the search; the second link opens the related page.

Frequently asked questions about the search engine

What is the difference between the Criminal Code and the LECrim?

The Criminal Code (Organic Law 10/1995) is the substantive statute: it defines offenses and their penalties. The Criminal Procedure Law (LECrim) is the procedural statute: it governs how those offenses are investigated and tried (complaint, investigation, trial and appeals). This search engine queries both texts at once.

How is an article of the Criminal Code cited?

The usual form is "art." followed by the number and the abbreviation CP: for example, art. 248 CP for fraud. Articles added by later reforms are cited with bis, ter or quater (art. 172 ter CP), and subsections with internal numbering (art. 21.1 CP).

Is the text of the articles up to date?

Yes. The corpus is reviewed after every criminal law reform published in the Official State Gazette, and the search engine itself indexes more than 20 legislative reforms with the articles they affect, so you can check which organic law amended each provision.

Which sources does this search engine query?

Seven internal corpora: the articles of the Criminal Code, those of the Criminal Procedure Law, a glossary of legal terms, a catalog of criminal offenses, recent criminal law reforms, the blog articles and the firm's service pages. It does not query external sources.

How do I find a specific article?

Type the article number (for example, 248 or 138) and the search engine will locate it in both the Criminal Code and the LECrim. The statutory texts are indexed in their official Spanish wording, so article numbers are the most reliable way to search them; offense names and legal concepts can also be searched in English.

Does it find Supreme Court case law?

Indirectly: the blog results block includes commentary on close to 50 Supreme Court rulings, together with practical guides on offenses and criminal procedure.

Does a search result replace advice from a lawyer?

No. The search engine is a reference tool for orientation purposes. Whether an article applies to a specific case depends on circumstances that can only be assessed in a professional consultation.

Specialist criminal defence from the very first moment.

The first decision matters. Engaging specialist criminal counsel from the outset of the procedure allows the procedural strategy to be built with all due safeguards.

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