At one time, the honour of peers was especially protected by the law; while defamation of a commoner was known as libel or slander, the defamation of a peer (or of a Great Officer of State) was called scandalum magnatum. The Statute of Westminster of 1275 provided that "from henceforth none be so hardy to tell or publish any false News or Tales, whereby discord, or occasion of discord or slander may grow between the King and his People, or the Great Men of the Realm." Scandalum magnatum was punishable under the aforesaid statute as well as under further laws passed during the reign of Richard II. Scandalum magnatum was both a tort and a criminal offence. The prohibition on scandalum magnatum was first enforced by the King's Council. During the reign of Henry VII, the Star Chamber, a court formerly reserved for trial of serious offences such as rioting, assumed jurisdiction over scandalum magnatum, as well as libel and slander, cases. The court, which sat without a jury and in secret*, was often used as a political weapon and a device of royal tyranny, leading to its abolition in 1641; its functions in respect of defamation cases passed to the common law courts. Already, however, the number of cases had dwindled as the laws of libel, slander and contempt of court developed in its place. In the reign of Charles II, scandalum magnatum was used by the future James II against Titus Oates, by Baron Gerard against his cousin Alexander Fitton, and by the Duke of Beaufort against John Arnold. By the end of the 18th century, however, scandalum magnatum was obsolete. The prohibition on it was finally repealed by the Statute Law Revision Act 1887.
scandalous
1590s, from Fr. scandaleux, from M.L. scandalosus, from Church L. scandalum (see scandal). Related: Scandalously.
scandal
1580s, "discredit caused by irreligious conduct," from M.Fr. scandale, from L.L. scandalum "cause for offense, stumbling block, temptation," from Gk. skandalon "a trap or snare laid for an enemy," in N.T., metaphorically as "a stumbling block, offense;" originally "trap with a springing device," from PIE *skand- "jump" (cf. Gk. skandalizein "to make to stumble, give offense to" someone; see scan; cf. also slander). Attested from early 13c., but the modern word is a reborrowing. Meaning "malicious gossip" is from 1590s; sense of "person whose conduct is a disgrace" is from 1630s. Scandal sheet "sensational newspaper" is from 1939.
24. Who Is Who In Lithuania 06:44 06-13 IP: 80.240.9.72
lryto rašinio citata: " Generalinės prokuratūros atstovas Žydrūnas Radišauskas praėjusią savaitę Seimui pateikė motyvus, kodėl prašoma atimti teisinę neliečiamybę iš vienos pagrindinių pedofilijos skandalo veikėjų: N. Venckienė viešai įžeidė teismą, nevykdė teismo sprendimo grąžinti brolio D. Kedžio ir L. Stankūnaitės dukrą motinai, pasipriešino valstybės tarnautojui, piktnaudžiavo vaiko teisėmis, trukdė antstolio veiklai."
Viena pagrindinių pedofilijos skandalo veikėjų.
O kur pedofilijos skandalo veikėjai pedofilai?
L.Stankūnaitė įsitikino – ramybės Lietuvoje nėra.
26. Ramybė Lietuvoje Yra! 06:50 06-13 IP: 80.240.9.72
Grįžau vakar iš Klaipėdos Vilniun ir mačiau daug ramybės - daug neartų, nešienautų ir krūmynais užžėlusių laukų, Elektrėnų elektrinės kaminai nerūko.
Ramybė.
Skandalus apsimoka leisti skandinimui tautų sąmonės pragėran ypatingai akademiniame valdžių irlklavime:
AtsakytiPanaikintihttp://www.delfi.lt/news/daily/lithuania/akademikai-jambrazeviciaus-brazaicio-perlaidojimas-didele-moraline-klaida.d?id=58904601