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Law Enforcement of Corruption Crimes by Village Apparatuses in Village Fund Allocations Wibowo, Dava Prawira; Aqil, Muhammad Zumri
Corruptio Vol 4 No 1 (2023)
Publisher : Faculty of Law, Universitas Lampung

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.25041/corruptio.v4i1.2970

Abstract

Indonesia is still struggling to break free from the shackles of corruption. Corruption does not only occur at the central government level, but corruption also occurs at the village government level. Such a large source of village funding is a consequence of the enactment of the Village Law Number 6 of 2014. The Village Fund (DD) is very likely to become a wetland for village officials/officials to commit acts of corruption. That with very large village funds, it is possible that many village officials take advantage of their power to commit fraud and others The method used by using a normative juridical approach method and supported by empirical juridical approach in the form of support from criminal law experts and law enforcement to support normative juridical data. Approach Normative juridical is done by seeing, analyzing and interpreting matters of a theoretical nature concerning legal principles through search related literature directly or indirectly direct In an effort to tackle the criminal act of corruption in village funds, it CAN be carried out in 2 (two) ways, the first effort is a preventive or non-penal effort. related agencies to carry out investigative audits. The prosecutor can do pro justitia. After conducting the audit, the prosecutor's office wrote to the relevant party, namely the alleged party, in this case the village official, to return the money within 60 days starting from the letter received by the alleged party. If within 60 days the alleged party does not return the money, the prosecutor's office will take repressive v action. in making efforts to overcome criminal acts of corruption, funds should be more inclined to seek repressive measures, although not forgetting that preventive measures themselves are based on pro justitia or have binding legal force.
Urgency of Changing the Notary Law as a Form of Legal Protection for Notaries and Their Clients Aqil, Muhammad Zumri; Hafidz, Jawade
Jurnal Konstatering Vol 4, No 2 (2025): April 2025
Publisher : Master of Notarial Law, Faculty of Law, Sultan Agung Islamic University

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Abstract

Abstract.This study aims to analyze: 1) The legal force of the Notary Law in providing legal protection for notaries and their clients at this time. 2) The form of change needed so that the Notary Law is more optimal in protecting notaries and their clients. This type of research is included in the scope of normative legal researcp. This type of research is normative legal researcp. The approach method in this study is the Legislation approach (statue approach). The type of data in this study is secondary data sourced from primary, secondary and tertiary legal materials. The data collection method uses library techniques (study documents). The analysis in this study is prescriptive. The results of the study concluded: 1) The legal force of the Notary Law in providing legal protection for notaries and their clients at this time, namely Protection for notaries is reflected in the regulation of authority in Article 15, the summons mechanism in Article 66, and supervision through the Notary Supervisory Board as regulated in Articles 67–81. Meanwhile, clients receive legal guarantees through Article 16 which affirms the independence of notaries, Article 54 which regulates the confidentiality of deeds, and Articles 84–85 which give clients the right to claim compensation in the event of a violation. 2) The form of change needed so that the Notary Law is more optimal in protecting notaries and their clients, namely one change needed is strengthening the mechanism for summoning notaries by law enforcement officers in Article 66, by setting a time limit for the Notary Honorary Council (MKN) to provide approval to prevent potential abuse of authority. In addition, Article 15 needs to be updated to accommodate the legality of electronic deeds, so that notaries can adapt to technological developments and provide more efficient services. In order to ensure transparency and certainty for clients, Article 16 must regulate the obligation of notaries to include a list of official fees, so as to prevent illegal levies that can harm users of notary services. In terms of law enforcement, Article 85 needs to be strengthened with stricter sanctions, such as the implementation of administrative fines and a blacklist system for notaries who are proven to have committed serious violations. Keywords: Client; Legal Protection, Notary; UUJN.