@article{Widyaningrum_2022, title={Legal Consequences For Notaries Who Corruption Criminal Acts}, volume={3}, url={https://ijersc.org/index.php/go/article/view/456}, DOI={10.51601/ijersc.v3i4.456}, abstractNote={<p>A notary is a public official who is authorized to make an authentic deed and has other authorities as <br />referred to in paragraph (1)Invite-Law Number 30 of 2004 concerning the Position of a Notary <br />(UUJN) as amended by Law Number 2 of 2014. The purpose of this study is to identify and analyze the <br />legal consequences for a notary who commits a criminal act of corruption. In the Criminal Code, it is <br />known that there are additional types of criminal acts, namely the additional criminal revocation of <br />certain rights, although not all crimes committed by a Notary can be added to an additional penalty. <br />However, it is different from the provisions in the Corruption Crime Act which stipulates that state <br />administrators who commit criminal acts of corruption can have their rights revoked</p>}, number={4}, journal={International Journal of Educational Research & Social Sciences }, author={Widyaningrum, Lendy}, year={2022}, month={Aug.}, pages={1426–1432} }