The Publicized Capital Punishment Management Executive Order, also known as Executive Order 14432 (formerly Executive Order 14431 and Executive Order 2310) is a nationwide executive order and act by the United States of Robloxia. According to the Executive Director and several members of the Department of Justice, they argued that this executive order will reduce illegal usage of capital punishment and abolish publicized capital punishments, first ratified in 1789 before being revised in January 19, 2026 after an outbreak of publicized capital punishments occurred. The premise of the executive order is to restrict the usage of capital punishments for "intimidation" and "cause of harm".

History:

In the base-line entry; the executive order (ratified in 1789), only details that in Robloxia, publicized capital punishments are to be conducted when the defendant/criminal has committed a sinful act or a major crime that cause infrastructure destruction. Although the order made it seem simplified; the 1789 revision entry didn't detail on certain requirements to determine if the defendant should be prosecuted with capital punishments or not. After referencing the Parrison v. Femblox Case, the department of justice has later revised the entry in 2026 after deeming the case being "illegally prosected".

As of the 2026 revised entry; the executive order, as claimed by the Executive Director of the Department of Justice, states that Robloxia is now currently outlawing publicized capital punishment, by being out of the few countries that now outlaw publicized capital punishments, hoping to make illegal prosecutions to be at least reduced or outlawed. It claims that this executive order is innovative as it restricts not only the usage of capital punishment but also outlawing publicized capital punishments. The Department of Justice also argued they redesigned the prosecution method which would always require authorization from the Department of Justice to determine usage of Capital Punishment. The Department of Justice believes this executive order will become the gold standard to outlaw illegal prosecutions as they announced their plans to require prosecutors and verdicts to be checked by the Department of Justice, making it another country to do so.

On January 19, 2026, the executive order stated that unless if the citizen commits a crime that is severe, a publicized capital punishment without formal trial cannot occur. Instead, the citizen who com are suggested to go on mandatory rehabilitation (for minors and non-severe crimes) or mandatory house arrest for at least two to four weeks (for adults and mildly-severe crimes), and any conduction of any form of capital punishments without formal evaluation of trial on whether the citizen is a minor or adult or whether the crime is non-severe, mildly severe or severe, would result in the punishment being a severe crime with the prosecutor and executer (if involved) facing punishments (which may range to penalties up to revocation, dismissal, death, or publicized capital punishment).

As of late-2025, the privileges for prosecutors to allow enaction of verdict will not be granted unless authorized and analysed by official members of the Department of Justice is finalized.

The Department of Justice also states they are allowing 100% transparency in any case as they also analyse the case once the prosection proposal was sent. Once the proposal is complete and sent, the Department of Justice would decide whether modification for the prosecution method is needed or if it is suitable; as such, only the prosecutor is allowed to prosecute defendants approved by the Department of Justice.

The executive order, according to the Department of Justice, is designed to provide a more detailed prosecution and to make illegal prosecution a severe punishment for prosecutors and/or executioners, which they believe will reduce corruption within Justice-related departments.

History of Executive Order:

Early-Revision

In 1789, the executive order was announced by a first-generation Justice Director, to ensure procedures of publicized executions are conducted "fairly". In which in 1821, the first execution using Executive Order 14432 was conducted.

Major Turns (Parrison v. Femblox Case)

In December 29, 2025; the Parrison v. Femblox Case was the turning court case that made the Department of Justice rewrote the Executive Order; the case was as follows:

The court judge, Issac Parker, was in charge of determining the verdict and sentencing of the defendant, Emberlain Bermon; a 29y.o Fembloxian diagnosed with Bloxergers charged with second-degree assault on Lisa Parrison, disorderly conduct in public, and public nudity.

The judge, at 1535 hours, had determined the verdict as guilty for all charges. However, he disregarded the medical note as irrelevent and sentence Emberlain to death by publicized capital punishment. Investigations reveal that Lisa Parrison (whom only had minor injuries) didn't chose to press charges.

In January 9, 2026; the Department of Justice has reopen the case for reviewal, in which reveal that the judge charged a defendant criminally and the fact that Lisa Parrison had chose to not press charges. Issac Parker was later charged for the illegal execution of Emberlain Bermon and corruption under the Peace Act of 1859; Issac was sentenced to life imprisonment, but later was sentenced to death in January 19 after the law was revised. Later, a surge in publicized capital punishment resulted in a major revision being pushed out that would rule out publicized capital punishment entirely unless authorized by the Department of Justice.

Effects:

Due to the recent change in 2026; criminal cases are monitored by Department of Justice officials, in which before verdict; the officials would review the verdict made by the judge and decide if modification of this order is necessary or if suitable.

As of February 2026; publicized capital punishments without authorization or approval from the Department of Justice was abolished, and 21 judges and prosecutors were arrested and charged for illegal prosecution and executions due to them being corrupted into targeting specific robloxians.

Responses:

Meanwhile, some former Supreme Court of Robloxia justices who were constitutionalists demanded that the publicized capital punishment should not be cruel and unusual in nature, as stipulated by the former Eighth Amendment of the former Robloxian Constitution, which states,

Excessive bail shall not be required nor excessive fines imposed, nor cruel and unusual punishments inflicted.

Even more, there existed an echelon of former Supreme Court of Robloxia justices who built of this Executive Order 14432 and argued that publicized capital punishment is cruel and unusual, demanding that Robloxia abolish the practice of capital punishment entirely, especially publicized cases.