1. Anyone who inflicts degrading treatment on another person, seriously undermining their moral integrity, shall be punished with a prison sentence of six months to two years.
The same penalty shall be imposed on those who, knowing the whereabouts of a person's body, repeatedly conceal such information from the family or relatives of the deceased.
The same penalty shall be imposed on those who, within the scope of any employment or public service relationship and taking advantage of their superior position, repeatedly commit hostile or humiliating acts against another person that, without constituting degrading treatment, amount to serious harassment of the victim.
The same penalty shall also be imposed on anyone who repeatedly carries out hostile or humiliating acts that, without constituting degrading treatment, are intended to prevent the legitimate enjoyment of housing.
When, in accordance with the provisions of Article 31 bis, a legal entity is responsible for the offenses included in the preceding paragraphs, it shall be subject to a fine of six months to two years. Subject to the rules established in Article 66 bis, Judges and Courts may also impose the penalties set out in subparagraphs b) through g) of paragraph 7 of Article 33.
2. Anyone who habitually exercises physical or psychological violence against their current or former spouse, or against a person who is or has been linked to them by a similar relationship of affection, even without cohabitation, or against their own or their spouse's or partner's descendants, ascendants, or siblings by birth, adoption, or affinity, or against minors or persons with disabilities in need of special protection who live with them or who are subject to the authority, guardianship, curatorship, foster care, or de facto custody of the spouse or partner, or against a person protected by any other relationship by which they are integrated into the core of their family life, as well as against persons who, due to their special vulnerability, are under custody or guardianship in public or private centers, shall be punished with a prison sentence of six months. A three-year prison sentence, deprivation of the right to possess and carry firearms for three to five years, and, where appropriate, when the judge or court deems it suitable to the interests of the minor or person with a disability in need of special protection, special disqualification from exercising parental authority, guardianship, curatorship, custody, or foster care for a period of one to five years, without prejudice to the penalties that may correspond to the crimes in which the acts of physical or psychological violence were committed.
The penalties will be imposed in their upper half when any of the acts of violence are perpetrated in the presence of minors, or using firearms, or take place in the shared residence or the victim's residence, or are carried out in violation of a sentence contemplated in Article 48 or a precautionary or security measure or prohibition of the same nature.
In the cases referred to in this section, a supervised release measure may also be imposed.
3. To assess the habitual nature referred to in the previous section, consideration will be given to the number of acts of violence that are proven, as well as their temporal proximity, regardless of whether said violence has been exercised on the same or different victims included in this article, and whether the violent acts have been subject to prosecution in previous proceedings.
4. Anyone who causes minor insult or unjust harassment, when the offended party is one of the persons referred to in paragraph 2 of Article 173, shall be punished with house arrest for five to thirty days, always at a different and distant address from that of the victim, or community service for five to thirty days, or a fine of one to four months, the latter only in cases where the circumstances expressed in paragraph 2 of Article 84 are present.
The same penalties shall be imposed on those who address another person with expressions, behaviors, or propositions of a sexual nature that create an objectively humiliating, hostile, or intimidating situation for the victim, without constituting other, more serious offenses.
The offenses defined in the two preceding paragraphs shall only be prosecuted upon complaint by the aggrieved person or their legal representative.