In the cases provided for in Articles 361 to 372, judges or courts, stating their reasons in the judgment, may impose a penalty one or two degrees lower than that prescribed by law for the offense in question, provided that the offender has voluntarily abandoned their criminal activities and has actively cooperated with the authorities or their agents, either to prevent the commission of the offense, to obtain decisive evidence for the identification or capture of other perpetrators, or to prevent the operation or development of the organizations or associations to which they belonged or with which they collaborated.
Likewise, in the cases provided for in Articles 368 to 372, judges or courts may impose a penalty one or two degrees lower on an offender who, being drug-dependent at the time of the commission of the acts, sufficiently demonstrates that they have successfully completed a rehabilitation treatment, provided that the quantity of toxic drugs, narcotics, or psychotropic substances was not of considerable importance or extreme gravity.