Executing a saint? An innocent one at that? No matter who utters such an absurd proposition, their wits are surely teetering on the edge of vacancy.
The molestations and rampant abuses committed by Charlemagne's clergy can all be swept under the rug, glossed over, and repentance through rapt prayer can negate even the necessity of a court appearance, let alone any further pursuance of justice.
There is a provision in Albion's laws for clergymen. Regardless of the crime committed by a clergyman who can read or write, as long as it isn't heresy, they are to be pardoned once, even if the offence is one as heinous as arson or murder.
All this applies only to the servants of the Mother Goddess. They are free to snub the restraints of law and its penalties. What then of those who have been canonized?
Only another saint or the Mother Goddess in the flesh has the prerogative and the power to pass judgment on a saint. Temporal forces have absolutely no right to administer such affairs.