A person in a position of trust could commit the offence of sexual abuse of trust, which has a maximum penalty of five years imprisonment.Another example is that section 141 of the Criminal Justice Act 1988 confers a power on the secretary of state to prescribe by order weapons that are offensive weapons and which it is an offence to manufacture, sell and so on. That power was transferred to the Scottish ministers on devolution and was used to make the Criminal Justice Act 1988 (Offensive Weapons) (Scotland) Order 2005, which added two new categories of weapon—the stealth knife and the straight, side-handled or friction-lock truncheon—to the list of weapons that are specified as offensive weapons under that section.Other examples include a power at section 2 of the Prohibition of Female Genital Mutilation (Scotland) Act 2005; one at section 8 of the Emergency Workers (Scotland) Act 2005, which enables ministers to amend by order the list of emergency workers whom it is an offence to assault, obstruct or hinder in various situations; and one at section 123(6) of the Licensing (Scotland) Act 2005, which allows ministers by order to include or exclude premises from the definition of excluded premises at section 123(2) of that act, which has the effect that the sale of alcohol in those premises would constitute a criminal offence.