Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

CRIMINAL JUSTICE POLICING IN AMERICA DUTIES OF THE POLICE  4 MAJOR DUTIES Keep the peace Apprehend violators Prevent crime Provide Social Services.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "CRIMINAL JUSTICE POLICING IN AMERICA DUTIES OF THE POLICE  4 MAJOR DUTIES Keep the peace Apprehend violators Prevent crime Provide Social Services."— Presentation transcript:

1

2 CRIMINAL JUSTICE POLICING IN AMERICA

3 DUTIES OF THE POLICE  4 MAJOR DUTIES Keep the peace Apprehend violators Prevent crime Provide Social Services

4  POLICE ARE NOT ONLY THE MOST NUMEROUS, BUT ALSO THE MOST VISIBLE OF THE CJ SYSTEM

5  POLICE ARE CONSIDERED TO BE THE “GATE KEEPERS” They have the first contact Make decisions on if the citizen will continue in the CJ Process

6 DISCRETION  Decision making according to professional judgment based on training and experience  Looks at: Seriousness of the offense Criminal hx of the offender Relationship between victims and offenders Strength of legal case against suspects and defendants

7 SOCIAL CONTRACT  Members of society are assumed to have entered an agreement to create the state and a government to acquire security and order for all  Citizens surrender certain rights. In exchange for that they expect the government to provide an effective system for regulating conduct

8 FORMAL CJ “BY THE BOOK”  U.S. and State Constitutions  Statutes—created by U.S. Congress, State Legislatures and City Councils  Court decisions both State and Federal  Written policy of CJ agencies

9 INFORMAL CJ “CJ IN ACTION”  Recognizes the need for flexibility  Examples  BOTH FORMAL AND INFORMAL NECESSARY

10 SOCIAL CONTROL  INFORMAL---one person to another  No police involvement  FORMAL—”handcuffs” Police involved

11 OTHER SOCIAL CONTROL INSTITUTIONS RELIGIOUS GROUPS FAMILIES SCHOOLS

12 CJ IS A STRUCTURE AND PROCESS  STRUCTURE CJ Agencies Professionals in them  PROCESS Decisions made by those professionals

13 STRUCTURE  Three government agencies and three levels of government Law enforcement Courts Corrections Levels of government  Local  State  Federal

14 STATE AND LOCAL  Law Enforcement—Police departments and County Sheriff  Court—Lower courts, trial courts, Court of Appeal and Probation  Corrections—County jails, State prisons and Community corrections agencies

15 FEDERAL

16  FBI  DEA  ATF  U.S. MARSHALS  U.S. PROBATION OFFICE  Approx 65 different agencies

17 PROCESS OF CJ  Series of decisions  Begins with Law Enforcement then to  Prosecutors then to  Courts then to  Corrections

18  Criminal justice is a structure and a process  Parts are interdependent

19  Decisions affect each other  Not always cohesive

20 HYDRAULIC EFFECT  Discretion can shift from one agency to another

21 DECISIONS PRIOR TO CJ PROCESS  Legislatures decide what will be a crime Any human conduct that violates a criminal law and is subject to punishment

22 FOUR TYPES OF LAW  SUBSTANTIVE LAW  PROCEDURAL LAW  CIVIL LAW  CASE LAW

23 SUBSTANTIVE LAW  CRIMINAL STATUTES POLICE CANNOT ARREST CITIZENS UNLESS THEY VIOLATE A SUBSTANTIVE LAW

24 PROCEDURAL LAW  Laws that dictate how police will do their job  For example: Use of Force

25 CIVIL LAW  Regulate social interactions arising from private, commercial or contractual relations  For example: City Building Codes

26 CASE LAW  Written opinions of the courts  For example: Miranda rights

27 DEFINING CRIME—SUBSTANTIVE LAWS  MALA IN SE—latin term Wrong in themselves Broad agreement in society that certain actions are so harmful that they must be punished

28  MALA PROHIBITA Laws that are enacted even though people in society may disagree about the harmfulness of certain acts

29 11 STEPS OF THE CJ PROCESS  Victims report crimes

30  Law Enforcement investigate

31  Police apprehend and arrest

32  Prosecutor charges

33  Suspect---guilty---plea bargain

34  Suspect—not guilty---trial

35  Judge sentences

36  Convicted have appeals

37  Convicted goes to corrections

38  Convicted awarded privileges or punishments

39  Convicted paroled  Step 11

40

41 MODELS OF CRIMINAL JUSTICE  Wedding Cake  Seriousness of charge  Past criminal record  Relationship of victim to offender  Was victim injured  Gun used  Strength of case  Funnel  Opposite shape of Wedding Cake  Sorting process  Case attrition  “Letting criminals off??”  Arrest does not mean guilt

42 WEDDING CAKE Celebrated cases Real crimes Ordinary felonies Misdemeanors

43 FUNNEL Lots of cases Few sentenced

44 CJ MODELS CON’T  Crime control model  Focus on need to protect people/property  For the good of society  Emphasizes police investigation and guilty pleas  Not concerned with fairness  Assembly line  Due process model  Focus on rights of individuals  Obstacle course  Adversary process—get to the truth by fighting in court  Formal rules of criminal procedure

45 CRIME CONTROL MODEL Assembly line

46 DUE PROCESS  OBSTACLE COURSE

47 PENDULUM  Crime control/due process PENDULUM

48  Where are we now????

49 USA PATRIOT ACT OF 2001

50 QUALITIES OF A POLICE OFFICER  CURIOUS  ABLE TO PERCEIVE DANGER  PERSPECTIVE EMPATHETIC COMPASSIONATE

51  Decisive  Have self-control  Must be able to adapt  Varied approaches to unique problems

52  HOW DO YOU LEARN THESE QUALITIES???

53

54 PROCESS IN A NUTSHELL  Citizens report crimes  Police investigate  Police apprehend and arrest  Prosecutor charges suspects  Suspect—guilty—plea bargain  Suspect—not guilty—trial  Judge sentences  Convicted have appeals  Convicted goes to corrections  Convicted awarded privileges or punished  Convicted paroled

55 CONSIDERATIONS  RACE  ETHNICITY  GENDER  Are there disparities (inequities)???  Caused by what????

56


Download ppt "CRIMINAL JUSTICE POLICING IN AMERICA DUTIES OF THE POLICE  4 MAJOR DUTIES Keep the peace Apprehend violators Prevent crime Provide Social Services."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google