Introduction to the U.S. Criminal Justice System

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Crime and Justice in the US

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Source: http://criminaljustice.pppst.com/Intro-to-UScriminaljustice.html

Transcript of Introduction to the U.S. Criminal Justice System

Page 1: Introduction to the U.S. Criminal Justice System

Crime and Justice in the US

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Crime in the United States

• Crime is a top concern of the American public.

• Crimes presented by the media are usually more sensational than the crimes routinely committed.

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Crime in the United States

Most police calls involve responding to complaints of disturbances:• Domestic quarrels• Neighbor squabbles• Gang altercations• Loud music

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Criminal Justice:An Institution of Social ControlThere are a variety of responses to crime in the United States, from punishment to prevention.

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Criminal Justice:An Institution of Social ControlCriminal justice is an institution of social control, as are:

– The family– Schools– Organized religion– The media– The law

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institution of social control

An organization that persuades people, through subtle and not-so-subtle means, to abide by the

dominant values of society.

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Criminal justice differs because:– It is concerned only with behavior that

is actually criminal.

– It is society’s “last line of defense.”

Criminal Justice:An Institution of Social Control

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Criminal Justice:The System

Criminal justice in the United States is administered by a loose confederation of more than 50,000 agencies of federal, state, and local governments.

• The police

• The courts

• Corrections

= The criminal justice system

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Criminal Justice:The System

The criminal justice system operates differently in some jurisdictions, but there are also similarities.

jurisdictionsA politically defined geographical area.

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Police

The criminal justice response to crime begins when a crime is reported to the police, or when the police discover a crime has been committed.

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Arrest WarrantOn rare occasions, police may obtain an arrest warrant from a lower-court judge before making an arrest.

arrest warrantA written order directing law enforcement officers to arrest a person.

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Courts

• After a suspect has been arrested and booked, a prosecutor reviews the facts of the case and decides whether to charge the suspect with a crime.

• If no charges are filed, the suspect must be released.

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Pretrial StagesAbout 90 percent of criminal defendants plead guilty to the charges against them, in an arrangement called plea bargaining.

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plea bargainingThe practice whereby a specific sentence is imposed if the accused pleads guilty to an agreed-upon charge or charges instead of going to trial.

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Trial 10 percent of criminal cases go to trial.

5 percent of criminal cases are decided in a bench trial.

bench trial

A trial before a judge, without a jury.

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Trial• If the defendant is

found guilty as charged

• The judge (and sometimes the jury) begins to consider a sentence.

If the defendant is found not guilty

The defendant is released.

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CorrectionsCurrently, five types of punishment are used in the United States:

–Fines–Probation–Intermediate punishments–Imprisonment–Death

Judges must impose sentences according to statutory guidelines.

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CorrectionsDefendants can appeal their convictions either on

legal or constitutional grounds.

Legal Grounds• Defects in jury selection

• Improper admission of evidence at trial

• Mistaken interpretations of law

Constitutional Grounds• Illegal search and seizure

• Improper questioning by police

• Incompetent assistance from counsel

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Criminal Justice:The Nonsystem

The “criminal justice system” in the United States is really a “nonsystem.” Each agency works independently, and often in conflict with others.

systemA smoothly operating set of arrangements and institutions directed toward the achievement of common goals.

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Criminal Justice:The Nonsystem

•Judges impose prison sentences when there isn’t room in prisons to hold the offenders.

•In every state, there is a separate process for juvenile offenders.

•Police often say sentencing does not match the crime.

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Criminal Justice:The Nonsystem

•Prosecutors complain about shoddy police work.

•Police complain that offenders are not prosecuted.

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Costs of Criminal Justice

• Each year in the United States an enormous amount of money is spent on criminal justice.

• In 1999, local, state, and federal governments spent a total of $146 billion on civil and criminal justice.

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Costs of Criminal Justice

State and local governments pay most of the cost of criminal justice. Generally speaking:

Local governments pay for police.

The federal government works strategically to influence criminal justice policies at other levels of government.

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Costs of Criminal Justice• About 4 cents out of

every tax dollar is spent on crime control.

• Roughly two-thirds of the American public thinks the government should spend more.

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Myths About Crime and Criminal Justice

Much of the American public’s understanding of crime and criminal justice is wrong; it is based on myths.

mythsBeliefs based on emotion rather than analysis.