Shared Flashcard Set

Details

CJ Exam
Final Exam
77
Criminal Justice
Undergraduate 2
04/30/2013

Additional Criminal Justice Flashcards

 


 

Cards

Term

Historical Information (types of cases included)

(Courts)

Definition


    Cases involving moral charges tended to dominate the courts.
     Religion and Sex! Laws were reproductions from the Bible.
     Religious based offenses included heresy, witchcraft, blasphemy, Quakerism, and violation of the Sabbath.

    Women were often singled out as criminals for violating laws of servitude and compliance.

Term

Federal versus State Courts (percent heard at each level)

FEDERAL

(Courts)

Definition

  Federal and State Courts have concurrent or co-existent jurisdiction

  Decide cases involving the U.S. government, the U.S.   Constitution, acts of Congress, controversies between states, disputes between states and between citizens of different states.

  U.S. Supreme Court (1 Chief Justice and 8 Associate Justices)

  Decides about 100 or fewer of some 5,000 or more cases asked to review each year

(Fewer than 1% heard at federal level)

  • Usually only accepts cases involving important interpretations of the Constitution or acts of government

 

Term

Federal versus State Courts (percent heard at each level)

STATE

(Courts)

Definition

98% of all cases are heard at the state level

No two state court systems are completely alike.

State judges are appointed or elected

Bench trial versus a jury trial

Because of congestion, it is not uncommon for jailed defendants awaiting trail to get time served when they come up for trial.

 

Term

Rights to Counsel What are the 3 major cases

(Courts)

Definition

 

  1. Powell v Alabama (1932): defendant has the right to counsel in cases where the DP might be imposed.
  2. Gideon v Wainwright (1963): defendant has the right to counsel in accused of a felony.
  3. Argersinger v Hamlin (1972): defendant has the right to counsel if accused of a misdemeanor if jail time may be imposed.

 

Term

Public Defender and % of Felons

 (Courts)

Definition

a lawyer appointed to represent people who cannot afford to hire an attorney

(80%)

Term

Plea bargaining (% of case)

(Courts)

Definition

an agreement in a criminal case between the prosecutor and defendant whereby the defendant agrees to plead guilty to a particular charge in return for some concession from the prosecutor.

(90%-95%)

Term

Burdens of Proof

(Courts)

Definition

 

Looking for legal guilt: the government has proven the defendant’s guilt and criminal responsibility beyond a reasonable doubt.

 

Term

Criminal Trial process and terminology

(beginning of a trial)

Definition

 

The defendant is presumed innocent. The prosecution must prove every element of the crime. The defendant does not have to prove innocence.

 

Term

Criminal Trial process and terminology

(jury terminology and fair/impartial case)

Definition

 

Jury must be free from unfair influences (for example: Estelle v Williams; the Court determined that the defendant was unfairly prejudiced because he was tried while wearing prison clothing).

Often, in sensational cases, having a “fair” and “impartial” jury is problematic.

 

Term

Criminal Trial process and terminology

(Types of Evidence)

Definition

There are 4 types of evidence: real evidence, testimonial evidence, direct evidence, and circumstantial evidence

 

Term

Criminal trial process and terminology

(Real Evidence)

 

Definition
Objects of any kind such as weapons, clothing, fingerprints, etc. (must be orginial)

Term

Criminal trial process and terminology

(Testimonial evidence)

Definition

Statements of competent, sworn witnesses. must be accompanied by real evidence

 

 

Term

Criminal trial process and terminology

(Direct evidence)

Definition

Observations of eyewitnesses.

 

Term

Criminal trial process and terminology

(Circumstantial evidence)

Definition


  • Information that tends to prove or disprove a point by influence
Term

Unamious Verdict

(Criminal Trial process and terminology)

Definition

If the jury is deadlocked, the court may declare a mistrial which places the defendant in the same position as if no trial had occurred and a new trial may commence.

If this happens, and the jury renders a verdict of guilty, then the judge may either accept the jury verdict or direct a verdict of not guilty.

  • The defense may make a motion for a judgment of acquittal before or after the jury convenes. The motion is based on the argument that the evidence is not sufficient to support a guilty verdict. If the defendant is found guilty, the defense may make a motion for a new trial.

 

Term

Amendment assoiciated with trial

(Criminal Trial process and terminology)

Definition

 

(Amendment 6) The Right to a Fair and Impartial Jury is Required by the Sixth Amendment

 

Term

The case that deemed to only allows a free attourney with first appeal

(Appeals process and terminology)

 

Definition

 

 

Supreme Court stated Ross vs. Moffin that he/she does not have the right to a free attourney to appeal a conviction to the Court of last resort (state or national supreme court)
Term

Appeals process and terminology

(writ of habeus corpus)

Definition

An ancient common law device that permits judges to review the legality of someones confinement


A person who have been convicted of a crime, has exhausted all normal appellate remedies, and is confined to prison may still challenge the conviction, sentence, or conditions of confinement by filing a petition for a _______

 

Term

(Sentencing and Punishment)

The two types of sentences include:

Definition

 

Determinate or flat-time: sentence whose length has been fixed by statute. No discretion involved.

Indeterminate: allows a judge to impose a minimum sentence and leaves the decision for release with the parole board or other administrative agency.

 

Term
What is Determinate
(Sentencing and Punishment)
Definition

flat-time: sentence whose length has been fixed by statute. No discretion involved.

 

Term

What is Indeterminate

(Sentencing and Punishment)

Definition
It allows a judge to impose a minimum sentence and leaves the decision for release with the parole board or other administrative agency.
Term

(Sentencing and Punishment)

The 7 Goals of Punishment include:

Definition

 

  1. Retribution
  2. Deterrence
  3. Rehabilitation
  4. Incapacitation
  5. Reintegration
  6. Restitution
  7. Restoration
Term

(Sentencing and Punishment)

Retribution

Definition


Punishment must avenge/retaliate for harm or wrong done to another

Code of Hammurabi (18th century); Law of Moses (“eye for an eye”)

Term

(Sentencing and Punishment)

Deterrence

Definition
Certain, swift, and severe punishment can discourage future crime by the offender (specific) and others (general)


Term

(Sentencing and Punishment)

Rehabilitation

Definition

Providing psychological and/or education assistance or job training to offenders makes them less likely to engage in future criminality; based on the notion that people can change.

 

The key to change is treatment: counseling, education, training, etc.

Term
(Sentencing and Punishment)
Incapacitation

Definition
Separate offenders from the community to reduce the opportunity for further crime while incarcerated.
Term

(Sentencing and Punishment)

Reintegration

Definition

Recognize that over 90% of offenders will eventually be released back into society; many will have a very difficult time transitioning back into society.

 

Must readjust to families, work, and the label “ex-con”

 

Something must be done to help them make the transition from prison life back into society.

Term

(Sentencing and Punishment)

Restitution

Definition

Offender repays the victims or the community in money and/or services.

 

Designed as an alternative to incarceration but often incorporated as a condition of probation.

Term

(Sentencing and Punishment)

Restoration

Definition

(offenders repay or “restore” victims’ losses)
 Provides a community protection: weighs public safety versus least costly, least restrictive correctional alternative.
Competency development: emphasizes remediation for offenders’ social, educational, or other deficiencies.

Term

Amendment associated with punishment

(Sentencing and Punishment)

Definition
The Eighth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution prohibits the federal government from imposing cruel and unusual punishment for federal crimes. The amendment states, "Excessive bail shall not be required, nor excessive fines imposed, nor cruel and unusual punishment inflicted."
Term
(Sentencing and punishment)
Definition
Term

(Sentencing and punishment)

Death Penalty

Definition
Term

(Sentencing and punishment)

Death Penalty

Definition
Term

(Sentencing and punishment)

Death Penalty

Definition
Term

(Sentencing and punishment)

Death Penalty

Definition
Term

(Sentencing and punishment)

Death Penalty

Definition
Term

(Sentencing and punishment)

Death Penalty

Definition
Term

(Sentencing and punishment)

Death Penalty

Definition
Term

(Sentencing and punishment)

Death Penalty

Definition
Term

(Sentencing and punishment)

Death Penalty

Definition
Term

Death Penalty argumen for Public Opinion

(Sentencing and punishment)

 

 

Definition

For: The majority of the American public supports use of the death penalty.
Against: A growing number of Americans support the sentence of life without parole over the death penalty.

Term

Death Penalty Argument for Retribution

(Sentencing and punishment)

 

Definition

For: Only the taking of the murderer's life restores the balance and allows society to show convincingly that murder is an intolerable crime which will be punished in kind. it is proper to take an "eye for an eye" and a life for a life.

 

Against: emotional impulse for revenge is not a sufficient justification for invoking a system of capital punishment

Term

Death Penalty argument for Deterrence

(Sentencing and punishment)

Definition

For: if murderers are sentenced to death and executed, potential murderers will think twice before killing for fear of losing their own life.

 

Against: States in the United States that do not employ the death penalty generally have lower murder rates than states that do.

Term

Death Penalty argument for Incapacitation

(Sentencing and punishment)

 

Definition

For: 100% effective because removes the opportunity to commit another crime
Against: life without parole is sufficient and enough to incapacitate

Term

Death Penalty argument for Cost of Death Penalty

(Sentencing and punishment)

 

Definition

For: It is much cheaper to sentence someone to death rather than life in prison.
Against: cost the state 70% more per case , case costs $2.3 million more than incarceration in maximum for 40 years, and Cases resulting in life imprisonment average around $500,000 each

Term

Decisions to seek Death Penalty

(Sentencing and punishment)

 

Definition

The prosecution has a 1 in 3 chance of returning a death sentence.
There is a 1 in 4 chance that sentence will be overturned
There is a 2 in 4 chance the person will die of natural causes or prison related death (not execution)
There is only a 1 in 4 chance that person will be executed (8%)

Term

Death Penalty argument for Closure

(Sentencing and punishment)

 

 

Definition

  For: execution brings closure to the murderer's crime and closure to the ordeal for the victim's family.

Against: Using an execution to try to right the wrong of their loss is an affront to families and only causes more pain.

Term

Historical information

(Jails and Prisons)

Definition



    Early jails consisted of drunks, prostitutes, thieves, robbers, orphaned children, and debtors, and people who did not agree with the Church of England.
    The “shire-reeves” or sheriffs controlled the jails in their individual shires or localities.
    Early jails operated on a fee system. Prisoners had to pay fees to the sheriff and the jail keepers
    Corruption was common place; food, sanitation, and medical care were substandard, Conditions in jails were appalling.
    Jails in colonial America were also very poor. Many jails held all types of offenders together in dormitories regardless of gender, age, or type of offense.
    Separation of the most serious offenders from others and also by gender.
    1790, also Philadelphia, institution known as 1st true correctional institution in American opened: the Walnut street Jail
    Prisoners engaged in productive labor and male inmates were paid a daily wage to offset the cost of incarceration.
    Most prisons were modeled after the concepts of the Walnut Street Jail.

 

Term

1st jail

(Jails and Prisons)

Definition

 

Walnut street Jail

 

Term

Difference between jails in prisons

Prisons

(Jails and Prisons)

 

 

Definition

local/state, felony offenders, stable population; rural areas; larger populations; more diverse programs.

 

a state or federal confinement facility that has custodial authority over adults sentenced to confinement


Term

Difference between jails in prisons

Jails

(Jails and Prisons)

 

Definition

operated by county, hold pre-trial detainees and those sentenced to less than a year, changing population, populated areas, smaller populations, limited programs.

 

local operated short term confinement facility


Term

Purpose of jail

(Jails and Prisons)

Definition

 

  • To enhance public safety by segregating those deemed a criminal threat to people and property.
  • Affect some measure of positive behavior/attitudinal change.
  • Serve as a form of punishment.

 

Term

Purpose of prison

(Jails and Prisons)

Definition
To punish, to protect, and to rehabilitate.
Term

Problems with Jail

(Jails and Prisons)

Definition

   
         The words jail and crowding are inseparable.
         Creates increased tensions, increased wear and tear on facilities and equipment, budgetary problems, and inability to meet program and service standards.
        Problems created at all stages of the system.
         Direct supervision is needed
Term

Problems with Jail pt 2

(Jails and Prisons)

Definition
Physically ill: infectious diseases, substance abuse, STDS, etc.
        Alcoholics and drug addicts
        Inmates with disabilities
        Aggressive and assaultive inmates
        Vulnerable inmates: because of size, appearance, history, etc.
        Mentally ill
        Sex offenders
        Suicidal inmates


Term

Problems with Prison

(Jails and Prisons)

Definition

    Serious overcrowding
    Riots and disturbances (seem to occur in waves/contagious)

Term

security classifications and differences

(Jails and Prisons)

Definition
Maximum, Medium, Minumum
Term

security classifications and differences

for Maximum

(Jails and Prisons)

Definition

       
confines 4,000 inmates and the smallest about 60.
Historically, immigrants and minorities.
Since the 1980s: MAXI-MAXI PRISONS
Term

security classifications and differences

for Medium

(Jails and Prisons)

Definition
Most intensive correctional and rehabilitative efforts are conducted in medium security prisons.
Similar in appearance to maximum security prisons.
Term

security classifications and differences

for Minimum

(Jails and Prisons)

Definition
Diverse facilities
Relatively open
Serve the economic needs of society and the institution

Term

Prison Labor

(Jails and Prisons)

Definition
Learn discipline, accountability, job skills, and earn $ for compensation

1930s-1940s

1979: law passed to allow inmate labor

70% of all inmates perform work in prison; most involves maintenance of the facility itself

Only about 2/3 are paid for their work: average wage is less than 60 cents per hour.

Still hotly debated issue
Term

Women in prison (Statistics)

(Jails and Prisons)

Definition

women were punished for not being submissive, obedient, or chaste or for theft/begging. Required to cook, clean, sew, and be prostitutes for guards and other inmates because inmates were not separate for

women and men.

In 1980 there were just over 12,000 women in prison.

 

By 1997, that number had increased to almost 80,000.

 

Most women’s prisons are medium security prisons.
Most administrative and correctional officers are male which has led to sexual abuse and sexual favors.

 



Term

Women in prison statistics 2

(Jails and Prisons)

Definition
1 in 3 women are in prison for drug related offenses
Women serving a sentence for a violent crime are twice as likely as men to have committed the crime against an intimate or relative.

    57% of women inmates were physically or sexually abused in the past as compared to 16% of men. Of the 57% of women, 37% were abused before the age of 18.
    75% of women in prison have at least one child; 66% of these children are under the age of 18 (200,000 children)
    6% of women are pregnant upon admission to jail or prison (taken at birth and placed with relatives or welfare agency)
Term

Gang membership (factors associated with)

(Jails and Prisons)

Definition


  
         Racial/Ethnic gangs
         
             Racial solidarity
             Geographical proximity
         Political biases
             Religious beliefs
             Motorcycle machismo

Term

Number of adults in jail/prison and on probation/parole 

(Jails and Prisons)

Definition

2.5 million in jail and prison
7.5 million under correctional supervision (1/31 adults)

Term

What is Probation

(Jails and Prisons)

Definition

             A sentence of imprisonment that is suspended. Also, the conditional freedom granted by a judicial officer to a convicted offender as lon a the person meets certain conditions of behavior
Term

What is Parole

(Jails and Prisons)

Definition
the status of a convicted offender who has been conditionally released from prison by a paroling authority before the expiration of his or her sentence, is placed under the supervision of a parole agency, and is required to observe the conditions of parole

Term

% of people released from prison or jail
    (Jails and Prisons)


        

Definition
95% will be released
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