crime in america you are innocent until proven guilty

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Crime in America You are innocent until proven guilty

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Page 1: Crime in America You are innocent until proven guilty

Crime in America

You are innocent until proven guilty

Page 2: Crime in America You are innocent until proven guilty

What is Law?

• Law: set of rules and standards by which a society governs itself

• Law defines individual rights and responsibilities

• Law establishes the “rules of the game”

• No person is (or should) be above the law

Page 3: Crime in America You are innocent until proven guilty

Influences on Law

• 1. Code of Hammurabi– Earliest written form of law– 1792-1750 BC (King of Babylon)

• A collection of “common laws” – 282• Specified punishments• Identified

– Criminal acts – Civil laws– Property crimes– Family law

Page 4: Crime in America You are innocent until proven guilty

Influences, pt. 2

• 2. Ten Commandments– System found in Bible (Moses rec’d. from

God) on Mt. Sinai– 13th Century BC– Identified morality as basis

Page 5: Crime in America You are innocent until proven guilty

Influences, pt. 3

• 3. Constitutional Law– Most fundamental and important source of all

law in US– Representative democracy

• Outlines our structure of government• Set forth basic rights for citizens

– US Supreme Court is ultimate authority• Decides what is constitutional…

Page 6: Crime in America You are innocent until proven guilty

Influences, pt. 4

• 4. Statutory law– Law written by legislative branch of

government• Based loosely on Roman*** laws

– ***poor Romans demanded laws be written down so all could see, know and understand

– Twelve Tables – posted in Forum (city center) – 450 BC– Those laws were used for +1,000 years

» 350 AD Justinian (Roman leader) revamped laws to simplify the code: Justinian Code

Page 7: Crime in America You are innocent until proven guilty

Influences, pt. 5

• Statutes (laws) written by states/cities are called ordinances. Limit citizen’s behavior:– Speed limits– Rules for food inspection/usage– Minimum wage for workers– Age for driver’s license– Social security access?

Page 8: Crime in America You are innocent until proven guilty

Influences, pt. 6

• 5. Napoleonic Code (France)– Took Justinian Code/reworked 1804– Became model for Europe’s legal system– Adopted by Louisiana & French Canada

• They had been colonized by France

Page 9: Crime in America You are innocent until proven guilty

Influences, pt. 7

• 6. Common Law– single, most important basis for American legal

system– Laws written after cases decided by judges (issues

that others might have)– Set precedent (future questions)– “stare decisis” Latin for let the decision stand– English colonist brought common law to America,

before 1776

Page 10: Crime in America You are innocent until proven guilty

Guest Speaker

• Special Agent III

• Donnie Long

• OSBI

• Investigative Division

Page 11: Crime in America You are innocent until proven guilty

Crime

• Crime is any act that breaks the law and there is a punishment for it

• Criminal – any person who commits a crime• FBI (Federal Bureau of Investigation)

– Collects data and tracks the types and numbers of crime in America

– Universal Crime Report (UCR)• Felonies (serious crimes)• Misdemeanors (minor crimes)

Page 12: Crime in America You are innocent until proven guilty

Crime, pt. 2

• Identifies most common crimes:

• Most Common Arrest Category:

• Men & women – Highest %– DUI (driving under influence) – alcohol/drugs– Larceny– Criminal mischief

Page 13: Crime in America You are innocent until proven guilty

Crime, pt. 3

• 2nd level crime committed:– Liquor law violations (underage drinking)– Assault– Disorderly conduct

• 3rd level crime (least amount reported)– Murder– Arson– Embezzlement– Justifiable homicide: killing of a felon by police officer

or the killing of a felon by private citizen during a felony

Page 14: Crime in America You are innocent until proven guilty

Criminology

• The study of crime and the criminal justice system:– Police– Courts– prisons

Page 15: Crime in America You are innocent until proven guilty

Tendencies…

• Crimes for men typically…– Major property crimes– More violent types

• Crimes for women typically…– Bad checks– Credit card fraud– Drugs (sales/use)– Other non-violent types

Page 16: Crime in America You are innocent until proven guilty

Violent Crime

• Any crime against a person that involves the use of force:– Rape– Murder– Those who harm a person

• Threaten to kill someone• Do them bodily harm

Page 17: Crime in America You are innocent until proven guilty

Numbers…

• UCR Report 2012 (most recent)

• Violent crime up .7% from 2011

• Nationally:– 14,827 murdered (up 1.1%)

• 43% south• 21% west• 21% Midwest• 14% northeast

Page 18: Crime in America You are innocent until proven guilty

Numbers, pt. 2

• Nonviolent property crimes up to $15.5 billion in value loss.

• Oklahoma: OSBI UCR– 139,319 total crimes reported

• 191 murdered 2012– 3 Durant, 2,700 total crimes

» Reported, pop. 16, 026

Page 19: Crime in America You are innocent until proven guilty

Violent Crimes - Types

• 1. Aggravated assault– Intentional injury upon another person– Can occur in the commission of another crime

• 2. hate crimes– Injury to another because of prejudice carried against

other people• Gay community (high %) affected

• 3. rape– 3rd most common type– Unwanted sexual attack on body of another

Page 20: Crime in America You are innocent until proven guilty

Property Crimes - Types

• 1. Burglary– Forcible, illegal entry into someone’s home with the

intent to steal something

• 2. larceny– Theft of property without the use of force against

another person

• 3. motor vehicle theft– Taking car from someone without their permission**

• Gang members steal to use car in another crime

Page 21: Crime in America You are innocent until proven guilty

Property, pt. 2

• 4. Robbery– Crime that can involve both people and

property; might involve a threat of violence against another person (mugging)

• 5. Vandalism– Willful destruction of property (tagging)

• 6. Arson– Destruction of property using fire

Page 22: Crime in America You are innocent until proven guilty

“Victimless” crimes???

• Illegal gambling

• Drug abuse

• The “victim” is the person doing the crime…does not harm others.

• Can lead to other criminal acts (which does hurt others).

Page 23: Crime in America You are innocent until proven guilty

“White-Collar” crimes

• Non-violent, breach of trust crimes• 1. embezzlement

– Theft or misuse of $$ by person trusted by another

• 2. fraud– Cheating someone out of $$, property

• 3. cybercrimes– Stealing identity of someone else (Identity Theft)– Using technology/computer

Page 24: Crime in America You are innocent until proven guilty

Other Criminal Activities

• Organized Crime (Crime Syndicates)– Profit made from illegal activities

• Gambling• Alcohol/drug sales• prostitution

• Political Crime– Illegal or unethical acts involving elected officials

• Kickbacks• Bribery• Insider dealing

Page 25: Crime in America You are innocent until proven guilty

Reasons for Crime

• 1. Poverty– When people starve, more likely to commit a

criminal act to live

• 2. Illegal drug addiction– Stealing to support habit becomes necessary

to the addict

• 3. Permissive society– Parents fail to tell kids “no”-you can’t have

everything you want…

Page 26: Crime in America You are innocent until proven guilty

reasons, pt. 2

• 4. Urbanization– Major movement into cities

• Higher access to illegal activities• Larger # of potential victims

• 5. Technology– Ease of access to computers– Lower educational level (lead 1 to crime)

• 6. Social Change– Joining “gang” for substitute family

• Family structure of current society not as stable…sometimes.

Page 27: Crime in America You are innocent until proven guilty

National Crime Bill

• Passed 1994: has 5 parts

• 1. added police officers

• 2. expanded prison system

• 3. gave tougher penalties for crimes

• 4. increased # crimes eligible for conviction (prison time)

• 5. 3-strikes rule

Page 28: Crime in America You are innocent until proven guilty

Criminal Justice System – Police (1)

• 6 duties:– 1. to protect life and property– 2. prevent crime– 3. arrest people who violate the law– 4. protect rights of people– 5. maintain order– 6. control traffic

Page 29: Crime in America You are innocent until proven guilty

Police, pt. 2

• Must undergo before being hired:– Complete background investigation– Full psychological evaluations (MMPI)– Physical agility tests– Strict training program

• Oklahoma (CLEET); facility at Ada– Council of Law Enforcement and Education Training

Page 30: Crime in America You are innocent until proven guilty

Arrest me????

• Before making any arrest, officers must:– Have probable cause to believe crime was committed– Request arrest warrant signature from a judge– Upon arrest and person is not free to leave, Miranda

Rights should be read to suspect if they are going to be questioned

– Suspect taken to jail, photographed, fingerprinted, national data base checked, and booked into jail***

– ***arrest time to court time can be longer than is comfortable for some…

Page 31: Crime in America You are innocent until proven guilty

Criminal Justice System (2)Court

• 1. preliminary hearing• Judge reads formal charges• Suspect formally arraigned

– Suspect enters plea: guilty or not guilty• Judge decides if bail is option

– Bail is $$ or property put up to get out of jail-for the time being– Judge might say no bail allowed

» You stay in jail» Considered “flight risk” (you might runnoft)

– Judge might say no bail required» (out on “own recognizance” – promise be good)

– Judge may set bail amounts based on:» Nature of crime» Recommendation from District Attorney» Request from defense attorney

Page 32: Crime in America You are innocent until proven guilty

Trial phase (2)

• If judge “binds over” for trial:• Jury selection is first action of trial.

– Both attorneys choose jury members• Jury pool (local registered voters)

• Prosecution generally begins trial with opening remarks about case.

• Defense attorney speaks for suspect.– Defendants cannot be forced to testify against

themselves (5th amendment) spouses also have protection against testifying

Page 33: Crime in America You are innocent until proven guilty

Trial, pt. 2

• Trial may take up to ??? Days.

• When both attorneys finished with witnesses and case presentation, judge gives instructions to jury:– What charges are– What punishments are appropriate– Jury begins deliberations (make their

decision-in private)

Page 34: Crime in America You are innocent until proven guilty

Jury time

• 2 choices:– Guilty

• Must be unanimous that suspect guilty “beyond a shadow of a doubt”

– Acquit (Not guilty)• Set suspect free immediately

– “Hung Jury” – last option• If jury cannot totally agree, sometimes “Mistrial”

declared and another trial set

Page 35: Crime in America You are innocent until proven guilty

Sentencing (3)

• If defendant found guilty, must be sentenced.– Juries make recommendations for

punishments to judge…but

• Some states have mandatory punishments for certain crimes.– Judges have option to finalize punishments

• At sentencing, both attorneys are present + the guilty person.

Page 36: Crime in America You are innocent until proven guilty

Sentencing, pt. 2

• Plea bargain might be offered…defense attorney’s continue to try to get their client the best possible choice for punishment.

• Punishment begins when offer accepted• Prison is only option for serious crimes• For less serious crimes, judge might impose

lighter sentence.– County jail time– Fine– Probation– Or all three

Page 37: Crime in America You are innocent until proven guilty

Corrections (4)

• Prison Time– Oklahoma has 163 statewide jails

• (counties, state prisons, city jails)• 15,650 prisoner capacity statewide

• Most Americans agree:– Dangerous criminals should be locked up…

• Most prisons overcrowded• Prison changes people• Sometimes “rehabilitation” doesn’t happen there• “cruel and unusual” punishment???

Page 38: Crime in America You are innocent until proven guilty

Parole/Probation (5)

• Final chain in system…after serving a portion of the sentence.

• Allows felon to prove prison lessons learned• Reduces prison population• Parole board interviews felon

– Free them or keep in jail???– If freed, felons must report regularly to Probation

Officer (PO) every month– Felons must get paying job and report any changes to

PO immediately

Page 39: Crime in America You are innocent until proven guilty

Capital Punishment

• Death penalty– Spring 2013 (most recent ##)– 34 states have death penalty

• Oklahoma uses lethal injection

– US Government and US military also have death penalty

• Most severe form of punishment• ***Video clip on “debunking” death penalty

Page 40: Crime in America You are innocent until proven guilty

Capital, pt. 2

• Numbers…Spring 2013:

• Death Row Census

• 3,108 people on death row across America– 1,341 White 3,046 Men– 1,300 Black 62 Women– 369 Hispanic– 68 Others

Page 41: Crime in America You are innocent until proven guilty

Death Penalty TypesHave been used by US…

Lethal Injection

Gas Chamber

Firing Squad

Electric Chair

Hanging

Page 42: Crime in America You are innocent until proven guilty

Juvenile Crime

• A young person under the age of 18

• “juvenile delinquent”

• Late 1870’s courts realized kids did not realize full meaning of actions: should not get full punishment

• Created juvenile system to get kids out of circumstances that lead them to commit crime???

Page 43: Crime in America You are innocent until proven guilty

Causes of Juvenile Delinquency???

• 1. poor home life conditions– Parents don’t take care of kids– Parental alcohol/drug abuse– Parents are criminals– Parents are abusing the kids

• 2. bad neighborhoods– High % crime and poverty rates– Kids exposed to violence– Low amount of job opportunities

Page 44: Crime in America You are innocent until proven guilty

Causes, pt. 2

• 3. gang membership– Gangs offer “family” protection– Support each other, even in criminal acts– Gangs very often involved in murder/illegal

drugs (sales/use)

• 4. high drop out rates– Lack of education and social skills– Kids make bad choices– Lower job opportunities for drop outs

Page 45: Crime in America You are innocent until proven guilty

Causes, pt. 3

• 5. alcohol and drug abuse– Bad decision making skills– Kids under influence do things wouldn’t

ordinarily do– Need $$ to support the habit so they steal or

prostitute themselves

• 6. peer pressure– If you hang out with delinquents, it’s easy to

become one…

Page 46: Crime in America You are innocent until proven guilty

Re: Gault

• 1967 Supreme Court Case

• Changed the way kids are tried in courts

• Created juvenile justice system– Juvenile courts (not adult style)– Kids, parents and law enforcement only

allowed in (protect kid)– Judge listens to entire story and makes

decision what to do with kid offender

Page 47: Crime in America You are innocent until proven guilty

Judicial Suggestions…

• Judges might order these:– Don’t use drugs and or alcohol– Stay in school– Fight peer pressure– Learn to say no– Live a full, happy life– Avoid the criminal justice system altogether!!!

Page 48: Crime in America You are innocent until proven guilty

Juvenile Punishments

• 1. Placement in foster care– Take the kid out of situation at home – Abusive/non-protective parents

• 2. Juvenile Corrections– Facilities for serious offenders– Prison for kids– “boot camp” style

• Thunderbird Academy (Pryor, OK)

Page 49: Crime in America You are innocent until proven guilty

Punishments, pt. 2

• 3. probation– Period of time to prove they’ve reformed (supervised

by PO)– Must obey strict rules of behavior– Stay away from negative people and influences– Report to PO regularly

• 4. counseling– Juvenile is given case worker they see regularly to

teach them life skills/anger management/crisis management

Page 50: Crime in America You are innocent until proven guilty

Punishment, pt 3

• 5. Adjudicated as Adult– Most serious decision made about a juvenile;

no longer gets protection of being a kid.– Judge can decide if crime is serious enough– Kid can be treated like adult– Kid is over 14 and accused of felony– Statistics prove that sending kids to adult

prison does not help them!