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Chapter 5 Police

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Tell me about one encounter you had with a police officer, good or bad, ... criminal law organized crime, drug, violent crimes, and white collar crimes. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Chapter 5 Police


1
Chapter 5 Police
  • Tell me about one encounter you had with a police
    officer, good or bad, passive or active.

2
Policing History and Structure
  • Chapter 5
  • Law

3
Historical Development of the Police
  • Bobbies the English police is of special
    significance to students of criminal justice in
    America, for it was upon the British model that
    much of early American policing was based.

4
Early law enforcement - Posse
  • Until 1200 A.D., when a person committed a crime
    and could be identified, he was pursued by an
    organized posse. The posse was led by the mounted
    officer, comes stabuli. Our modern terms of
    Sheriff or constable are derived from these early
    terms.

5
Early law enforcement - Posse
  • The offender, once caught, became the victim.
    Guilt was usually assumed and trials were rare.
    Public execution, often involving torture,
    typified this early justice.

6
Early police Bow Street Runners
  • Bow Street Runners were an early English police
    unit formed under the leadership of Henry
    Fielding, magistrate of the Bow Street region of
    London.

7
Bow Street Runners
  • The early eighteenth century saw the emergence in
    London of a large criminal organization led by
    Jonathan Wild. Wild ran a group of robbers,
    thieves and burglars.

8
Bow Street Runners
  • Bow Street Runners, a force of dedicated police
    officers, were organized to handle Wild and his
    men.
  • Henry Fielding, a judge in the Bow Street region,
    founded the new police force.

9
The New Police
  • In 1829, sir Robert Peel formed what many called
    a modern police force.
  • Members of the modern police force were dubbed
    Bobbies after their founder. RobertBob.

10
Bobbies
  • Londons Bobbies were organized around two
    principles
  • (1) The belief it was possible to discourage
    crime
  • (2) The practice of preventive patrol

11
The Early American Experience
  • Early American law enforcement efforts were based
    to some degree on the British experience.
  • However, the unique experience of the American
    colonies quickly differentiated the needs of
    colonists from those of the masses remaining in
    Europe.
  • Recent writers on the history of the American
    police have observed that policing in American
    was originally decentralized and
    geographically dispersed.

12
The Frontier
  • One of the major factors determining the
    development of American law enforcement was the
    frontier, which remained vast and wild until the
    late nineteenth century. The back woods areas
    proved a natural haven for outlaws and bandits.

13
Vigilantism
  • Most of the original vigilantes of the American
    West were honest men and women trying to forge an
    organized and predictable lifestyle out of the
    challenging situation of the new frontier.

14
Policing Americas early cities
  • In 1693, the first uniformed police officer was
    employed by New York city.
  • In 1731 the first precinct and station was
    constructed.
  • Early 19th century (1800s), many cities hired a
    police force.

15
Policing in the Twenty Century
  • During the 20th century, telephones, automobiles
    and radios all had their impact. Teddy Roosevelt,
    the 26th president of the U.S. began his career
    by serving as a police commissioner in New York
    from 1895-1897.

16
Policing in the Twenty Century
  • As president, Roosevelt helped to organize the
    Bureau of Investigation, which later became the
    FBI.
  • The FBI became a national investigative service
    designed to quickly identify and apprehend
    offenders charged with a growing list of federal
    offenses.

17
Prohibition and Police Corruption
  • A dark period for American law enforcement
    agencies began in 1920 with the passage of a
    constitutional prohibition against all forms of
    alcoholic beverages. Until prohibition was
    repealed in 1933, most parts of the country were
    rife with criminal activity, much of it
    supporting the trade in bootlegged liquor.
    Bootleggers earned huge sums of money, and some
    became very wealthy. Massive wealth in the hands
    of law violators greatly increased the potential
    for corruption among police officials, some of
    whom were paid off to support the bootlegging
    operations.

18
Prohibition
19

20
American Law Enforcement Today
  • Three major legislative and judicial
    jurisdictions exist in the United States
    federal, state and local each has created a
    variety of police agencies to enforce its laws.
  • Law enforcement also extends to private security
    firms (for profit firms).

21
Federal Law Enforcement Agencies
  • There are many federal law enforcement agencies
    distributed in the U.S. government. See page 199.
    According to the Bureau of Justice and
    Statistics, federal law enforcement agencies
    employ over 88,000 full time, weapon carrying,
    officers. Another 72,000 are support staff (no
    guns for support staff).

22
FBI
  • Federal Bureau of Investigations (FBI) may be the
    most famous and most exemplary police officers.
  • History of FBI established in 1908 to fight
    business corruption. The FBI started out working
    on antitrust violations and bankruptcy fraud and
    to pursue federal fugitives. The bureau grew
    quickly because of the White Slave Traffic Act in
    1910. This necessitated a coordinated interstate
    law enforcement effort to fight organized
    prostitution. This act stopped the importation
    of women from Europe for prostitution in the U.S.
  • In the 1920 -1930s the combination of
    Prohibition and organized crime propelled the FBI
    into war with well armed and violent groups.

23
FBI
  • 1935 FBI dealt with collecting information about
    radical groups within the US, including Communist
    extreme groups. During WWII, the FBI dealt with
    combating the efforts of Nazi and Japanese
    saboteurs. In the 1960s the FBI investigated
    civil rights violations.
  • 1990s FBI had to repair a damaged reputation for
    the 1993 failure of the Waco incident. Four
    agents were killed, and 72 people died in the
    Waco fire.
  • The FBI crime forensics lab was criticized for
    improper practices as well. The US dept. of
    Justice has identified 3,000 criminal cases that
    may have been affected by flawed procedures and
    flawed testimony by FBI laboratory technicians.

24
FBI
  • The Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) is the
    investigative arm of the US Department of
    Justice. The FBI's investigative authority can be
    found in Title 28, Section 533 of the US Code.
    Additionally, there are other statutes, such as
    the Congressional Assassination, Kidnapping, and
    Assault Act (Title 18, US Code, Section 351),
    which give the FBI responsibility to investigate
    specific crimes.

25
The FBI today
  • Their mission statement divides responsibility
    into five functions criminal law enforcement,
    law enforcement services, foreign
    counterintelligence, investigative and
    operational support and direction, control and
    administration.

26
FBI Today
  • FBI criminal law organized crime, drug, violent
    crimes, and white collar crimes.
  • FBI law enforcement provides forensics for
    criminal law, provide training for law
    enforcement outside of the FBI.
  • FBI foreign counterintelligence investigates
    and collects information to identify and
    neutralize the activities of foreign powers and
    their agents that adversely affect the US
    national security.
  • FBI investigation and operational support - other
    domestic investigations.
  • FBI administration training and administration
    support.

27
State Law Enforcement
  • State Law Enforcement Highway patrol, State
    police, and State university police. (p. 207)
  • State law enforcement agencies usually do the
    following
  • Assist local law enforcement in criminal
    investigations when asked.
  • Operate identification bureaus.
  • Maintain a central criminal records repository.
  • Patrol the state highways.
  • Provide select training for municipal and county
    officers.

28
Local Agencies
  • The term local police encompasses municipal
    (city) police, sheriff (rural) department and
    other specialty police such as campus police and
    transit police. i.e. Stanford police and BART
    police.

29
Local Police
  • Every incorporated municipality in the country
    has the authority to create its own police force.
    Some forces are very small with one police
    officer and others are large. New York City
    Police department has 40,000 full time sworn
    officers.
  • Sheriff departments are responsible for law
    enforcement in unincorporated areas and for the
    operation of the county jail.

30
Private Protective Services
  • Private agencies such as Pinkerton provide
    tailored policing funded by the guarded
    organization, whereas police are paid by public
    monies and work for the people as a whole.
  • Major reasons for quick growth of private
    security companies include
  • an increase in crimes in the workplace
  • an increase in fear (real or perceived) of crime
  • the fiscal crises of the state which results in
    less police available
  • an increase in public and business awareness and
    use of more cost effective private security
    products and services.
  • Examples of private security services are bank
    guards, airport security, mall security, hospital
    security, nuclear facility security, money
    transfer security.

31
  • End of Chapter 5 notes
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