Title: Criminal Justice Policy
1Criminal Justice Policy
- Wilson, Chapter 12
-
- CQ Researcher, Chapter 11
-
- Why are U.S. Incarceration Rates So High?
Michael Tonry, Crime Delinquency, Vol. 45, No.
4, 419-437 (1999). - Beckett, K. 1994 Setting the Public Agenda
Street Crime and Drug Use in American
Politics, Social Problems 41(3) 42546. -
- Ilyana Kuziemko and Steven D Levitt, An
empirical analysis of imprisoning drug offenders,
Journal of Public Economics, Volume 88, Issues
9-10, , August 2004, Pages 2043-2066. -
- Drug Policy and the Criminal Justice System
(The Sentencing Project) - Debates
- April 10 Should the death penalty be abolished?
- April 17 Should recreational drug use be
legalized? -
-
2Criminal Justice Policy Regimes (Wilson)
- Colonial Criminal Justice Regime (1610-1790)
- Pre-Industrial Criminal Justice Regime
(1791-1870) - Industrial Criminal Justice Regime (1870-1960)
- Rights Criminal Justice Regime (1960-1994)
- Incarceration Criminal Justice Regime
(1994-present)
3The Increasing Punitiveness of Criminal Justice
Policies (and Enforcement)
- Increased use of the death penalty for capital
offenses - Increased use of incarceration for violent and
(especially) nonviolent offenses - Why has this happened?
- What are the consequences?
4The Death Penalty
- Furman v. Georgia, 1972
- Marshall and Brennan inherently cruel and
unusual - Douglas, Stewart and White employed in
arbitrary, random, unfair, and discriminatory
pattern. - Supreme Court struck down all capital punishment
laws as currently written - 700 persons given permanent reprieve
5The Death Penalty
- Gregg v. Georgia, 1976
- Georgia rewrites death penalty laws to ensure
fairness and uniformity of application - series of cases involving other states
effectively reinstated the death penalty
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7The Death Penalty
8The Death Penalty
9The Death Penalty
10The Death Penalty
11The Death Penalty
12The Death Penalty
- Racial disparity
- 42 of death row inmates are black
- 53 black or Latino
13 of Homicides Committed by Black Offender
Source Bureau of Justice Statistics
14The Death Penalty
- Racial disparity
- 42 of death row inmates are black
- 53 black or Latino
- "race of victim effect (David Baldus, 1980s)
- 50 of all murder victims are white
- gt80 of all death row inmates executed were
convicted of killing a white victim - gt80 of statistical studies find a significant
race of victim effect - Supreme Court refuses to recognize this evidence
(1987, McKlesky vs. Kemp)
15The Death Penalty
16The Death Penalty
- Cruel punishment (8th Amendment)?
- Death Penalty Methods
- By state
- Botched executions
- Lethal injection
- States with executions on hold
- H-L Article on Kentucky execution methods
17The Death Penalty
18The Death Penalty
19Incarceration in America
- History
- a recent phenomenon
- Colonial era fines, shame (stocks/cages),
whipping, banishment (NYC, 1733-43 whipped and
banished nearly every nonresident guilty of
theft), hanging (for the most serious of crimes
and repeat offenders) - Imprisonment as a democratic reform
- 1786 PA eliminates death penalty for robbery and
burglary other states follow example - What to do with offenders? Incarceration
20Walnut Street Jail (Philadelphia 1790)
21Incarceration Today
- 2006 Total 2,258,983
- Federal Prisons 190,844 (8.4)
- State Prisons 1,302,129 (57.6)
- Local Jails 766,010 (33.9)
22Incarceration in America
- Federal prisons
- Three Prisons Act 1891 3 federal prisons
- Bureau of Prisons Act 1930 orig. 11, now 114
- Characteristics of Federal Prisoners
- 93 male
- 57.5 white
- 31.4 Hispanic
- 10 High security
- 43 medium or low
- 29 non-citizen
- Large of drug offenders
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24Incarceration in America
- State Prisons
- - 51 prison systems
- Characteristics of State Prisoners
- 94 male
- 47.7 white
- 14.7 Hispanic
- Larger of violent offenders
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28Incarceration in America
- Local jails
- misdemeanors, awaiting trial, short sentences
- majority are unconvicted
- 13 under "jail supervision" are not living in
jail facility - 89 male
- 41 White(NH)
- 42 Black, 16 Hispanic
29Theories of Imprisonment(Stability of Punishment
Thesis)
30Challenging the Stability of Punishment Thesis
31Challenging the Stability of Punishment Thesis
32The Incarceration Explosion
- The Incarceration Explosion
- the U.S. imprisonment rate has more than tripled
since 1980 - gt2 million people behind bars gt7 million under
some form of control by criminal justice system - The American inmate population has grown so large
that it is difficult to comprehend imagine the
combined populations of Atlanta, St. Louis,
Pittsburgh, Boston, and Miami behind bars. - The biggest prison system in the Western
industrialized world is now.....
33The Incarceration Explosion
- The Incarceration Explosion
- CAs prison system (175,512 - 2006) is bigger
than the federal prison system - The CA prison/jail population is larger than that
of France, Japan, Great Britain, Germany,
Singapore, and the Netherlands....(more
international comparisons) - COMBINED
- The country with the largest percentage of
citizens behind bars is........ - No other society in human history has ever
imprisoned so many of its own citizens for the
purposes of crime control (Marc Mauer, The Race
to Incarcerate)
34The Incarceration Explosion
- The U.S. houses 22 of the worlds prison
population (source)
35Why?
- Why has the U.S. prison population grown so much
in recent decades? - Why is this trend unique to the U.S.??
36Why?
- Crime?
- Demographics?
- Unemployment?
37Crime Rates and Incarceration Rates in the U.S.
38Crime Rates and Incarceration Rates in the U.S.
39Why?
- Crime?
- Demographics?
- Unemployment?
- Public Opinion? Media?
- Partisan Politics
- Public Policy
- Tough sentencing policies
- The drug war
40Why?
- Increases in incarceration rates are in large
part a result of deliberate changes in criminal
justice policy - Increase in the power/discretion of law
enforcement (Supreme Court rulings) - Increase in law enforcement effort
- Increase in the severity of criminal sentences
41Why?
- Increasing the Severity of Criminal Sentences
- Sentencing reform
- The failure of the rehabilitative ideal
- Indeterminate vs. determinate sentencing
- Mandatory minimum sentences
- Three strikes laws
- Increasing use of the death penalty
- The War on Drugs
42The War on Drugs
- Late 1960s
- Recreational drug use rises in U.S.
- Bureau of Narcotics and Dangerous Drugs is
founded (1968) - 1970s
- 1970 - Comprehensive Drug Abuse Prevention and
Control Act - 1971 - Nixon declares war on drugs
- 71 - Special Action Office for Drug Abuse
Prevention - 72 - Office of Drug Abuse Law Enforcement
(ODALE) - establish joint federal/local task
forces to fight the drug trade at the street
level - 73 - The Drug Enforcement Administration is
established
43The War on Drugs
- 1970s (contd)
- 78 - Asset forfeiture introduced (CDAPCA)
- 1980s
- 82 - Largest cocaine seizure ever raises U.S.
awareness of Medellin cartel (3906 lbs.) - 84 - just say no campaign
- 86 - The Anti-Drug Abuse Act of 1986 - 1.7
billion - mandatory minimum penalties for drug offenses
- Possession of at least one kilogram of heroin or
five kilograms of cocaine is punishable by at
least ten years in prison
44The War on Drugs
- 1980s (contd)
- 89 - Office of National Drug Control Policy
- Drug czar
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46The War on Drugs Not Just a Federal Government
Campaign
47Explaining the Drug War
- Objectivist vs. Constructionist perspectives
- Katherine Beckett
- Making Crime Pay Law and Order in Contemporary Am
erican Politics 1997 - Michael Tonry
- Malign Neglect 1994
48Explaining the Drug War
- Objectivist perspective - Drug use?
49Explaining the Drug War
- Objectivist perspective - Drug use?
50Explaining the Drug War
51Public Opinion Drugs as Most Important Problem
Source Beckett, Social Problems, Vol. 41, No. 3.
(Aug., 1994), pp. 425-447.
52Media Coverage of Drug Issue
Source Beckett, Social Problems, Vol. 41, No. 3.
(Aug., 1994), pp. 425-447.
53Government Drug War Initiative
54Explaining the Drug War
- Government-initiated electoral
motivations/legitimacy - Role of media has helped create public support
55The Mobilization Model
Government (formal agenda)
Mass Public
Public Agenda
56Explaining the Drug War
- Government-initiated electoral
motivations/legitimacy - Role of media has helped create public support
- Has been self-perpetuating due to federal/state
bureaucracy - Federal-state grants
- Asset forfeiture
57The Consequences of the Drug War
- Michael Tonry and Malign Neglect
- The War was unnecessary
- The War is/was a failure
- The cost was tremendous
58The Consequences of the Drug War
- Tonry The War was fought largely from partisan
political motives to show that the Bush and
Reagan (and Clinton) administrations were
concerned about public safety, crime prevention,
and the needs of victims.
59The Consequences of the Drug War
- Tonry The War on Drugs foreseeably and
unnecessarily blighted the lives of hundreds of
thousands of disadvantaged black Americans and
undermined decades of effort to improve the life
chances of members of the urban black underclass.
60The Consequences of the Drug War
61The Consequences of the Drug War
62Disparities in Drug Laws
- The emergence of crack
- differences between crack and powder cocaine
- intensity/duration of high
- crack as a cause of violence
- open-air markets (crack) vs. secure settings
(cocaine)
63Disparities in Drug Laws
- Federal sentencing
- Powder cocaine possession with intent to
distribute carries a five year sentence for
quantities of 500 grams or more. - Crack cocaine a conviction of possession with
intent to distribute carries a five year sentence
for only 5 grams.
64Disparities in Drug Laws
Source Sentencing Project
65Disparities in Drug Laws
Source Sentencing Project
66Disparities in Drug Laws
Source Sentencing Project
67Disparities in Drug Laws
Source Sentencing Project
68Disparities in Drug Use?
- The federal government tracks drug use through
large national surveys (Dept. of Health and Human
Services, Substance Abuse and Mental Health
Services Administration - Statistics on illicit drug use by race
69Racial Disparity in Prison Admissions
Source Rand
70Racial Disparity in Imprisonment Rates