Title: Crime and Punishment
1Crime and Punishment
2Essay Questions
- What do you consider to be effective means of
keeping law and order in todays society?
(Cambridge 1988) - Consider the arguments for and against the use of
death penalty in a modern society. (Cambridge
1997) - Juvenile delinquency is on the rise because
parents are not doing their job. What do you
think? (YJC) - The abolition of capital punishment is a humane
but unwise move. Discuss. (CJC) - The threat of global terrorism is a destabilising
force in todays world. Give your views. (JJC)
3Crime a definition
- A violation of norm that has been entered into
law and is backed by the power and authority of
the state to impose formal sanctions eg. fines,
arrest and imprisonment
4Causes of crime
- Are criminals born or made?
- Nurture (Social and Economic factors)
- Weakening family institution
- In my judgement, one of the basic reasons we
have had crime, lawlessness and disorder in the
United States has been the breakdown of the
family unit. - Robert F Kennedy
- Violence and sexual permissiveness in the media
5Causes of crime
- Poverty
- Nothing incites to money-crimes like great
poverty or great wealth. Mark Twain - High unemployment rate
- Consumerist and materialistic culture
- Individualistic society
- Decaying morals and religious foundation with
rising secularism
6Causes of crime
- Discrimination and oppression
- Inadequate social control
- Easy availability of drugs and weapons
- Peer influence
7Causes of crime
- Nature (Inborn traits)
- Weak-willed character
- Low level of self-discipline
- Susceptible to temptation
- Psychiatric disorder
- Schizophrenia
- Psychopathy
8Causes of crime
- Genetic Disposition
- Genetically predisposed to crimes
9Types of Crime
crimes that cause serious harm to people or
property
- Crime against a person
- - murder, rape, assault
- Crime against property
- - arson, vandalism
10The murder of James Bulger
11Types of Crime
- Prostitution
- illegal sexual acts among consenting adults
- drug abuse violations
- Illegal gambling
- acts viewed as criminal because the society as a
whole regards them as morally repugnant
12Types of Crime
a self-perpetuating conspiracy that operates for
profit or power and that seeks to obtain immunity
from the law through fear and corruption
(Abadinsky, 1981)
- Providing illegal goods and services
- selling illegal drugs,
- loan sharking
- Providing legal goods and services by illegal
means - monopolise public services by bribing public
officials threatening violence against
potential competitors - use legitimate companies to launder money
earned through their illegal activities
the unlawful activities of the members of a
highly organized, disciplined association engaged
in supplying illegal goods and services
13Types of Crime
White-collar crime a crime committed by a person
of respectability and high status in the course
of his occupation (Sutherland, 1949)
- illegal stock trading
- embezzling
- padding expense accounts
- stealing from an employer
- evading personal income taxes
- unethical or unfair practices
14(No Transcript)
15Types of Crime
- the unlawful use of force or violence against
persons or property to intimidate or coerce a
government or civilian population, to achieve
political or other objectives
- assassinations
- bombings
- arson
- hostage-taking
- hijacking
- seizure and occupation of a building
- ecological and high-tech terrorism
16Types of Crime
- Petty crimes
- Cyber crime
- Telecommunication crimes
- Illegal groups
- Genocide
17THE CONCEPT OF PUNISHMENT
- Definition
- Punishment under law is the authorized imposition
of deprivations of freedom or privacy or other
goods to which the person otherwise has a right,
or the imposition of special burdens because
the person has been found guilty of some criminal
violation, typically (though not invariably)
involving harm to the innocent.
18Key ideas
- Punishment is an authorized act, not an
incidental or accidental harm. It is an act of
the political authority having jurisdiction in
the community where the harmful wrong occurred. - 2. Specifying the deprivation as a deprivation of
rights is a helpful reminder that a crime is
(among other things) a violation of the victim's
rights, and the harm thus done is akin to the
kind of harm a punishment does.
19- 3. Punishment is a human institution, not a
natural event outside human purposes, intentions,
and acts. - 4. Punishment is imposed on persons who are
believed to have acted wrongly. Being found
guilty by persons authorized to make such a
finding, and based on their belief in the
person's guilt, is a necessary condition of
justified punishment. Actually being guilty is
not.
20Purpose of Punishment
- Deterrence
- General punishing this ? deters others
- Specific punishing this ? to deter this ?
21Purpose of Punishment
- 2. Incapacitation/Protection
- Protect society by separating the criminal
either by incarceration or stigmatization
22Purpose of Punishment
- 3. Rehabilitation
- Cure the ? to prevent future crimes
23Purpose of Punishment
- 4. Retribution
- Punish the ? because he deserves it
- eye for an eye
- Punish ? to pay his debt to society so that he
can be reinstated to societys protection and
benefits
24Types of Punishment
- Probation
- Fine
- Imprisonment
- Monetary compensation
- Exile
- Home detention (House arrest)
25Types of Punishment
- Corporal Punishment
- the legal imposition of physical pain on the
convicted offender - E.g. caning, castration
- Capital Punishment / Death Penalty
26CAPITAL PUNISHMENT
- Capital punishment is the lawful infliction of
death as a punishment.
THE DEATH PENALTY
27THE DEATH PENALTY
- History / Background
- Methods
- Arguments For and Against
- The Death Penalty in Singapore
28BACKGROUND
- Since ancient times (18th 5th Century B.C), the
death penalty has been used for a variety of
offences - Common methods then Crucifixion, stoning,
drowning, beating to death and burning alive - By 1500 in England, many people put to death for
felonies like treason, rape, burglary, murder and
arson
29BACKGROUND
- Britain influenced America's use of the death
penalty more than any other country did. - Major reforms of the death penalty began in
Europe by the 1750s - Many nations began to abolish the death penalty.
E.g Venezuela (1853), Portugal (1867) and in the
US, Michigan (1847)
30Overview of the death penalty during 2003
- Amnesty International recorded that at least
- 1,146 prisoners were executed in 28 countries
- 2,756 people were sentenced to death in 63
countries. - 84 per cent of all known executions took place in
China, Iran, the USA and Vietnam
31Overview of the death penalty during 2003
- Amnesty International recorded that
- a total of 117 countries have abolished the death
penalty in law or practice. - 78 other countries retain and use the death
penalty - Over 35 countries and territories have abolished
the death penalty for all crimes since 1990. (E.g
S Africa, Mauritius, HK, Poland, Canada)
32METHODS
Electrocution
33METHODS
Lethal Injection
34METHODS
Shooting
35METHODS
BEHEADING
36METHODS
Hanging
37ARGUMENTS FOR THE DEATH PENALTY
- The death penalty is a necessary tool to fight
and deter crime. Capital punishment deters crime
by causing would-be murderers to fear arrest and
conviction and by preventing convicted murderers
from killing again. In recent years, violent
crime in New York has dropped dramatically, due
in part to the reinstitution of the death
penalty.
George E. Pataki,
Republican governor of NY -
38ARGUMENTS FOR THE DEATH PENALTY
- Obviously people fear death more than life
imprisonment. Only death is final. Where there
is life there is hope. Actual murderers feel
that way 99.9 per cent prefer life imprisonment
to death. So will prospective murderers. What
is feared most deters most. Ernest van
den Haag, Retired Professor at Fordham University
39ARGUMENTS FOR THE DEATH PENALTY
- The death penalty is a necessary tool to fight
and deter crime. Capital punishment deters crime
by causing would-be murderers to fear arrest and
conviction and by preventing convicted murderers
from killing again. In recent years, violent
crime in New York has dropped dramatically, due
in part to the reinstitution of the death
penalty.
George E. Pataki,
Republican governor of NY -
- Obviously people fear death more than life
imprisonment. Only death is final. Where there
is life there is hope. Actual murderers feel
that way 99.9 per cent prefer life imprisonment
to death. So will prospective murderers. What
is feared most deters most. Ernest van
den Haag, Retired Professor at Fordham University
Incapacitation
deterrence
40ARGUMENTS FOR THE DEATH PENALTY
- But even if an execution has only a small
chance of deterring future murders, the murderer
should be executed because he has, through his
crime, forfeited his life. Capital punishment
satisfies justice, and the fact that it may also
save lives is enough to favour the execution of
convicted murderers. Ernest van den
Haag, Retired Professor at Fordham University
41ARGUMENTS FOR THE DEATH PENALTY
- For beyond deterrence there is justice. The
thought that the man who cruelly and deliberately
slaughtered your child for fun or profit is
entitled peacefully to live out his days at
taxpayers expense, playing tennis or baseball or
enjoying the prison library, is hard to stomach.
42ARGUMENTS FOR THE DEATH PENALTY
- But even if an execution has only a small
chance of deterring future murders, the murderer
should be executed because he has, through his
crime, forfeited his life. Capital punishment
satisfies justice, and the fact that it may also
save lives is enough to favour the execution of
convicted murderers. Ernest van den
Haag, Retired Professor at Fordham University
- For beyond deterrence there is justice. The
thought that the man who cruelly and deliberately
slaughtered your child for fun or profit is
entitled peacefully to live out his days at
taxpayers expense, playing tennis or baseball or
enjoying the prison library, is hard to stomach.
RETRIBUTION
COST
43ARGUMENTS AGAINST THE DEATH PENALTY
- I think that the only purpose of the death
penalty, as I see it, is vengeance-pure and
simple vengeance. But I think vengeance is a very
personal feeling and I dont think it is
something that civilized government should engage
in. Janet Reno, Attorney General of the
US
44ARGUMENTS AGAINST THE DEATH PENALTY
- Capital punishment fails as a deterrent
because murderers who premeditate about a killing
do not expect to get caught, and spontaneous,
emotional murderers are incapable of thinking
rationally about the consequences of their act.
Retribution also fails as a reason to
execute criminals because capital punishment
violates a societys self-respect and humanity,
and it is not always possible in a court of law
to fairly and unemotionally make the decision to
execute someone. Michael Ross, A
View from Death Row (Inmate convicted of
murder in the deaths of 5 girls and a woman in
1987)
45ARGUMENTS AGAINST THE DEATH PENALTY
- I think that the only purpose of the death
penalty, as I see it, is vengeance-pure and
simple vengeance. But I think vengeance is a very
personal feeling and I dont think it is
something that civilized government should engage
in. Janet Reno, Attorney General of the
US
- Capital punishment fails as a deterrent
because murderers who premeditate about a killing
do not expect to get caught, and spontaneous,
emotional murderers are incapable of thinking
rationally about the consequences of their act.
Retribution also fails as a reason to
execute criminals because capital punishment
violates a societys self-respect and humanity,
and it is not always possible in a court of law
to fairly and unemotionally make the decision to
execute someone. Michael Ross, A View
from Death Row (Inmate convicted of murder in
the deaths of 5 girls and a woman in 1987)
barbaric
Does not deter crime
46ARGUMENTS AGAINST THE DEATH PENALTY
- capital punishment actually makes the fight
against crime more difficult. Executions waste
valuable resources that could be applied to more
promising efforts to protect the public.
Additionally, innocent people are sometimes
executed and the brutalizing effect executions
have on society may result in more murders. For
these reasons, the death penalty should be
opposed. Robert M. Morgenthau,
District Attorney Manhattan
47ARGUMENTS AGAINST THE DEATH PENALTY
- Capital cases are a nightmare for the entire
justice system. Police chiefs recognize that
death penalty cases are particularly burdensome
in the early stages. Two-thirds of the police
chiefs polled said that death penalty cases are
hard to close and take up a lot of police
time. Richard C Dieter, Death Penalty
Information Centre
48ARGUMENTS AGAINST THE DEATH PENALTY
- capital punishment actually makes the
fight against crime more difficult. Executions
waste valuable resources that could be applied to
more promising efforts to protect the public.
Additionally, innocent people are sometimes
executed and the brutalizing effect executions
have on society may result in more murders. For
these reasons, the death penalty should be
opposed. Robert M. Morgenthau,
District Attorney Manhattan
- Capital cases are a nightmare for the entire
justice system. Police chiefs recognize that
death penalty cases are particularly burdensome
in the early stages. Two-thirds of the police
chiefs polled said that death penalty cases are
hard to close and take up a lot of police
time. Richard C Dieter, Death Penalty
Information Centre
Innocent lives taken
COST
49ARGUMENTS AGAINST THE DEATH PENALTY
- Additionally, innocent people are sometimes
executed and the brutalizing effect executions
have on society may result in more murders. For
these reasons, the death penalty should be
opposed.
50ARGUMENTS AGAINST THE DEATH PENALTY
- Brutalizing effect
- the death penalty tends to devalue human life
and sends a message that tells citizens that
killing people under some circumstances is
appropriate. -
- state-sanctioned executions brutalize the
sensibilities of society, making potential
murderers less inhibited.
STATE-SANCTIONED MURDER?
51THE DEATH PENALTY IN SINGAPORE
- Method - Hanging
- Who?
- Murderers
- Drug traffickers (gt15g heroine, gt30g
morphine/cocaine, gt500g cannabis) - Tough drug laws enacted in 1975 made the death
sentence mandatory for trafficking - Kidnappers
- 70 of hangings are for drug offences
52THE DEATH PENALTY IN SINGAPORE
- In a rare comment about the death penalty, Prime
Minister Goh Chok Tong mentioned in an interview
on BBC HARDtalk program in 2003
"I think probably it will be
in the region of about 70 to 80 (first 9 months
of 2003). I do not know the precise number, I
stand to be corrected," - The government confirmed later that 28 people had
been executed in 2002, 27 in 2001 and 21 in 2000,
without giving confirmed figures for 2003. - When asked why he did not know exactly how many
people had been executed this year, PM Goh
replied "I have got more important issues to
worry about.
53THE DEATH PENALTY IN SINGAPORE
- Amnesty - Singapore has one of the highest
execution rates in the world relative to its
population - Western critics point to the "right to life" as a
fundamental reason to abolish the death penalty
54THE DEATH PENALTY IN SINGAPORE
- Senior Minister Lee Kuan Yew
- "The basic difference in our approach springs
from our traditional Asian value system which
places the interests of the community over and
above that of the individual," Singapore's Senior
Minister Lee Kuan Yew said in a speech. - "In criminal law legislation, our priority is
the security and well being of law-abiding
citizens rather than the rights of the criminal
to be protected from incriminating evidence."
55Criminal Justice in Singapore
56Court of Appeal
Supreme Court
High Court
District Courts
Magistrates' Courts
Commercial Criminal Courts and Special Trial
Courts
Subordinate Courts
Coroners' Court Family Court Juvenile Court Small
Claims Tribunal
57Supreme Court Chief Justice and Judges of of the
High Court
Court of Appeal
High Court
Civil claims more than 100,000 Probate cases
of more than 3 million Criminal cases where the
punishment is death or life imprisonment
Hears appeals against judgment from High
Court and other lower courts
58Criminal and Civil Cases
- Criminal cases are those initiated by the state
against and individual or group. - Civil cases are those initiated by individuals
who have been aggrieved by another individual or
group. divorce
59Mandatory Sentences
- For certain crimes the judges have to give a
punishment stipulated by law. No variation or
discretion is allowed. - Death 15g of heroin 30g of cocaine - 30g of
morphine 500g of cannabis - 1.2kg of
opium 200g of cannabis resin - Caning illegal immigration, vandalism, rape,
- It is a cardinal principle of morality, justice
and democratic government that an offender guilty
of a crime should be sentenced by the court to
such penalty as his crime merits taking account
of all the circumstances including the nature of
the crime, the circumstances of the offender, the
effect of the crime on the victim and the
victims family, the need to prevent the offender
from re offending and deter others from offending
in the same way and the need to protect the
public.
60Chief Justice and Judges of of the High Court
61Subordinate Courts
12 strokes of the cane imprisonment lt10
years fine lt100,000
District Courts
Magistrates' Courts
6 strokes of the cane imprisonment lt3 years a
fine lt 30,000
Determination of cause of death
Coroners' Court
Child below 14 Young Person below 16
Juvenile Court
Divorce, Maintenance, Custody
Family Court
Claims not exceeding 10,000
Small Claims Tribunal
Commercial Criminal Courts and Special Trial
Courts
62Procedures in Juvenile Cases
63Rationale for Punishment in Juvenile Cases
- rehabilitation and reformation of the
offender - removal of him/her from undesirable
surroundings - promoting his/her education and welfare
- compensation of victim(s) involved
- protection of public
- minimizing the risk of further offending by the
offender and - punishment of offender
64Options Available in Juvenile Cases
- Commit the offender to the care of a relative or
other fit person - Offender's Parent or Guardian to execute a bond
to exercise proper care and Guardianship - Community service order
- Probation order
- Detention at a Place of Detention
- Weekend Detention at a Place of Detention or
Approved Institution - Approved School Order
- Reformative Training Centre
- Payment of a fine, damages or costs
65http//www.karisable.com/crpunyouth.htm