Criminology Today - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 68
About This Presentation
Title:

Criminology Today

Description:

... studying one offender or group like street gang find similarities for others ... Gang example how far do you go. Self-reporting simply another form ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:917
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 69
Provided by: JudgeF5
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Criminology Today


1
Criminology Today
  • Chapters 3 and 4

2
Chapter 3 Where Do Theories Come From?
  • Overview
  • Criminological research
  • Criminological theory study of crime
  • Role of research and experimentation
  • Quantitative and qualitative methods
  • Study ethical considerations in research
  • Impact of research on social policy

3
Introduction
  • Story of Mayor of Inglis, Florida
  • Official proclamation banning Satan from Inglis
    used official stationery
  • Police Chief says crime did not decrease
  • ACLU threatened suit
  • Town rescinded proclamation, Mayor reimbursed for
    use of stationery
  • Mayor was reelected still Mayor today
  • Concept that the devil made them do it

4
This Chapter
  • Describes how criminologists make use of
    contemporary social scientific research methods
    in the development of criminological theories and
    evidence-based policies and practices.
  • Evidence based that which is built on
    scientific findings and especially practices and
    policies founded upon the results of randomized
    controlled experiments
  • Experimental criminology a form of contemporary
    criminology that makes use of rigorous social
    scientific techniques, especially randomized
    controlled experiments and the systematic review
    of research results.

5
For any of this to have meaning
  • The realize its ultimate promise, criminology
    must become accepted as a policy-making tool,
    consulted by lawmakers and social planners alike,
    and respected for what it can tell us about both
    crime and its prevention.

6
Laubs history of criminological thought
  • 1900 1930 Golden Age of Research
  • 1930 1960 Golden Age of Theory
  • 1960 2000 Characterized by extensive theory
    testing of the dominant theories, using largely
    empirical methods.
  • Laub criminologists over the past century have
    undertaken the task of building a scientific or
    evidence based criminology vs. an armchair
    criminology of earlier times
  • The emphasis on measurement and objectivity gives
    contemporary criminology its scientific flavor

7
Theory Building
  • Hypothesis an explanation that accounts for a
    set of facts and that can be tested by further
    investigation
  • Theory a series of interrelated propositions
    that attempt to describe, explain, predict, and
    ultimately control some class of events
  • Lust murderers men who sexually abuse and kill
    women, often sadistically theory doesnt help
    us understand their motives

8
The Role of Research and Experimentation
  • Theories, once proposed, need to be tested
    against the real world via a variety of research
    strategies, including experimentation and case
    studies.
  • Knowledge is inevitable built on experience and
    observation. Hence the crux of scientific
    research is data collection.

9
Research
  • Research the use of standardized, systematic
    procedures in the search for knowledge
  • Applied research scientific inquiry that is
    designed and carried out with practical
    applications in mind.
  • Pure research research undertaken simply for
    the sake of advancing scientific knowledge
  • Primary research - research characterized by
    original and direct investigation
  • Secondary research new evaluations of existing
    information that had been collected by other
    researchers

10
Scientific research proceeds in stages
  • Problem identification
  • The development of research design
  • A choice of data-collection techniques
  • A review of findings, which often includes
    statistical analysis

11
Problem Identification
  • Choosing an issue to study
  • Availability of government grant monies
    frequently determines the focus of much
    contemporary research in the area of crime
  • The bulk of research in criminology is intended
    to explore issues of causality, especially the
    claims made by theories purporting to explain
    criminal behavior

12
Testing Hypothesis
  • Two definitions
  • An explanation that accounts for a set of facts
    and that can be tested by further investigation
  • Something that is taken to be true for the
    purpose of argument or investigation
  • Variable concept that can undergo measurable
    changes
  • Operationalization the process by which
    concepts are made measurable
  • Once the concepts within our hypothesis are
    measurable, we can test the hypothesis itself.
  • Once a hypothesis has be operationalized, it is
    assumed to be true for purposes of testing. It
    is accepted for study purposes until proven
    untrue or rejected.

13
Research Designs
  • The logic and structure inherent in an approach
    to data gathering
  • Confounding effects a rival explanation, or
    competing hypothesis, that is a threat to the
    internal or external validity of a research
    design (other reasons why things may have
    occurred Ex. Taking sugar out of diet) 2
    different types
  • Internal validity the certainty that
    experimental interventions did indeed cause the
    changes observed in the study group
  • External validity the ability to generalize
    research findings to other settings
  • Examples of these on page 97 and 98

14
Experimental and Quasi- Experimental Research
Designs
  • To have confidence that the changes intentionally
    introduced into a situation are the real cause of
    observed variations, it is necessary to achieve
    some degree of control over factors that threaten
    internal validity.
  • Controlled experiment an experiment that
    attempts to hold conditions constant

15
Quasi-experimental
  • An approach to research that, although less
    powerful than experimental designs, is deemed
    worthy of use when better designs are not
    feasible
  • The crucial defining feature of
    quasi-experimental designs is that they give
    researchers control over the when and whom of
    measurement, even though others decide the when
    and to whom of exposure to the experimental
    intervention.

16
Definitions
  • Control group a group of experimental subjects
    that, although the subject of measurement and
    observation, is not exposed to the experimental
    intervention
  • Randomization the process whereby individuals
    are assigned to study groups without biases or
    differences resulting from selection

17
Techniques of Data Collection
  • The most important question to consider when
    beginning to gather information is whether the
    data-gathering strategy selected will produce
    information in a usable form.
  • Surveys a social science data-gathering
    technique that involves the use of questionnaires
  • Case studies built around in-depth
    investigations into individual cases studying
    one offender or group like street gang find
    similarities for others

18
Collecting Data
  • Participant observation a strategy in data
    gathering in which the researcher observes a
    group by participating, to varying degrees, in
    the activities of the group. Gang example how
    far do you go
  • Self-reporting simply another form of survey
    research
  • Secondary analysis purposefully culls
    preexisting information from data that have
    already been gathered and examines it in new
    ways. (saves time and expense)

19
Problems in Data Collection
  • Intersubjectivity a scientific principle that
    requires that independent observers see the same
    thing under the same circumstances for
    observations to be regarded as valid.
  • Replicability a scientific principle that holds
    that valid observations made at one time can be
    made again later if all other conditions are the
    same.
  • Science rests its claim to authority upon its
    firm basis in observable evidence

20
Data Analysis
  • Two types of statistical methods
  • Descriptive statistics statistics that
    describe, summarize or highlight the
    relationships within data that have been gathered
  • Inferential statistics statistics that specify
    how likely findings are to be true for other
    populations or in other locales

21
Test of Significance
  • A statistical technique intended to provide
    researchers with confidence that their results
    are, in fact, true and not the result of sampling
    error.
  • The larger the sample size, the greater the
    confidence we can have in our findings.

22
Quantitative vs. Qualitative
  • Quantitative methods a research technique that
    produces measurable results that can be analyzed
    statistically
  • Mystique of quantity is an exaggerated regard
    for the significance of measurement, just because
    it is quantitative, without regard either to what
    has been measured or to what can subsequently be
    done with the measure. The mystique of quantity
    treats numbers as having intrinsic scientific
    value.

23
Quantitative vs. Qualitative
  • The qualitative method in contrast to those that
    are quantitative, produce subjective results, or
    results that are difficult to quantify.
  • Qualitative methods are important for the insight
    they provide into the subjective workings of the
    criminal mind and the processes by which meaning
    is accorded to human experience.
  • Introspection, life histories, case studies, and
    participant observation all contain the potential
    to yield highly qualitative data.

24
Verstehen
  • The kind of subjective understanding that can be
    achieved by criminologists who immerse themselves
    in the everyday world of the criminals they
    study.
  • A researchers subjective understandings of
    crimes situational meanings and emotions its
    moments of pleasure and pain, its emergent logic
    and excitement within the larger process of
    research.
  • It further implies that a researcher, through
    attentiveness and participation, at least can
    begin to apprehend and appreciate the specific
    roles and experiences of criminals, crime
    victims, crime control agents, and others caught
    up in the day-to-day reality of crime.

25
P. 106 Crime in the News
  • Idaho Town Arming Itself
  • Town Council of Greenleaf, Idaho, is considering
    a recommendation that all households keep and
    maintain guns because of the crime that might
    come with the encroaching growth from nearby
    Boise.
  • Does gun ownership help to reduce criminal
    opportunity?

26
Values and Ethics in Research
  • Research, especially research conducted within
    the social sciences, does not occur in a vacuum.
    Values enter into all stages of the research
    process, from the selection of the problem to be
    studied to the choice of strategies to address
    it. In short, research is never entirely free
    from preconceptions and biases, although much can
    be done to limit the impact such biases have on
    the results of research.
  • The most effective way of controlling the effects
    of biases is to be aware of them at the outset of
    the research.

27
Data Confidentiality
  • The ethical requirement of social scientific
    research to protect the confidentiality of
    individual research participants, while
    simultaneously preserving justified research
    access to the information participants provide.
  • Informed consent the ethical requirement of
    social scientific research that research subjects
    be informed as to the nature of the research
    about to be conducted, their anticipated role in
    it, and the uses to which the data they provide
    will be put.
  • NIJ not publishing the findings of the DARE
    program
  • 12 step method of AA
  • Pressure of expenditure of pubic funds on research

28
Social Policy and Criminological Research
  • The results of scientific studies in the field of
    criminology should have practical implications
    that can guide practice in relevant areas.
  • Ex. Arrests instead of warnings in DV cases -
    departments adopted policy of arrests some
    states made it law
  • However, publicly elected officials are often
    either ignorant of current criminological
    research or do not heed the advice of
    professional criminologists, seeking instead to
    create politically expedient policies.
  • One such study and laws enacted dealt with 3
    strike laws

29
Three Strike Laws
  • Became popular with legislatures across the
    country near the end of the last century, provide
    an example of the kind of dilemma facing
    criminologists who would influence social policy
    on the basis of statistical evidence.
  • Three strike laws require that felons receive
    lengthy prison sentences following their third
    felony conviction.
  • Such laws are built on the commonsense notion
    that getting tough on repeat offenders by
    putting them in prison for long periods should
    reduce the crime rate. Logic seems to say that
    lengthy prison sentences for recidivists will
    reduce crime by removing the most dangerous
    offenders from society.
  • A study in 22 states, however, concluded that
    such legislation typically results in clogged
    court systems and crowded correctional facilities
    and encourages three-time felons to take dramatic
    risks to avoid capture.

30
Alabamas Habitual Felony Offenders
  • 13A-5-9. Habitual felony offenders --
    Additional penalties.
  • (a) In all cases when it is shown that a
    criminal defendant has been previously convicted
    of a felony and after the conviction has
    committed another felony, he or she must be
    punished as follows
  • (1) On conviction of a Class C felony, he or she
    must be punished for a Class B felony.
  • (2) On conviction of a Class B felony, he or she
    must be punished for a Class A felony.
  • (3) On conviction of a Class A felony, he or she
    must be punished by imprisonment for life or for
    any term of not more than 99 years but not less
    than 15 years.
  • (b) In all cases when it is shown that a
    criminal defendant has been previously convicted
    of any two felonies and after such convictions
    has committed another felony, he or she must be
    punished as follows
  • (1) On conviction of a Class C felony, he or she
    must be punished for a Class A felony.
  • (2) On conviction of a Class B felony, he or she
    must be punished by imprisonment for life or for
    any term of not more than 99 years but not less
    than 15 years.
  • (3) On conviction of a Class A felony, he or she
    must be punished by imprisonment for life or for
    any term of not less than 99 years.
  • (c) In all cases when it is shown that a
    criminal defendant has been previously convicted
    of any three felonies and after such convictions
    has committed another felony, he or she must be
    punished as follows
  • (1) On conviction of a Class C felony, he or she
    must be punished by imprisonment for life or for
    any term of not more than 99 years but not less
    than 15 years.
  • (2) On conviction of a Class B felony, he or she
    must be punished by imprisonment for life or any
    term of not less than 20 years.
  • (3) On conviction of a Class A felony, where the
    defendant has no prior convictions for any Class
    A felony, he or she must be punished by
    imprisonment for life or life without the
    possibility of parole, in the discretion of the
    trial court.

31
Part 2 Crime CausationChapter 4 Classical
and Neoclassical Thought
  • The belief that at least some illegal activity is
    the result of rational choices made by
    individuals seeking various kinds of illicit
    rewards forms the basis for the perspectives on
    crime causation that are discussed in this
    chapter.
  • Example planning that goes in Sex-tourism
    page 124

32
Major Principles of the Classical School
  • Most classical theories of crime causation make
    the following basic assumptions
  • Human beings are fundamentally rational, and most
    human behavior is the result of free will coupled
    with rational choice
  • Pain and pleasure are the two central
    determinants of human behavior
  • Punishment, a necessary evil, is sometimes
    required to deter law violators and to serve as
    an example to others who would also violate the
    law
  • Root principles of right and wrong are inherent
    in the nature of things and cannot be denied
  • Society exists to provide benefits to individuals
    that they would not receive in isolation
  • When men and women band together for the
    protection offered by society, they forfeit some
    of the benefits that accrue from living in
    isolation
  • Certain key rights of individuals are inherent in
    the nature of things, and governments that
    contravene those rights should be disbanded
  • Crime disparages the quality of the bond that
    exists between individuals and society and is
    therefore an immoral for of behavior

33
Forerunners of Classical Thought
  • Mores behavioral proscriptions covering
    potentially serious violations of a groups
    values. Examples murder, rape and robbery
  • Folkways time honored customs. Although
    folkways carry the force of tradition, their
    violation is unlikely to threaten the survival of
    the group Ex. Body piercing jewelry on men

34
Definitions
  • Mala in se acts that are thought to be wrong in
    and of themselves example forcing someone to
    have sex against his or her will and the
    intentional killing of children
  • Mala prohibita acts that are wrong only because
    they are prohibited examples prostitution,
    gambling, drug use may not be illegal in
    different jurisdictions

35
The Demonic Era
  • Since time began, humankind has been preoccupied
    with what appears to be an ongoing war between
    good and evil.
  • Cosmically based plague, holocaust
  • Individual behavior victimization
  • Trephinaiton a form of surgery typically
    involving bone, especially the skull. Evil
    spirits residing in the heads of offenders.

36
Early Sources of the Criminal Law
  • Code of Hammurabi an early set of laws
    established by the Babylonian king Hammurabi, who
    ruled the ancient city from 1792 to 1750 B.C.
    first body of law to survive and be available for
    study.
  • Intended to establish property and other rights
    crucial to the continued growth of Babylon as a
    significant commercial center.
  • Emphasis on retribution penal philosophy
    attempt to keep cruelty within bounds before
    code revenge seeking victims punished

37
Early Roman Law
  • Early Roman Law derived from the Twelve Tables
    written circa 450 B.C. which regulated family,
    religious, and economic life
  • Emperor Justinian I (A.D. 527-565) The
    Justinian Code contained elements of our modern
    civil and criminal law and influenced Western
    legal thought through the Middle Ages

38
Common Law
  • Common law forms the basis for much of our modern
    statutory and case law. It has often been called
    the major source of modern criminal law.
  • Common law refers to a traditional body of
    unwritten legal precedents created through
    everyday practice of English society and
    supported by court decisions during the Middle
    Ages.
  • Common law is so-called because it was based on
    shared traditions and standards rather than on
    those that varied from one locale to another.
  • Today, common law forms the basis of many of the
    laws on the books in English-speaking countries
    around the world.

39
The Magna Carta
  • Great Charter important source of modern laws
  • The Magna Carta was signed on June 15, 1215 by
    King John of England at Runnymede under pressure
    from British barons who took advantage of Johns
    military defeats at the hands of Pope Innocent
    III and King Philip Augustus of France.
  • Forced the King to be bound by law.

40
The Magna Carta, cont
  • Original purpose was to ensure feudal rights and
    to guarantee that the king could not encroach on
    the privileges claimed by landowning barons.
  • Later, it guaranteed basic liberties for all
    British citizens and ruled that any acts of
    Parliament that contravened common law would be
    void.
  • This formed the basis for Supreme Courts power to
    nullify laws of Congress
  • Provision concerning not prosecuting barons
    without just cause served as basis of our concept
    of due process of law
  • It has been called, The foundation stone of our
    present liberties.

41
Enlightenment
  • A social movement that arose during the
    eighteenth century and that built upon ideas like
    empiricism, rationally, free will, humanism, and
    natural law.

42
Thomas Hobbes (1588-1679)
  • English philosopher Thomas Hobbes work
    Leviathan (1651)
  • Social contract the Enlightenment-era concept
    that human beings abandon their natural state of
    individual freedom to join together and form
    society. In process of forming individuals
    surrender some freedoms to society as a whole and
    government, once formed is obligated to assume
    responsibilities toward its citizens and to
    provide for their protection and welfare.

43
John Locke (1632-1704)
  • English philosopher published Essay Concerning
    Human Understanding put forth the idea that the
    natural human condition at birth is akin to that
    of a blank slate upon which interpersonal
    encounters and other experiences indelibly
    inscribe the traits of personality. He ascribed
    the bulk of human qualities to life experiences.
  • Locke contended that human beings, through a
    social contract, abandon their natural state of
    individual freedom and lack of interpersonal
    responsibility to join together and for society.

44
Jean-Jacques Rousseau (1712-1778)
  • Swiss-French philosopher and political theorist
  • Human beings are basically good and fair in their
    natural state but historically were corrupted by
    the introduction of shared concepts that joint
    activities like property, agriculture, science
    and commerce.
  • Contributed to concept of natural law

45
Natural Law
  • The philosophical perspective that certain
    immutable laws are fundamental to human nature
    and can be readily ascertained through reason.
    Human-made laws (positive law), in contrast, are
    said to derive from human experience and history
    both of which are subject to continual change.

46
Natural Law and Natural Rights
  • Natural rights thoughts that individuals retain
    in the face of government action and interests
  • Thomas Jefferson wrote of inalienable rights to
    life, liberty, property, such rights were
    naturally due all men and women because they were
    inherent in the social contract between citizens
    and their government

47
Natural Law today
  • Many people today still hold that the basis for
    various existing criminal laws can be found in
    immutable moral principles or in some other
    identifiable aspect fo the natural order.
  • The Ten Commandments, inborn tendencies, the
    idea of sin, and perceptions of various forms of
    order in the universe and in the social world
    have all provided a basis for the assertion that
    natural law exists.
  • Example debate over abortion

48
The Classical School
  • A criminological perspective of the late 1700s
    and early 1800s that had its roots in the
    Enlightenment and that held that humans are
    rational beings, that crime is the result of the
    exercise of free will, and that punishment can
    be effective in reducing the incidence of crime,
    as it negates the pleasure to be derived from
    crime commission.

49
Cesare Beccaria (1738-1794)
  • Italian in 1764 published Essay on Crimes and
    Punishments
  • Distilled the notion of the social contract into
    the idea that laws are the conditions under
    which independent and isolated men untied to form
    a society.
  • Writings mainly consisted of a philosophy of
    punishment
  • Purpose of punishment is deterrence rather than
    retribution punishment should be imposed to
    prevent offenders from committing additional
    crimes
  • Adjudication and punishment should both be swift
    and certain

50
Beccaria continued
  • Punishment should fit the crime, declaring that
    theft should be punished by fines, personal
    injury through corporal punishment, and serious
    crimes against the state (revolution) via
    application of the death penalty
  • He wrote that oaths were useless in a court of
    law because accused individuals will naturally
    deny their guilt even if they know themselves to
    be fully culpable
  • Is responsible for the contemporary belief that
    criminals have control over their behavior, that
    they choose to commit crimes, and that they can
    be deterred by the threat of punishment

51
Jeremy Bentham (1748-1832)
  • Benthams claim rested upon his belief, spawned
    by Enlightment thought, that human beings are
    fundamentally rational and that criminals will
    weigh in their minds the pain of punishment
    against any pleasures thought likely to be
    derived from crime commission.

52
Definitions
  • Hedonistic calculus the belief, first proposed
    by Jeremy Bentham, that behavior hold value to
    any individual undertaking it according to the
    amount of pleasure or pain that it can be
    expected to produce for that person
  • Utilitarianism another term fir Jeremy
    Benthams concept of hedonistic calculus

53
Bentham continued
  • Distinguished between 11 different types of
    punishment pages 134 135
  • Suggested tattooing name on wrists for police
    indentification
  • Panopticon a prison designed by Jeremy Bentham
    that was to be circular building with cells along
    the circumference, each clearly visible from a
    central location staffed by guards
  • Prisons should be managed by contractors

54
Heritage of the Classical School
  • Five principles fundamental to modern day
    perspectives page 137
  • Rationality
  • Hedonism
  • Punishment
  • Human rights
  • Due process

55
Neoclassical Criminology
  • Positivism the application of scientific
    techniques to the study of crime and criminals
  • Hard determinism the belief that crime results
    from forces beyond the control of the individual
  • Acceptance of the notion of determinism implied
    that offenders were not entirely responsible for
    their crimes and suggested that crime could be
    prevented by changing the conditions that
    produced criminality

56
Neoclassical criminology
  • A contemporary version of classical criminology
    that emphasizes deterrence and retribution, with
    reduced emphasis on rehabilitation
  • Nothing works doctrine the belief popularized
    by Robert Martinson in the 1970s that
    correctional treatment programs have little
    success in rehabilitating offenders
  • Justice model a contemporary model of
    imprisonment in which the principle of just
    deserts forms the underlying social philosophy

57
Rational Choice Theory
  • A perspective that holds that criminality is the
    result of conscious choice and that predicts that
    individuals choose to commit crime when the
    benefits outweigh the costs of disobeying the
    law.
  • Routine activities theory (RAT) a brand of
    rational choice theory that suggests that
    lifestyles contribute significantly to both the
    volume and the type of crime found in any society
  • Situational choice theory a brand of rational
    choice theory that views behavior as a function
    of choices and decisions made within a context of
    situational constraints and opportunities
  • Soft determinism the belief that human behavior
    is the result of choices and decisions made
    within a context of situational constraints and
    opportunities

58
Table 4-1
  • Twenty-five techniques of situational crime
    control, p. 140
  • 5 objectives are across the top of the table

59
Situational Crime Control Policy
  • The new crime prevention effort called for a
    focus not on people who commit crime but on the
    context in which crime occurs
  • Situational crime prevention a social policy
    approach that looks to develop a greater
    understanding of crime and more effective crime
    prevention strategies through concern with the
    physical, organizational, and social environments
    that make crime possible..
  • Target hardening the reduction in criminal
    opportunity for a particular location, generally
    through the use of physical barriers,
    architectural design, and enhanced security
    measures - (sometimes causes criminals to find
    new targets - displacement)

60
Punishment and Neoclassical Thought
  • If a person is attracted to crime and chooses to
    violate the law, modern neoclassical thinkers
    argue, then he or she deserves to be punished
    because the consequences of crime were known to
    the offender before the crime was committed.
  • Example of caning of 18 year old Faye in
    Singapore, p. 146
  • Notions of revenge and retribution are morally
    based. They build on a sense of indignation at
    criminal behavior and on the sense of
    righteousness inherent in Judeo-Christian notions
    of morality and propriety.

61
Just Deserts Model
  • The notion that criminal offenders deserve the
    punishment they receive at the hands of the law
    and that punishments should be appropriate to the
    type and severity of crime committed.
  • Deterrence the prevention of crime
  • Specific deterrence a goal of criminal
    sentencing that seeks to prevent a particular
    offender from engaging in repeat criminality
  • General deterrence a goal of criminal
    sentencing that seeks to prevent others from
    committing crimes similar to the one for which a
    particular offender is being sentenced
  • Justice is not swift! Page 147 middle

62
Recidivism
  • Recidivism the repetition of criminal behavior
  • Recidivism rate the percentage of convicted
    offenders who have been released from prison and
    who are later rearrested for a new crime,
    generally within five years following release
  • 80-90
  • Figure 4-2 on page 148

63
The Death Penalty
  • Capital punishment the legal imposition of a
    sentence of death upon a convicted offender
  • Opponents of capital punishment make 10 claims
    page 148 bottom
  • Advocates deserved, failure to is injustice to
    victim, just deserts, never commit another crime
  • CP and race imposed disproportionately

64
Alabama Death Penalty or Life Without
  • (a) The following are capital offenses
  • (1) Murder by the defendant during a kidnapping
    in the first degree or an attempt thereof
    committed by the defendant.
  • (2) Murder by the defendant during a robbery in
    the first degree or an attempt thereof committed
    by the defendant.
  • (3) Murder by the defendant during a rape in the
    first or second degree or an attempt thereof
    committed by the defendant or murder by the
    defendant during sodomy in the first or second
    degree or an attempt thereof committed by the
    defendant.
  • (4) Murder by the defendant during a burglary in
    the first or second degree or an attempt thereof
    committed by the defendant.
  • (5) Murder of any police officer, sheriff,
    deputy, state trooper, federal law enforcement
    officer, or any other state or federal peace
    officer of any kind, or prison or jail guard,
    while such officer or guard is on duty,
    regardless of whether the defendant knew or
    should have known the victim was an officer or
    guard on duty, or because of some official or
    job-related act or performance of such officer or
    guard.
  • (6) Murder committed while the defendant is
    under sentence of life imprisonment.
  • (7) Murder done for a pecuniary or other
    valuable consideration or pursuant to a contract
    or for hire.
  • (8) Murder by the defendant during sexual abuse
    in the first or second degree or an attempt
    thereof committed by the defendant.
  • (9) Murder by the defendant during arson in the
    first or second degree committed by the
    defendant or murder by the defendant by means
    of explosives or explosion.
  • (10) Murder wherein two or more persons are
    murdered by the defendant by one act or pursuant
    to one scheme or course of conduct.
  • (11) Murder by the defendant when the victim is
    a state or federal public official or former
    public official and the murder stems from or is
    caused by or is related to his official position,
    act, or capacity.
  • (12) Murder by the defendant during the act of
    unlawfully assuming control of any aircraft by
    use of threats or force with intent to obtain any
    valuable consideration for the release of said
    aircraft or any passenger or crewmen thereon or
    to direct the route or movement of said aircraft,
    or otherwise exert control over said aircraft.
  • (13) Murder by a defendant who has been
    convicted of any other murder in the 20 years
    preceding the crime provided that the murder
    which constitutes the capital crime shall be
    murder as defined in subsection (b) of this
    section and provided further that the prior
    murder conviction referred to shall include
    murder in any degree as defined at the time and
    place of the prior conviction.
  • (14) Murder when the victim is subpoenaed, or
    has been subpoenaed, to testify, or the victim
    had testified, in any preliminary hearing, grand
    jury proceeding, criminal trial or criminal
    proceeding of whatever nature, or civil trial or
    civil proceeding of whatever nature, in any
    municipal, state, or federal court, when the
    murder stems from, is caused by, or is related to
    the capacity or role of the victim as a witness.
  • (15) Murder when the victim is less than
    fourteen years of age.
  • (16) Murder committed by or through the use of a
    deadly weapon fired or otherwise used from
    outside a dwelling while the victim is in a
    dwelling.
  • (17) Murder committed by or through the use of a
    deadly weapon while the victim is in a vehicle.

65
Gallup poll
  • A Gallup poll in May 2006 found that 2/3 of
    Americans 18 and older support the death penalty.
    But when asked which is the better penalty for
    murder, roughly half said life without parole and
    about half said the death penalty
  • Massachusetts has long been one of the 12 states
    where capital punishment is not a sentencing
    option for the crime of murder.

66
Policy Implications Classical School
  • Determinate sentencing a criminal punishment
    strategy that mandates a specified and fixed
    amount of time to be served for every offense
    category. Under the strategy, for example, all
    offenders convicted of the same degree of
    burglary would be sentenced to the same length of
    time behind bars.
  • Truth in sentencing a close correspondence
    between the sentence imposed upon those sent to
    prison and the time actually served prior to
    prison release

67
Alabamas Sentencing Guidelines
  • See Internet - http//filmore.net/faulknerclass/in
    dex.html

68
Next Class
  • Chapter 5 Biological Roots of Criminal Behavior
  • Chapter 6 Psychological Psychiatric
    Foundations of Criminal Behavior
  • Review information for Midterm Exam
  • Topics for term paper assignments
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com