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Chapter 12 Offenses against Public Morality

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Title: Chapter 12 Offenses against Public Morality


1
Chapter 12Offenses against Public Morality
2
OBJECTIVES
  • After reading this chapter, you should be able to
  • Describe victimless crimes, and give some
    examples of such crimes.
  • Define prostitution, and assess its legal status
    in various jurisdictions within the United
    States.
  • Identify the conditions under which marijuana
    might be legalized or decriminalized.
  • Summarize the notion of a crisis of
    overcriminalization, and assess whether such a
    crisis exists relative to some of the crimes
    discussed in this chapter.

3
CRIMES AGAINST PUBLIC DECENCY AND MORALITY
  • While most crimes have specific and identifiable
    individual victims, some crimes do not.
  • Such offenses fall into a category of
    social-order offenses called crimes against
    public decency and morality.
  • Crimes against public decency and morality are
    sometimes termed victimless crimes by virtue of
    the fact that they generally involve willing
    participants.

4
CRIMES AGAINST PUBLIC DECENCY AND MORALITY
5
PROSTITUTION
  • North Carolina law defines prostitution as
  • the offering or receiving of the body for sexual
    intercourse for hire as well as the offering or
    receiving of the body for indiscriminate sexual
    intercourse without hire.
  • Soliciting prostitution is the act of asking,
    enticing, or requesting another to commit the
    crime of prostitution.

6
PROSTITUTION
  • Generally speaking, the elements of the crime of
    prostitution are
  • Engaging in or offering to perform
  • A sexual act
  • For hire

7
PROSTITUTION
  • Generally, the following acts constitute the
    crime of promoting prostitution
  • Owning, controlling, managing, supervising, or
    otherwise keeping a house of prostitution
  • Procuring a person for a house of prostitution
  • Encouraging, inducing, or otherwise purposely
    causing another to become or remain a prostitute
  • Soliciting a person to patronize a prostitute
  • Procuring a prostitute for another
  • Transporting a person with the purpose of
    promoting that persons involvement in
    prostitution

8
PORNOGRAPHY, OBSCENITY, AND LEWDNESS
  • Pornography can be defined as
  • the depiction of sexual behavior in such a way
    as to excite the viewer sexually.
  • Obscenity is a bit more difficult to define.
  • Generally speaking, obscenity can be defined as
    that which appeals to the prurient interest
    and lacks serious literary, artistic, political,
    or scientific value.

9
PORNOGRAPHY, OBSCENITY, AND LEWDNESS
  • In 1973, in the case of Miller v. California, the
    Court held that to be obscene, and thus not
    protected by the free speech clause of the U.S.
    Constitution, objectionable material must meet
    all of the following requirements
  • The average person, applying contemporary
    community standards, would find that the work,
    taken as a whole, appeals to the prurient
    interest.
  • The work depicts or describes, in a patently
    offensive way, sexual conduct specifically
    defined by the applicable statute.
  • The work, taken as a whole, lacks serious
    literary, artistic, political, or scientific
    value.

10
PORNOGRAPHY, OBSCENITY, AND LEWDNESS
  • Similar to laws against pornography and obscenity
    are strictures against lewdness.
  • Whereas pornography refers to some thing that is
    obscene, lewdness refers to behavior that is
    obscene.
  • Lewd behavior consists of intimate activity by a
    single individual where such activity is intended
    to be sexually arousing.
  • A lewd act might be captured on videotape,
    causing the tape to be classified as pornography.

11
PORNOGRAPHY, OBSCENITY, AND LEWDNESS
  • Lewd behavior is sometimes also termed
    lasciviousness.
  • Lascivious refers to something that is obscene or
    lewd or tends to cause lust.
  • Lewd and lascivious conduct is sometimes also
    termed public indecency or indecent exposure.
    Georgia law, for example, states

12
PORNOGRAPHY, OBSCENITY, AND LEWDNESS
  • A person commits the offense of public indecency
    when he or she performs any of the following acts
    in a public place
  • An act of sexual intercourse
  • A lewd exposure of the sexual organs
  • A lewd appearance in a state of partial or
    complete nudity
  • A lewd caress or indecent fondling of the body of
    another person

13
OTHER CONSENSUAL SEX OFFENSES
  • Although they may strike anyone with modern
    sensibilities as strange or outdated, laws
    against fornication and adultery continue to
    exist in some states.
  • Holdovers from an earlier age, many such laws
    were passed in the late nineteenth or early
    twentieth centuries, when a strong family and
    sexual chastity were highly valued.
  • As a result, many consensual sex offenses are
    still termed offenses against the family.

14
OTHER CONSENSUAL SEX OFFENSES
  • Homosexuality has been traditionally viewed as
    unnatural sexual behavior and was frequently
    termed a crime against nature.
  • Crime against nature, however, is also a general
    term that can include homosexual or heterosexual
    acts of anal intercourse, oral intercourse, and
    bestiality (sexual relations with animals).
  • It may even apply to heterosexual intercourse in
    positions other than the conventional
    missionary position.

15
OTHER CONSENSUAL SEX OFFENSES
  • States used a variety of terms in describing
    homosexual behavior or deviate sexual
    intercourse. South Carolina, for example,
    criminalized the abominable crime of buggery.
  • Although South Carolina provided no further
    statutory definition of the offense, buggery was
    generally understood to mean anal intercourse.
  • Another public morality crime is bigamythe crime
    of marrying one person while still legally
    married to another person.

16
OTHER CONSENSUAL SEX OFFENSES
  • Polygamy, is the marrying of, or cohabiting with,
    more than one spouse at a time in the purported
    exercise of the right of plural marriage. In most
    jurisdictions, polygamy is a felony.
  • Incest, another sexually defined offense,
    consists of unlawful sexual intercourse with a
    relative through blood or marriage, such as ones
    brother, sister, mother, or father.

17
GAMBLING AND GAMING
  • Gambling is sometimes categorized under the
    heading organized crime and vice offenses.
  • We treat it here as an offense against morality
    because it has all of the characteristics of such
    an offensealthough it may also frequently be
    associated with organized criminal activity.
  • Gambling can be defined as the wagering of money,
    or of some other thing of value, on the outcome
    or occurrence of an event.
  • It is illegal where made so by law.

18
CONTROLLED SUBSTANCES
  • The word drug is a generic term applicable to a
    wide variety of substances that have any physical
    or psychotropic effect on the human body.
  • Over the years, drugs have been defined by social
    convention.
  • While today, for example, most everyone would
    agree that heroin and cocaine are drugs, they
    were not always seen as such.
  • Similarly, although alcohol, nicotine, and even
    caffeine probably fall into the drug category
    in the minds of most people today, their
    categorization as drugs is relatively recent,
    having occurred during the past two or three
    decades.

19
CONTROLLED SUBSTANCES
20
CONTROLLED SUBSTANCES
  • The term controlled substance refers to
    specifically defined bioactive or psychoactive
    chemical substances that come under the purview
    of the criminal law.
  • It is interesting to recognize that all of
    todays controlled substance laws are the result
    of legislative action.

21
CONTROLLED SUBSTANCESAntiDrug Abuse Legislation
  • The first major piece of federal antidrug
    legislation came in 1914 with enactment of the
    Harrison Act.
  • The Harrison Act required those dealing in opium,
    morphine, heroin, cocaine, and specified
    derivatives of those drugs to register with the
    federal government and to pay a tax of 1 per
    year.
  • The only people permitted to register, however,
    were physicians, pharmacists, and members of the
    medical profession.
  • With passage of the Boggs Act in 1951, however,
    marijuana, along with a number of other drugs,
    entered the class of federally prohibited
    controlled substances. The

22
CONTROLLED SUBSTANCESThe Controlled Substances
Act of 1970
  • By 1970, Americas drug problem was clear to
    almost everyone, and legislators assumed a highly
    punitive approach to controlling drug abuse.
  • Under President Richard Nixon, legislation
    designed to encompass all aspects of drug abuse
    and to permit federal intervention at all levels
    of use was enacted.
  • Termed the Comprehensive Drug Abuse Prevention
    and Control Act of 1970,66 the bill still forms
    the basis of federal enforcement efforts today.

23
CONTROLLED SUBSTANCESThe Controlled Substances
Act of 1970
24
CONTROLLED SUBSTANCESThe Controlled Substances
Act of 1970
  • Pharmacologists, chemists, and botanists are
    constantly discovering and creating new drugs.
  • Likewise, street-corner chemists in clandestine
    laboratories churn out inexpensive designer
    drugspsychoactive substances with widely varying
    effects and abuse potential.
  • Hence the Controlled Substances Act also includes
    provisions for determining what newly developed
    drugs should be controlled and into which
    schedule they should be placed.

25
CONTROLLED SUBSTANCESThe Controlled Substances
Act of 1970
26
CONTROLLED SUBSTANCESThe AntiDrug Abuse Act of
1988
  • In 1988, the federal AntiDrug Abuse Act was
    passed into law.
  • Under the law, penalties for recreational drug
    users were substantially increased, and it became
    more difficult for suspected drug dealers to
    purchase weapons.
  • The law also denied federal benefits to convicted
    drug offenders, ranging from loans (including
    student loans) to contracts and licenses.

27
CONTROLLED SUBSTANCESOther Federal Antidrug
Legislation
  • Other significant federal antidrug legislation
    exists in the form of the Crime Control Act of
    1990 and the Violent Crime Control and Law
    Enforcement Act of 1994.
  • The 1990 law targeted drug crime through a number
    of initiatives.

28
CONTROLLED SUBSTANCESState-Level Antidrug Laws
  • Antidrug laws at the state level show a
    surprising degree of uniformity.
  • Such uniformity is due to the fact that almost
    all states have adopted some version of the
    Uniform Controlled Substances Act, which was
    proposed in 1972 by the National Conference of
    Commissioners on Uniform State Laws.
  • The Uniform Controlled Substances Act is similar
    to the federal Drug Abuse and Prevention Control
    Act in that it also groups controlled substances
    into five schedules.
  • The schedules are quite similar to those under
    federal law.

29
CONTROLLED SUBSTANCESAsset Forfeiture
  • Forfeiture is an enforcement strategy that
    federal statutes and some state laws supportand
    one that bears special mention.
  • Antidrug forfeiture statutes at both the state
    and federal level provide a special category of
    forfeiture laws.
  • Such statutes authorize judges to seize all
    monies, negotiable instruments, securities, or
    other things of value furnished or intended to be
    furnished by any person in exchange for a
    controlled substance.

30
CONTROLLED SUBSTANCESAsset Forfeiture
31
CONTROLLED SUBSTANCESMedical Marijuana
  • In 1996, voters in California passed Proposition
    215, known as the Compassionate Use Act, which
    allowed doctors to prescribe marijuana for
    medicinal purposes.
  • About the same time, a similar measure passed in
    Arizona, and in November 1999, Maine voters
    passed a referendum permitting some sick people
    to use small amounts of marijuana.

32
SUMMARY
  • Crimes against public decency and morality
    constitute a third type of social-order offense.
    The first two types, crimes against public order
    and crimes against the administration of
    government, were discussed in Chapter 10.
  • Crimes against public decency and morality
    typically include not only prostitution,
    gambling, and drug use, but also pornography,
    obscenity, and various other consensual sex
    offensessuch as bestiality, deviate sexual
    relations, lewdness, indecency, seduction,
    fornication, adultery, and bigamy.

33
SUMMARY
  • Crimes against public decency and morality are
    sometimes termed victimless crimes by virtue of
    the fact that they generally involve willing
    participants.
  • Pornography is the depiction of sexual behavior
    in such a way as to excite the viewer sexually.
    Obscenity, a related crime, can be defined as
    that which appeals to the prurient interest (a
    morbid interest in sex) and lacks serious
    literary, artistic, political, or scientific
    value. Sex and obscenity are not synonymous, and
    obscenity is not constitutionally protected under
    First Amendment free speech guarantees.

34
SUMMARY
  • Obscene matter means material, taken as a whole,
    that to the average person, applying contemporary
    community standards, appeals to the prurient
    interest, depicts or describes sexual conduct in
    a patently offensive way, and lacks serious
    literary, artistic, political, or scientific
    value.
  • An emerging concern in the area of crimes against
    public decency and morality is the availability
    of pornography via the Internet. Lawmakers
    (especially at the federal level) have attempted
    to restrict access to pornographic materials.

35
SUMMARY
  • Crime against nature refers to intercourse
    contrary to the order of nature. It can include
    homosexuality, bestiality, and even heterosexual
    intercourse in positions other than the
    conventional missionary position.
  • Drug use and abuse and lawfully controlled
    substances represent an area of special interest
    to many Americans today. Controlled substances
    are specifically defined as bioactive or
    psychoactive chemical substances that come under
    the purview of the criminal law.

36
SUMMARY
  • Under federal law and the laws of many states,
    controlled substances are classified according to
    five schedules. Schedules are an attempt to
    categorize controlled substances according to
    their abuse potential.
  • Laws regulating public morality have sometimes
    been criticized as contributing to a crisis of
    overcriminalization. Overcriminalization refers
    to the idea that laws regulating public morality
    may result in a substantial diversion of police,
    prosecutorial, and judicial time, personnel, and
    resources.
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