Punishment & Sentencing
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Transcript Punishment & Sentencing
Punishment & Sentencing
Chapter 10 in Your Textbook
John Massey
Criminal Justice
Philosophies for Punishment
Four basic philosophies
Incapicitation
Prevent future crimes
Setting an example (cost/benefit analysis)
General and Specific Deterrence
Rehabilitation
Offenders can no longer pose a threat to society
Take away criminal ability
Remove from community = reduce criminal opportunity
Deterrence
1) incapacitation, 2) deterrence, 3) rehabilitation, 4) retribution
Do not just punish
Treat and cure (drug treatment, etc.)
Retribution
Eye for an eye
Punishment should be proportional to crime committed
Forms of Sentencing
Intedeterminate, Determinate, Truth-In-Sentencing
Interdeterminate sentencing
Determinate sentencing
Fixed sentencing
Offender serves an exact amount (usually cannot be reduced)
Truth-in-sentencing
Judge determines minimum and maximum terms for imprisonment
When minimum is reached – person is eligible for parole
Requires those convicted of certain crimes to serve at least 85 % of sentence
Part of “get-tough” movement
Good time
Reduction in time served by prisoners based on their good behavior
Not used as often as it was in the past
Forms of Punishment
Different ways to punish our criminals
Capital Punishment
Imprisonment
Very common
Jails and prisons
Overcrowding and budget problems
Probation
The death penalty (38 states and the federal govt.)
1st degree murder, murder of a police officer
Electric chair, lethal injection, firing squad
A Community Sanction
Eases overcrowding
Electronic monitoring, house arrests, boot camps, etc.
Fines
Yet to catch on in the U.S.
Some minor crimes and drug cases
Part of salary or income in other countries
Forms of Punishment
Restitution and Community Service
Restorative Justice
Reparations to injured party
Pay victims of a crime for “damages”
Cleaning up litter on roads, painting, landscaping, etc.
Apologize, show remorse, admit your faults
Shame Punishment
Newest form
Shoplifters, sex offenders
Sentencing Decisions
Seriousness of offense
Criminal history
Employment
Victims
Sentencing Disparity
Sentencing Guidelines
Crack v. cocaine possession (5. g v. 500 g.)
Require judges to give determined sentences based on variety of factors
Seriousness of crime
Criminal record
Mandatory Sentencing/Habitual Offender Laws
Specific crimes
Long sentences
Ex: three strikes
More on the Death Penalty
Legal until 1972
Furman v. Georgia (5-4 vote)
Gregg v. Georgia (1976)
Think prohibition of alcohol
Few executions from 1976-1985
Increase since 1985
Slowed up in last few years
Violated 8th amendment
Cruel and unusual punishment
Technology, DNA, Forensics
Texas #1, Virginia #2
The Death Penalty Debate
Death v. life in prison without the possibility of parole (the question)