Costs The New York DP ended several years ago (interesting post-Furman history!) - partly because of its very high cost -and this is largely because NY.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
From Crime to Doing Time What Courts Do
Advertisements

Professor Byrne Lecture Nov. 9, 2010
CJS - Chapter 6 What does Walker mean by --- "deterrence has a simple, intuitive appeal"? Punishment “should” work – “common sense” Key problem: Theory.
Chapter 5 – Criminal Procedure. The Role of the Police The process by which suspected criminals are identified, arrested, accused and tried in court is.
CAD - Chap 5 Note: CJ and Crim usually don’t go here - history, sociology, broader social policy.
The Anatomy of a Criminal Case Government – Libertyville HS.
Chapter 14 The Trial.
Chapter 1 Crime and Justice in the US. Crime in the United States Crime is a top concern of the American public. Crimes presented by the media are usually.
Albrecht, Albrecht, Albrecht, Zimbelman © 2011 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved. May not be copied, scanned, or duplicated, in whole or in part, except.
Chapter 13: Criminal Justice Process ~ Proceedings Before Trial Objective: The student should be able to identify the required procedures before a trial.
Chapter 26 The Economics of Crime Copyright © 2010 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.McGraw-Hill/Irwin.
CHAPTER EIGHT SENTENCING.
Fair DP IDEALS/ABSTRACT “Criminal Justice System” “Fairness and justice for all” “Equality under the law” “Checks and balances” “Best legal system in the.
DP - Appeals Before WW2, federal appeals were rare. (indigent defendants, no legal help) The two Scottsboro rulings in the 1930s were major exceptions.
Not Your Typical Criminal Defendant. The Sixth Amendment “In all criminal prosecutions, the accused shall enjoy the right to a speedy and public trial,
Pre-Trial Procedures. Release before trial  Few people charged with a crime are held in jail until their trial  There must be good reason to keep someone.
The American Justice System Essential Questions: What are the steps of the criminal justice system? What do police do? What are the pre-trial steps of.
By: Elizabeth Yoder. THE ISSUE atch?v=lC15kOoe4_s SHOULD THE DEATH PENALTY BE ENFORCED??
6 th Amendment protections, bail, grand jury, jury selections, plea bargaining.
Death Penalty Is It Worth It? By Oscar Flores. What is Capital Punishment? The Death Penalty or Capital Punishment is The death penalty is a form of punishment.
Death Penalty Ryan Moye. hoice_polls/neDs3TD34MfobgO hoice_polls/neDs3TD34MfobgO.
California Death Penalty History: Pretty typical patterns -- Few executions -- Privatization and centralization -- More “humane” executions -- Mostly poor,
Mariana Guiza.  Death penalty is the punishment of execution, administered to someone legally convicted of a capital crime.
Journal– 3/8/12 Read the article “Searching for Details Online, Lawyers Facebook the Jury” and answer the questions on the back of your packet .
Categories of law Civil-private wrong Criminal-public wrong.
Crime and Criminal Justice 3/20/2012. Learning Objectives Use knowledge and analyses of social problems to evaluate public policy, and to suggest policy.
Inadequate Trial Representation "A person may be condemned to die in Texas in a process that has the integrity of a professional wrestling match" (Stephen.
Law and the Legal Process. Jurisdiction What is Jurisdiction? What is Jurisdiction? The authority of a court to hold a trial and decide a case The authority.
{ Criminal Trial Procedure What happens when the police arrest a criminal suspect?
Mistakes in Death Sentencing DPIC Website: DPIC webpage - Innocence Old Report - July 1997 But still useful.... Lawyers’ perspective.
Soc 329 Slammed Mother Jones Slammed: The Coming Prison Meltdown 2008.
Chapter 13: Criminal Justice Process- Proceedings before the Trial
Bell Ringer Read the article “Searching for Details Online, Lawyers Facebook the Jury” and answer the questions. Be ready to discuss your answers with.
Courts, Crime and Controversy
From Crime Scene to Courtroom, Examining the Steps of the Criminal Justice System Through the Lens of a Local Crime Who: Benjamin Newman What: Hit & Run.
 Public support for the death penalty is diminishing in the U.S.  Roughly half the U.S. public now prefers life without parole over the death penalty.
Criminal Courts may be State or Federal Government. Always involve the violation of some standing law. Unlike a civil case, if no law was broken, a Criminal.
McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2012 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Chapter 28 The Economics of Crime.
Post World War 2 Michael Meltsner - Cruel and Unusual Random House, 1973 (Re-published in 2011) Highly recommended by the same author: The Making of a.
The Steps of a Trial -through the eyes of Lil Wayne.
$1 Million $500,000 $250,000 $125,000 $64,000 $32,000 $16,000 $8,000 $4,000 $2,000 $1,000 $500 $300 $200 $100 Welcome.
The Death Penalty By Ryan Rueter. Issues of Death The Death Penalty is largely a morality issue –Some believe in “an eye for an eye” –Others believe nothing.
WHY I H8 the DeAtH PeNaLtY !!!!!!!!!!! KILLING IS BAD N’KAY.
Attitudinal Survey on the CJS
Understanding the Criminal Justice System CJUS 101 Chapter 8-A: Judges, Prosecutors, and Others at the Bar of Justice.
Class Name, Instructor Name Date, Semester Criminology 2011 Chapter 17 PROSECUTION AND PUNISHMENT.
DP - Appeals Before WW2, federal appeals were rare. (indigent defendants, no legal help) The two Scottsboro rulings in the 1930s were major exceptions.
McGraw-Hill/Irwin © 2002 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., All Rights Reserved. Chapter 24 The Economics of Crime.
THE PENAL SYSTEM AN OVERVIEW. Why do we have a penal system? Incapacitation: remove dangerous people from society so they don’t harm the rest of us. Deterrence:
DP - Inad Rep "A person may be condemned to die in Texas in a process that has the integrity of a professional wrestling match" (Stephen Bright, Director.
Constitutional Criminal Procedure
DP - Abstract & Real The Abstract Death Penalty: Only the “worst of the worst” accused murderers are selected for capital punishment. Clear evidence of.
Aim: What is the formal Criminal Process?. The Formal Criminal Process 1. Initial Contact- Citizen and Police contact. 2. Investigation- Identification.
DP - Discrimination “We have three classes of homicide” I was told by the chief of detectives in a large southern city. “If a n____ kills a white man that’s.
DP - Fair DP IDEALS/ABSTRACT “Criminal Justice System” “Fairness and justice for all” “Checks and balances” “Best legal system in the world” Reinforced.
Understanding the Criminal Justice System CJUS 101: Chapter 10 Sentencing, Appellate Review, and the Penalty of Death.
DP - Deterrence Three meanings of deterrence: Specific deterrence – one person General deterrence - deters others Theory - "logically" punishment should.
CJS - Chapter 7 Read page 132 carefully!! To conservatives discretion = “soft on crime” ** (discretion – police, courts, prisons) “Liberal” judges and.
Gabriela Munoz Econ Period: 2 DEATH PENALTY. TYPES OF DEATH PENALTIES Lethal Injection Electrocution Gas Chamber Firing Squad Hanging.
This guide simplifies the arrest-to-sentence process in New York County.
The Criminal Justice System. Arrest Procedure The Arrest: To arrest a person the police must have probable cause. (reason to believe that criminal activity.
The Judicial System What Courts Do and Crime. Stages of Criminal Justice.
THE CRIMINAL JUSTICE SYSTEM Chapter Twelve. CATEGORIZING CRIME IN TEXAS Felony Serious crime punishable by prison and/or fine Serious crime punishable.
Chapter 1 Crime and Justice in the US.
Welcome Back 9/1/2015 What does the constitution tell us?
The Criminal Justice Process
Procedures for a CRIMINAL case
Deadly Justice, Ch 14, 15 - Cost - Deterrence
Yoyo: QUESTION: A man was found dead with a cassette recorder in one hand and a gun in the other. When the police came in, they immediately pressed the.
Presentation transcript:

Costs The New York DP ended several years ago (interesting post-Furman history!) - partly because of its very high cost -and this is largely because NY appeals courts wouldn’t allow sham trials! (even some conservative Repubs in NY refused to support sham trial system!)

Costs Timothy McVeigh trial -- defense alone cost $13.8 million only up to conviction - appeals added several million more. Prosecution cost even more!! (Police investigation, trial, etc.) Total cost was well over $30 million!!

Costs DPIC material on cost and the article “Millions Misspent” are mostly anecdotal like this -- “stories” from state to state New Jersey first to abolish in a long time Illinois, New Mexico, more to come? California??

Costs So why is cost important? Crime policy is costing many billions of dollars (“imprisonment binge” and DP) Pulling money away from important social services – esp health, education, infrastructure (plus tax cuts for corps & rich!!) “double hit” on state budgets then the economic collapse

Costs Also, high cost leads to cost-cutting, and that leads to more problems -- like sham trials and mistakes. (most costs are paid at local level)

Costs A bigger problem underlying both -- Politics dominates US crime policy, and this is disastrous – politicians and media generate exaggerated fear of crime, then follow the mindless public response to unrealistic fear reinforced by corporations/unions that profit from policies. This costs huge amounts of money - and doesn’t work - makes problems worse.

Costs Much of the public believes that it costs less to execute than imprison capital defendants. Not true! Costs much more. When shown that it costs more, they think that it is mostly because of the cost of appeals. Also not true! Mostly cost of trials.

Costs Opponents of the DP increasingly promote LWOP (Life Without Parole) as a much less costly alternative. Also decreases problems - like discrim, execution of innocent, etc. (Public much less likely to favor DP if LWOP is offered as alternative)

Costs LWOP would be less costly - but in the long run it is still inefficient and bad policy. LWOP and Mistakes - usually no appeals!! (Nobody else does this!)

Costs General cost estimate of the alternative - long prison sentences. Median age at sentencing = 28 LE = 60's (lower than gen pop) 40 years x 25,000 year = $1 million Cost of “Life sentence”

Costs Note: Attorney & court costs are much lower because most cases are settled by a guilty plea (most cases involve substantial evidence) also there are very few appeals! Nothing to appeal in settled cases!

Costs Usual Estimate for DP cases: average $2 - 5 million per case by the end of the process (execution). (varies by state and locality - the more “sham” the trials are the cheaper the overall system)

Costs Components of cost (note: costs have increased since 1990s) (based on low-end hypothetical estimate) -- $1.5 million per complete case (doesn’t include the cost of other DP cases that do not end in execution - more later - “system costs”)

Costs Pre-trial: $150,000 (most paid by locals) More thorough police investigation (because of trial) Legal prep for indictment/motions/trial Experts/research/consulting/testimony (lab work, etc.).

Costs Trials: $600,000 (most paid by locals) Bifurcated trials (court costs for judge and staff) - costs of juries - prosecution trial costs (many atty hours) - witness/evidence costs (depositions, testimony, etc.) - defense costs (varies a lot!)

Costs State post-conviction appeals process: $200,000 (most paid by states) Some investigative costs, some attorney time, some court time

Costs Federal post-conviction appeals process: $300,000 (most paid by federal courts) (Note: includes prosecution costs for appeals preparation - paid by states)

Costs Pre-execution imprisonment: $250, years (avg $25,000 year (paid by states)

Costs Costs of execution: usually negligible (execution workers, often prison lockdown, chemicals, publicity, etc.).

Costs TOTAL : $1.5 Million $3 Billion post-Furman extra cost (extra $.5 mill x cases)

Costs System Costs But there are also other "system costs" - costs associated with having vs. not having a DP system – that are not related to individual cases. Having a DP system increases the costs of many other homicide cases.

Costs sentences are result of about 25,000 DP trials 30% conviction & upheld death sent rate.

Costs Some defendants are acquitted at trial, Some are convicted but are not sentenced to death, Some retrials after cases overturned on appeal (about 40% of post-Furman cases overturned on appeal, most retried).

Costs If acquitted at trial, no cost of appeals -- so only partial cost. If convicted but prison, some appeals because of trial! (Because a trial was held, even those cases that did not result in death sentences are subject to appeal! -- unlike settled cases).

Costs If system costs are averaged into the total cost of cases that end up as DP cases, probably close to $3 mill per average "complete dp case" (nationwide low average estimate).

Costs Bottom line -- $15-20 billion extra cost nationwide for DP systems. Further: Largest part of costs paid by localities (counties) - Pre-trial & Trial expenses. Smaller part paid by state & federal (appeals). Much cost of DP paid up front (esp local costs) while prison costs are spread over many years.

Costs These costs also lead to other problems - attempts to cut costs lead to the problems of inadequate rep, discrimination, mistakes, shoddy appeals process, etc. This is also why only 20 counties in the US have generated a majority of the post-Furman executions - they are the ones that can afford the process!

Costs Is the DP worth the extra expense? Cost-Benefit analysis often applied to public policies. Incapacitation? Homicide recidivism is rare and the alternative is prison, which incapacitates as effectively as execution.

Costs Deterrence? Research indicates no deterrent effect, likely increases homicides (negates any incapacitation effect too).

Costs "Justice"/"Closure" for victims/survivors? Less than 5% of homicides are DP cases - are victims/survivors in other 95% of homicide cases devalued? (other 95% are disproportionately minority-victim cases).

Costs Cost is not the most important aspect of the DP -- but it is part of a larger problem (a shoddy system) because it wastes public resources and provides no public benefits -- cost contributes to those problems as well, in the form of cost-cutting to save public money.