Sentencing: Once guilt has been determined, the next step is to decide what to do to the offender What should sentencing accomplish? Multiple goals of.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
CRIMINAL JUSTICE POLICING IN AMERICA DUTIES OF THE POLICE  4 MAJOR DUTIES Keep the peace Apprehend violators Prevent crime Provide Social Services.
Advertisements

Punishment and Sentencing
Criminal Justice Process: Sentencing & Corrections
Chapter 15 Sentencing Options
Sentencing Structure Comparisons Barb Tombs July 16, 2007 Presentation to the CT Sentencing Task Force Subcommittees.
Thinking Critically Questions Chapter Ten and Eleven.
PROCESSING OF YOUTHFUL AND JUVENILE OFFENDERS IN NORTH CAROLINA Youth Accountability Planning Task Force December 10, 2009.
Sentencing, Appeals, and
Criminal Justice Process: Sentencing and Corrections 1. Sentencing Options 2. Purposes of Punishment 3. Parole 4. Capital Punishment 5. Corrections.
Poli 103A California Politics Crime and Punishment II: Race and Crime.
CHAPTER EIGHT SENTENCING.
Community Corrections.  Community Corrections are the subfield of corrections in which offenders are supervised and provided services outside jail or.
The New Technology of Community Corrections James Byrne Lecture.
Community Corrections
Sentencing and Punishment
Poli 103A California Politics Crime and Punishment II: Race and Crime.
Chapter 11 Punishment and Sentencing
Capital Punishment Revisited Capital punishment is both a Sentencing and a Corrections issue (it bridges the 2 topics) Note distinction between 2 different.
Punishment & Sentencing Chapter 10 in Your Textbook John Massey Criminal Justice.
1 Sentencing Decisions Chapter Sixteen. 2 Lady Justice Right hand: scales of justice symbolizing fairness in the administration of justice. Eyes: blindfold,
Chapter 15: Criminal Justice Process ~ Sentencing & Corrections Objective: The student should be able to list the various options to sentencing & identify.
AJ 50 – Introduction to Administration of Justice
Anatomy of a Criminal Trial West Melbourne Police Department Citizen’s Academy Court Night Judge David E. Silverman Judge Rhonda Babb.
Manuel MendiolaCriminal Justice Chapter 1 Criminal Justice Process And Jurisdiction of felonies and misdemeanors.
Sentencing and the Presentence Investigation Report
Chapter 11 SENTENCING AND SANCTIONS 1. Purpose of Criminal Sanctions  Criminal Sanctions – A penalty imposed for violating accepted social norms. A sanction.
Criminal Justice Chapter 9 Presentation Assignment By: Ciara Hairston & Kiya Holland May 4, 2012.
Chapter 4 Sentencing and punishment. In this chapter, you will look at the purposes and process of sentencing and the different factors affecting a sentencing.
Chapter 16 Sections Objectives: 4.05, 4.09, 6.02, 6.07, 6.08.
Criminal Justice System. Police Have immediate control over who is arrested “Police discretion” Size of U.S. population and number of police officers.
Chapter 9 Punishment and Sentencing
Chapter 2 Sentencing and the Correctional Process Corrections: An Introduction, 2/e Seiter ©2008 Pearson Education, Inc. Pearson Prentice Hall Upper Saddle.
Sentencing What purpose is served by establishing a system of punishment for those who commit crimes?
1. Explain retribution to deter crime At one time the primary reason for punishing a criminal was RETRIBUTION. This is the idea behind the saying “an.
Purpose of Punishment Corrections. Retribution – An eye for an eye; a tooth for a tooth. – Society, through the criminal justice system, taking on the.
Introduction to Criminal Justice
Sentencing and Corrections. Once Found Guilty, a defendant will be sentenced by a jury or judge.
Punishment and sentencing By: Jessie Graber The goals of modern sentencing  General Deterrence- a crime control policy that depends on the fear of criminal.
Sentencing and Corrections. Judges Options Suspended Sentence: Sentence is given but is not imposed until the defendant messes up again (arrested or violates.
Introduction to Criminal Justice Sentencing, Appeals, and the Death Penalty Chapter Nine Bohm and Haley.
Chapter 1 The Goals of Correctional Policy Corrections Content: Jails, probation, prisons, parole Context: Democracy, bureaucracy Goals: Fairness (law)
Punishment & Sentencing The Criminal Justice system aims to solve three basic questions: What conduct is criminal? What determines guilt? What should be.
Constitutional Criminal Procedure
POLI 103A CALIFORNIA POLITICS CRIME AND PUNISHMENT II: RACE AND CRIME.
SENTENCING AND CORRECTIONS CHAPTER 15 PAGES
SENTENCING Overview/Review The “PSI” and “Risk Assessment” Sentencing Disparity Sentencing Guidelines Who Dictates Time Served?
Sentencing and the Correctional Process
Chapter 28-2: Texas Courts Systems Guided Notes. Texas Judicial System A. Consists of : 1)Courts 2)Judges 3)Law enforcement agencies B. Serves the purposes.
CRIMINAL JUSTICE TODAY, 10E© 2009 Pearson Education, Inc by Dr. Frank Schmalleger Pearson Prentice Hall Upper Saddle River, NJ Pretrial, Trials,
Understanding the Criminal Justice System CJUS 101: Chapter 10 Sentencing, Appellate Review, and the Penalty of Death.
Street Law Ch. 15: The Criminal Justice Process: Sentencing and Corrections.
© 2015 Cengage Learning Chapter 9 Punishment and Sentencing.
© 2015 Cengage Learning Chapter 11 Punishment and Sentencing Chapter 11 Punishment and Sentencing © 2015 Cengage Learning.
Outline of the U.S. and Arizona Criminal Justice Systems
Sentencing.
9 Sentencing.
Sentencing, Appeals, and the Death Penalty
Imposing the ‘Sentence’
Chapter 9 Punishment and Sentencing
Punishment and Sentencing
C10: Punishment and Sentencing
Criminal Court Cases Chapter 16, Section 2.
Probation and Parole.
Criminal Justice Process: Sentencing & Corrections
Chapter 4 Sentencing and the Presentence Investigation Report: Background, Preparation, and Functions.
Chapter 16 Citizenship and the Law
Sentencing.
CRIMINAL JUSTICE PROCESS: SENTENCING AND CORRECTIONS
Presentation transcript:

Sentencing: Once guilt has been determined, the next step is to decide what to do to the offender What should sentencing accomplish? Multiple goals of sentencing are recognized: a)Retribution ( justice & atonement for wrongdoing ) b)Deterrence ( psychological prevention of crime ) c)Incapacitation ( physical prevention of crime ) d)Reformation/rehabilitation ( changing the offender ) e)Restoration/restitution ( repairing the harm done ) Which goal is most important?

What things can be done to offenders? a)Fines (money or property) b)Imprisonment c)Death d)Probation e)Work/labor f)Treatment or counseling g)Restitution h)Corporal punishment i)Loss of citizenship (and rights) j)Public shaming k)Exile/banishment

Strategies of Sentencing: Determinate vs. Indeterminate sentences a)Indeterminate: At the time of sentencing, the offender knows only the minimum and the maximum they could receive (a range)  Actual sentence length decided by parole board decision  Closely linked to rehabilitation of offender b)Determinate: At the time of sentencing, the offender receives a specific sentence (e.g., 5 years)

Strategies of Sentencing: b)Determinate Sentencing: specific forms  Fixed or Flat sentencing: sentence decided by legislature & specified in statutes for each offense (with provision for “good time” reduction)  Presumptive sentencing: Legislature specifies a recommended sentence with range of departures available to judge (guideline-restricted)  Mandatory sentencing: legislature mandates specific punishment (often no good time)

Strategies of Sentencing: What is the difference between “good time” and “parole”? (both = sentence reductions) –Standard good time = sentence reductions earned at a fixed rate for good conduct Not a matter of discretionary beneficence But may be reduced for disciplinary actions –Parole = a discretionary decision to release early made by the parole board It is a judgmental “act of grace” by parole board It is not owed to the inmate or simply earned Inmate is released into conditional supervision

Strategies of Sentencing: Public Perceptions of “good time” and “parole”? –They mislead the society or victims regarding how much offenders are actually punished –They release dangerous criminals too soon –They subvert justice The recent response to issue of “good time” = passage of “Truth-in-Sentencing” laws –These dramatically restrict the amount sentences can be reduced by “good time” –Generally limited to serious or violent crimes

Strategies of Sentencing: What is the correctional purpose of “good time” and “parole” provisions? a)Encourage or motivate good behavior during incarceration Provide a positive incentive to avoid trouble & “be productive” The alternative = brutalization & very unsafe working conditions for correctional staff b)Manage prison population levels and avoid over-crowding The down-side of tougher sentencing = larger prison populations & higher prison costs

The Process of Sentencing: In principle, sentencing is a separate task from conviction (but some overlap in practice) In felonies (and some misdemeanors), trial and sentencing hearing are separate events ─Need additional information about offender ─Need time to deliberate and consider evidence Sentence Hearing to decide punishment ─Scheduled several weeks after trial ─Will introduce additional information not presented at the trial or admissible at trial Judicial role depends on statutory structure

The Process of Sentencing: Sentence Hearing includes: ─Pre-sentence Investigation (PSI) report by probation officer ─May include victim impact evidence & testimony ─May include character witnesses for defense ─Seek to identify mitigating and aggravating factors that would lessen or increase sentence ─Will include prosecutor recommendations ─May include hearsay evidence ─May rely on opinions by expert witnesses ─May include offender’s statement (& apology)

The Process of Sentencing: What factors can be considered in deciding the sentence? Depends on legal discretion allowed to judge ─Mandatory sentencing statutes ─Statutory sentencing guidelines Legal factors: severity of offense; prior criminal record; use of violence or weapon; influence of collaborators; victims’ characteristics (as specified in law) Extralegal factors: gender, age, race, social class, economic status, personal attributes (not specified in law)

The Process of Sentencing: Note important differences between Felony and Misdemeanor sentencing:  Misdemeanor sentencing = abbreviated & often collapsed into trial event  Felony sentencing = more formalized & extended  Limits on period of incarceration & amount of fine  Place of incarceration: –County Jail for misdemeanors –State prison for felonies (with some exceptions)  Differences in civil disabilities that go long with the sentence – i.e., loss of citizenship & rights

Capital Sentencing as a special issue: Criminal punishment is often viewed by its extremes (rather than by average practices) Death is the most extreme thing we can do to offenders  It often is the issue by which people define their stands on criminal justice  However, executions are extremely rare events with ambiguous impact on justice practices The importance of the Death Penalty for CJ policy is symbolic rather than actual

Capital Punishment: death as a sentence Historical use of the death penalty in the U.S.

Capital Punishment: death as a sentence Availability of Death Penalty is variable Comparison of U.S. with other countries Constitutional issues on the death penalty ─It is unconstitutional: Furman v. Georgia, 1972 ─It is reestablished: Gregg v. Georgia, 1976 ─Later decisions re: methods/crimes/offenders? Death Penalty controversies: ─Method of execution  doing it humanely (applying “evolving standards of decency”) ─Selection of cases  using it in a non-arbitrary, non-capricious, non-discriminatory fashion

Endnote on the inevitable presence of discretion in CJ Processing Discretion in CJ decision-making tends to follow a “Whack-a-Mole” pattern ─It may be eliminated or reduced at one decision point ─But it merely shifts and becomes more important at another decision point ─This often effectively changes who makes the decision ─It may also reduce how open & explicit the decision-making process is