SOLUTION MANUAL FOR Introduction to Criminal Justice 10e Robert M. Bohm, Keith N. Haley-The chapter begins by discussing crime in the United States. It briefly describes several
famous criminal cases in recent history.
...
SOLUTION MANUAL FOR Introduction to Criminal Justice 10e Robert M. Bohm, Keith N. Haley-The chapter begins by discussing crime in the United States. It briefly describes several
famous criminal cases in recent history. Criminal justice is examined as a system. That
system includes the police, the courts, and corrections. The police deal with crime, crime
control, arrests, and bookings. The prosecution deals with charging the defendants. The
prosecution also determines if the suspect has committed a misdemeanor, an ordinance
violation, or a felony. It may file an information or an indictment. An arrest warrant may be
issued by the court so that the police may arrest a suspect.
There are a variety of stages in a court that defendants may experience. They may have an
initial appearance, an arraignment, and a bail set; a preliminary hearing may occur.
Defendants may have a bench trial or a jury trial. They may participate in plea bargaining or
simply plead guilty and receive their sentence.
Convicted defendants then become part of the correctional system, where they may receive
probation, intermediate punishments, or incarceration. After serving a portion of their
sentence, they may be paroled. Next, the chapter discusses how the criminal justice system
is sometimes viewed as a nonsystem because of the differences among different
jurisdictions of independent agencies within the United States and the conflict and
confusion among them.
The chapter then presents the two models of the criminal justice system. The first, the crime
control model, reflects traditional conservative political values. In this model, the control of
criminal behavior is the most important function of criminal justice. The second, the due
process model, embodies traditional liberal political values. In this model, the principal goal
of criminal justice is at least as much to protect the innocent as it is to convict the guilty.
The chapter ends with a discussion of myths about crime and criminal justice. The chapter
also uses the history of trial by ordeal as an example. Throughout the book, criminal justice
myths are exposed and explained.
Lecture Outline
I. Crime in the United States
Every day people are confronted with reports of crime in newspapers, magazines, and radio
and television news programs. Crime is a favorite subject of movies and novels.
Unfortunately, some people encounter crime more directly as victims. No wonder crime is a
top concern of the American public.
II. Criminal Justice: An Institution of Social Control
Like the family, schools, organized religion, the media, and the law, criminal justice is an
institution of social control in the United States. A primary role of such institutions is to
persuade people, through subtle and not-so-subtle means, to abide by the dominant values
of society. Subtle means of persuasion include gossip and peer pressure, whereas expulsion
and incarceration are examples of not-so-subtle means.
III. Criminal Justice: The System
Criminal justice in the United States is administered by a loose confederation of more than
50,000 agencies of federal, state, and local governments. There are differences in the ways
the criminal justice system operates in different jurisdictions, there are also similarities. The
term jurisdiction, as used here, means a politically defined geographical area.
Misdemeanors are less serious crimes generally punishable by a fine or by incarceration in
jail for not more than one year. Felonies are serious offenses punishable by confinement in
prison for more than one year or by death.
A. Police
The criminal justice response to crime begins when a crime is reported to the police or,
far less often, when the police themselves discover that a crime has been committed.
Often, an arrest supported by witness statements and crime scene evidence is sufficient
to close a case, especially with a less serious crime.
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