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Criminal Justice Final Note Cards

Terms

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Uniform Crime Report: the official crime data collected by the FBI from local police departments
UCR part one
1:celebrated cases
-wealthy or famous persons Ex: OJ simpson
2: serious felonies
-rape, robberies, and burglaries
3: less serious felonies
-young, first time offenders, rape victim went on dates
4: misdemeanors
-shoplifting, disordely
Wedding Cake Model
a crime control policy that depends on the fear of criminal penalties
General Deterrence
the view that crime is a product of three everyday factors: motivated offenders, suitable targets, and a lack of capable guardians
routine activities theory
a guilty mind: the intent to commit a criminal act
mens rea
an illegal act, or failure to act when legally required
actus reus
the decision by a prosecutor to drop a case after a complaint has been made because of, for example, insufficient evidence, witness reluctance to testify, police error, or office policy
nolle prosequi
The process in which a potential jury panel is questioned by the prosecution and the defense to select jurors who are unbiased and objective
voir dire
An order of a superior court requesting that a record of an inferior court (or administrative body) be brought forward for review or inspection
Writ of Certiorari
To stand by deciding cases: the legal principle by which the decision or holding in an earlier case becomes the standard by which subsequent similar cases are judged.
stare decisis
when a law enforcement agent includes a person to commit an offense which the person would otherwise have been unlikely to commit
entrapment
grounds or fields attached to a house
curtilage
a more serious crime that carries a penalty of incarceration in a state or federal prison, usually for one year or more
felony
Federal Bureau of Investigation: The arm of the Justice Department that investigates violations of federal law, gathers crime statistics, runs a comprehensive crime laboratory, and helps train local law enforcement officers
FBI
An emperiment that was directed at restricting the carring of guns in high risk places at high risk times
Kansas City Patrol Experiment
Evidence that is in plain view of police officers may be seized without a search warrant
Plain View Doctrine
the principle that evidence amy be used in a criminal trial even though the search warrant used to obtain it was technically faulty, so long as the police acted in good faith when they sought the warrant from a judge
good faith exception
A perspective on justice that views the main goal of the criminal justice system to be a systematic response to wrongdoing that emphasizes healing the wounds of victims, offenders, and communities caused or revealed by crime. It stresses noncoercive and h
restorative justice perspective
an order issued by a judge, directing officers to conduct a search of specified premises for specified objects or persons and to bring them before the court
search warrant
Crimes that involve the violations of rules that coltrol business enterprize; they can include employee pilferage, bribery, commodities, law violations, mail fraud, computer fraud, environmental law violations, embezzlement, internet scams, extortion, for
White Collar Crime
a body of specific rules that declare what conduct is criminal and prescribe the punishment to be imposed for such conduct
substantive criminal law
A style of police management that stresses proactive problem solving instead of reactive crime fighting
problem oriented policing (POP)
the working personalities adopted by police officers that can range from being a social worker in blue to a hard charging crime fighter
Police styles
a term used to describe a police officer who actively solicits bribes and vigorously engages in corrupt practices
meat eater
an attorney employed by the government to represent criminal defendants that cannot afford to pay for a laywer
Public defender
a plea of no contest; a defendant submits to sentencing without any formal admission of guilt that could be used against him or her in a subsequent civil suit
Nolo Contendere
criminal sanction that requires the offender to repay the victim or society, or both for damage caused by the criminal act
restitution
assigning probationers to a level and type of supervision based on their particular needs and the risks they pose for the community
risk classification
a sentence entailing the conditional release of a convicted offender into the community under the supervision of the court, subject to certain conditions for a specified time
Probation
electronic equiptment that enables probation officers to monitor the location of those under house arrest or other forms of supervision
electronic monitoring (em)
repitition of criminal behavior: habitual criminality
recidivism
assimilation into the seperate culture in the prison that has its own rewards and behaviors
prisonization
the early release of a prisoner from incarceration subject to conditions set by a parole board
parole
a high security prison in which inmates are kept in solitary confinement up to 23 hours per day
supermax prison
a regimented dehumanizing institution such as a prison, in which like situated people are kept in social isolation, cut off from the world at large
total institution
Is developed by judges through decisions of courts and similar tribunals, rather than through legislative statutes or executive branch action
Common Law
The act of removing or seperating, or seizing anything from the possession of its owner under process of law for the benifit of creditors or the state
Sequestration
The standard or proof required in most criminal cases within an adversarial system
Reasonable doubt
A person who murders three or more people over a period of more than 30 days with a "cooling off" period between each murder, and whose modivation for killing is largely based on psychological gradification
Serial murder
Possible defenses by excuse, an informative defense by which defendants argue that they should not be held criminally liable for breaking the law because they were leagally insane at the time of the commission of elegid events
Insanity defense
A procedural defense that forbids a defendant from bein gtried twice for the same crime on the same set of facts
Double jeopardy
Protects against abuse of government authority in legal procedure
Fifth Amendment
The process by which American courts have applied portions of the US bill of rights to the states
Incorporation doctrine
An agreement in a criminal case where by the prosecutor offers the defendant the oppurtunity to plead guilty, usually to a lesser charge or to the original criminal charge with the recommendation of a lighter than the max sentence
Charge Bargaining
Crimes consisting of rape, murder, burglary, armed robbery,
Serious Felonies
A person who seeks to influence a group to adopt or maintain a norm. EX: MADD
Moral Entreprenuar
Calculated by deviding the number of crimes that are "cleared" (due to a charge being laid) by the total number of crimes recorded
Clearamce rate
The part of the bill of rights which prohibits teh federal gov. from imposing excessive bail, excessive fines, or cruel and unusual punishment
eighth amendment
Holds that deviance is not inherrit to an act, but instead focuses on the linguistic tendancy of majorities to negatively label minorities or those seen as devient from norms.
Labeling theory
A lesser criminal act than a felony but more sever than an infraction, mostly punished with monitary fines
Misdemeanor
Guards against unreasonable search and seizures
Fourth amendment
Sets forth rights related to criminal prosecutions
Sixth amendment
To head the national committee on law observation and enforcement. The commission was an eleven member group charged with identifying the causes of criminal activity and to make recommendations for aopropriate public policy
Wickersham Commission
Searches made by the US law enforcement personnel based on the consent of the individual whose person or property is being searched
Consent search
Protects persons from harming themselves, or from being harmed by the judicial system
Writ of habeas corpus
A legal term referring to the investigation into teh history of person convicted of a crime before sentenceing to determine if there are extenuating circumstances which should ameliorate teh sentencce or a history of criminal behavior to increase the hars
presentence investigation report
A form of unequal treatment that is often of unexplained cause and is at least incongrous, unfair and disadvantaging in consequence
sentencing disparity
a political maxium which states that no layer of gov should take any action that exceeds that which is necessary to achieve the objective of gov reguardless of intent of object
proportionality principle
term used to describe the confiscation of assets, by the state, which are either (a) the proceeds of crime or (b) the instrumentalities of crime, and more recently, terrorism.
criminal forfeiture
a right in jury selection for the defense and prosecution to reject a certain number of potential jurors who appear to have an unfavorable bias without having to give any reason.
peremptory challange
a United States court case, which eventually came before the Supreme Court of the United States, that Dan T. Coenen describes as being the “most far-reaching post-Gregg challenge to capital sentencing.”
McClesky vs. Kemp
a scheduled extended visit during which an inmate of a prison is permitted to spend several hours or days in private, usually with a legal spouse
conjugal visit
the set of legal rules that jurors should follow when the jury is deciding a civil or criminal case
jury instructions
In the case, the Supreme Court unanimously ruled that state courts are required under the Sixth Amendment of the Constitution to provide counsel in criminal cases for defendants who are unable to afford their own attorneys.
Gideon vs. Wainwright
miranda rights trial. To prove that defendant was told their rights
miranda vs arizona
the United States Supreme Court decided that evidence obtained in violation of the Fourth Amendment, which protects against "unreasonable searches and seizures," may not be used in criminal prosecutions in state courts, as well as federal courts
Mapp vs ohio
the United States Supreme Court unanimously held that the warrantless seizure of items from a private residence constitutes a violation of the Fourth Amendment.[1] It also set forth the exclusionary rule that prohibits admission of illegally obtained evi
weeks vs united states

the laws that set out the basic rules of practice in the criminal justice system
Procedural criminal law
initial trial court appearance at which the accused is read the charges, advices of his or her rights, and asked to enter a plea
arraignment
a prison system, developed in New York during the 19th century, based on group work during the day and separation at night.
auburn system
role of the police as maintainers of community order and safety
broken windows theory
a short-term militaristic correctional facility in which inmates, usually young first time offenders, undergo intense physical conditioning and discipline
boot camp
the belief that capital punishment creates an atmosphere of brutality, reinforces the view that violence us an appropirate response to provocation, and thus encourages rather than deters the criminal use of violence
brutalization effect
the grounds or fields attached to a house
curtilage
a sworn written statement addressed to a court or judge by the police, prosecutor, or individual alleging that an individual has committed an offense and requesting indictment and prosecution
complaint
the ideas that crime can be prevented or displaced though the use of residential architectural designs that reduce criminal opportunity.
EX: Well lit housing projects that maximize survlance
Defensiable space
all parties in the adversary process working together in a cooperative effort to settle cases with the least amount of effort or conflict
Courtroom work group
a model of criminal justice that emphasized the control of dangerous offenders and the protection of society through harsh punishment as a deterrent to crime
crime control perspective
programs designed to bring the police and the public closer together and create a more cooperative working environment between them
Community oriented policing (COP)
a criminal violation usually one that indangers the public welfare, that is defined by the act itself, irrespective of intent
strict liability crime
treatment that degrades human dignity =, is disproportionately severe, or shocks the general conscience; it is prohibited by the 8th amendment
cruel and unusual punishment
a form of adaptation to prisons used by women. This group contains masculine and feminine figures acting as fathers and mothers and any other family member, including children
make-believe families
according to nicholas alex, the social burden that african american police officers carry by being both minority-group members and law enforcement officers
double marginality
a model of criminal justice that emphasizes individual rights and constitutional safeguards against arbitrary or unfair judicial or administrative proceedings
due process perspective
the principle that prohibits using illegally obtained evidence in a trial
Exclusionary rule
a group of citizens chosen to hear charges against persons acused of crime and to determine whether there is sufficient evidence to bring the persons to trial
grand jury
a term used for a police officer who accepts payoffs when everyday duties place him or her in a position to be solicited by the public
grass eaters
criminal acts directed toward a particular person or members of a group targeted because of their racial, ethics, religous or gender characteristics
hate crime
a written accusation returned by a grand jury, charging an individual with a specified crime after determination of probable cause
indictment
the policy of keeping dangerous criminals in confinement to eliminate the risk of their repeating the offense in society
incapacitation
a group of punishments falling between probation and prison; community based sanctions including house arrest and intensive supervision
intermediate sanctions

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