1 / 20

Chapter 15 Pages 176-180 Purposes of Punishment/Parole Capital Punishment

Chapter 15 Pages 176-180 Purposes of Punishment/Parole Capital Punishment. 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 eye for an eye and a tooth for a tooth.”

bruce-weiss
Télécharger la présentation

Chapter 15 Pages 176-180 Purposes of Punishment/Parole Capital Punishment

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Chapter 15 Pages 176-180 Purposes of Punishment/Parole Capital Punishment

  2. 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 eye for an eye and a tooth for a tooth.” • Instead of individuals seeking revenge , society does it through the criminal justice system.

  3. 2. Explain deterrence to deter crime • Deterrence: punishment to discourage the offender from committing another crime in the future; also, to deter others from committing the crime.

  4. 3. Explain the purpose of rehabilitation to deter crime. • Rehabilitation is helping convicted persons change their behavior so that they can lead useful and productive lives after their release

  5. 4. Explain the purpose of incapacitation to deter crime • Incapacitation means that the criminal is physically separated from the community and the communit4ed is protected as a result of incapacitation. • PRISON

  6. 5. Explain Parole • Parole is the release of a convicted person from prison before his or her entire sentence has been served. • Eligibility of parole is not a right, but, rather, a privilege. Inmates may go before a parole board that makes the decision

  7. 6. Two ways people can become eligible for parole. • After serving a minimum sentence specified by the judge or law. • Or, people automatically become eligible for parole after serving a portion of the total sentence

  8. 7. What is capital punishment also known as? • Capital punishment is also known as the death penalty

  9. 8. US Supreme Court 2008 • In 2008, the Court found that a state law providing the death penalty for the rape of a child was a disproportionate punishment (the punishment did not fit the crime) and a violation of the 8th Amendment.

  10. 9. • In 1972 case of Furman v. Georgia, the US Supreme Court held that the death penalty as then applied was unconstitutional. – Executions were halted. States rewrote capital punishment laws. In 1978, the Court ruled that the new laws were constitutional

  11. 10. Death row at end of 2006 • A. 98% were men • B. 56% were white • C. 42% were black • D. 11% were Hispanic.

  12. 11. What do most states use to carry out executions? • Most use lethal injections

  13. 12. • In 2007, all executions were temporarily stopped when the Supreme Court agreed to hear a case that challenged lethal injection as cruel and unusual punishment in violation of the 8th Amendment.

  14. 12a. • However, in 2008 the Court decided that the use of lethal injection did not pose a substantial risk of serous harm, and executions resumed.

  15. 13. Explain the two parts in a capital punishment trial. • Part one: the jury decides guilt or innocence • Part two: jury decides whether the defendant should receive the death penalty or a lesser punishment. • Judges and juries must consider both aggravating and mitigating circumstances.

  16. 14. Aggravating Circumstances • Aggravating circumstances are factors that suggest the defendant deserves a more severe punishment. Examples include a gruesome murder, crimes involving children, or previous convictions of the accused

  17. 15. Mitigating Circumstances • Mitigating circumstances are factors that suggest the defendant deserves a less severe punishment. Examples include the defendant’s age, lack of criminal record, or a history of showing that the victim had previously abused the defendant.

  18. 16. List the reasons why opponents are against capital punishment • No one who values life can approve of the death penalty. • Religious and moral objections to killing apply to the government. • Say death penalty does not deter murder • Death penalty applied in an unfair manner – more minorities executed • Violates 8th Amendment’s ban against “cruel and unusual punishment.”

  19. 17. What is one approach to dealing with a wrongful conviction? • Use life in prison without parole instead of the death penalty

  20. 18. What do advocates of the death penalty state? • Advocates state it is a JUST punishment for those who commit the most serious crimes. • Threat of death DOES deter crime because people fear death more than any other punishment.

More Related