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The History, Scope and Structure of the United States Criminal Justice System

The History, Scope and Structure of the United States Criminal Justice System. U.S. Criminal Justice System History. Early Foundations: Kin Policing System Code of Hammurabi Justinian Code 700 BC Watch & Ward 1285 AD American Colonies - Decentralization - Puritanism

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The History, Scope and Structure of the United States Criminal Justice System

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  1. The History, Scope and Structure of theUnited States Criminal Justice System

  2. U.S. Criminal Justice SystemHistory Early Foundations: • Kin Policing System • Code of Hammurabi • Justinian Code 700 BC • Watch & Ward 1285 AD • American Colonies - Decentralization - Puritanism - “The Watch” Boston 1636 • Sir Robert Peel - England 1829

  3. Criminal Justice in America Presented to the CJ 694 – Comparative Systems By Dr. Richard H. Ward Criminal Justice Center Sam Houston State University

  4. U.S. Criminal Justice SystemEntry into System

  5. U.S. Criminal Justice SystemHistory United States: • First U.S. PD established in Philadelphia 1833 • First State Police 1835 Texas Rangers

  6. U.S. Criminal Justice SystemHistory United States: • First U.S. PD established in Philadelphia 1833 • First State Police 1835 Texas Rangers • LAPD established 1877

  7. U.S. Criminal Justice SystemHistory United States: • First U.S. PD established in Philadelphia 1833 • First State Police 1835 Texas Rangers • LAPD established 1877 • ISP established 1922 • First Police Academy in San Francisco 1636

  8. U.S. Criminal Justice SystemHistory Three Eras in American Policing: • Political Era 1840 to 1920

  9. U.S. Criminal Justice SystemHistory Three Eras in American Policing: • Political Era 1840 to 1920 • Professional Era 1920 to 1970

  10. U.S. Criminal Justice SystemHistory Three Eras in American Policing: • Political Era 1840 to 1920 • Professional Era 1920 to 1970 • Community Era 1970 -

  11. U.S. Criminal Justice SystemHistory American Policing Today: • 18,760 police agencies • 796,518 sworn officers • 200,000 civilians • budgets total $51 billion • 10 million arrests per year

  12. U.S. Criminal Justice SystemCharacteristics of Law Enforcement Agencies 1% • 76% of U.S police agencies employ fewer than 100 sworn officers • 23% employ 100 to 1,000 officers • Only 1% of the nation’s police departments employ over 1,000 officers 23% 76%

  13. U.S. Criminal Justice SystemCharacteristics of Law Enforcement Agencies

  14. Federal: Federal Bureau of Investigation Drug Enforcement Administration Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco & Firearms U.S. Secret Service Postal Inspection State & Local: Housing Police Transit Police School District Police Port Authority Police Fish & Wildlife Water Reclamation U.S. Criminal Justice SystemSpecialized Law Enforcement Agencies

  15. U.S. Criminal Justice System Prosecution and Adjudication

  16. U.S. Criminal Justice SystemHistorical Roots • English Common Law • Adversarial System - District Attorney - Public Defender • State Sovereignty • Adoption of the U.S. Constitution in 1789 imposed federal on top of local system

  17. U.S. Criminal Justice SystemHistorical Roots Rights protected by the U.S Constitution: • Right to Due Process • Right to Counsel • Right Confront Witnesses • Right to a Speedy Trial • Right Against Self-Incrimination • Right Against Unreasonable Search & Seizure

  18. U.S. Criminal Justice SystemStructure of the Legal System

  19. U.S. Criminal Justice SystemCorrections

  20. U.S. Criminal Justice SystemHistory of Corrections Colonial Period: • Public Humiliation • Mutilation & Branding • Imprisonment - those awaiting trail - debtors - vagrants • County Houses of Correction established - Massachusetts Bay 1673 - Pennsylvania 1682

  21. U.S. Criminal Justice SystemHistory of Corrections Public Flogging circa 1776

  22. U.S. Criminal Justice SystemHistory of Corrections County Work House circa 1776

  23. U.S. Criminal Justice SystemHistory of Corrections Colonial Debtors Prison circa 1

  24. U.S. Criminal Justice SystemHistory of Corrections 18th & 19th Century: • Theocracy weakened • Less emphasis on public humiliation • Prisons became centerpiece of system • State Penitentiaries established in - Pennsylvania 1776 - Massachusetts 1805 Walnut Street Jail was the first facility used as a penitentiary circa 1776

  25. U.S. Criminal Justice SystemHistory of Corrections Newgate Prison circa 1776

  26. U.S. Criminal Justice SystemScope of Corrections Today Costs of Incarceration: • $25,000 per inmate per year • $69,000 per elderly inmate • life term = $1.5 million • new cell = $100,000

  27. U.S. Criminal Justice SystemScope of Corrections Today Prison population: • 2 million people incarcerated • 4.8 million on parole or probation • Over 6.5 million, or 3% of the population under supervision of criminal justice system • 11 million people are “booked” each year (admitted to a locked facility)

  28. U.S. Criminal Justice SystemStructure of Corrections

  29. U.S. Criminal Justice SystemPrison Population

  30. U.S. Criminal Justice SystemSize & Scope American adults touched by criminal justice system on any given day… • 1 in 142 incarcerated • 1 in 38 under correctional supervision • 1 in 28 admitted to jail in course of a year • Police maintain 50 million criminal records

  31. U.S. Criminal Justice SystemAlternatives to Incarceration • Probation • Intensive Probation • Day Reporting Centers • Halfway Houses • Boot Camps • Fines & Restitution • Community Service • Home Detention

  32. U.S. Criminal Justice SystemCrime Trends: Offenses

  33. U.S. Criminal Justice SystemCrime Trends: Two Reporting Structures

  34. U.S. Criminal Justice SystemCrime Trends: Number of Offenses in millions Total Crime is down 12 % from its peak in 1991

  35. U.S. Criminal Justice SystemCrime Trends: Number of Offenses in millions Assault 8% Burglary 19.4% Motor Vehicle Theft 11%

  36. U.S. Criminal Justice SystemCrime Trends: Number of Homicides per Year Homicides down 27% from peak of 24,700 murders in 1991

  37. U.S. Criminal Justice SystemCrime Rate versus Other Countries Except for murder, victimization rates in the U.S. are in line with other developed countries

  38. U.S. Criminal Justice SystemCrime Trends: Number of Offenses in millions Juvenile Crime is increasing at an alarming rate...

  39. U.S. Criminal Justice SystemCrime Trends: Number of Offenses in millions • Juvenile Crime is increasing at an alarming rate...

  40. U.S. Criminal Justice SystemJuvenile Arrests as % of Total, by Crime

  41. U.S. Criminal Justice SystemScope of System Today Costs of Crime: • $50 billion per year in lost revenue • $5 billion in health care costs • $65 billion spent on private security

  42. U.S. Criminal Justice SystemCrime Trends For the last several years we have seen a dramatic decrease in crime throughout the Country… Some Reasons Why: • community policing strategies - more cops on the street - problem solving approach • increase in prison population (3 strikes) • demographic shift (less juveniles)

  43. U.S. Criminal Justice SystemCommunity Policing An Alternative Policing Strategy... • Addresses underlying conditions that create crime • Requires officers to draw on wide range of resources • Pushes decision making down through the ranks • Emphasizes problem solving approach • Recognizes expertise of line officers • Greater public involvement

  44. U.S. Criminal Justice SystemCommunity Policing Case Study - Joliet, IL: After Year I... • Homicide down 25% • Part I crimes down 10% • All other crime down 5% “community involvement led directly to major drug and gang related arrests…”

  45. U.S. Criminal Justice SystemPrivatization Growing fear of crime and dissatisfaction with municipal enforcement prompted upsurge in private security… • Consumers and businesses spend $65 billion per year on private security • By the year 2000 there will be 3 private security officers for every 1 sworn police officer

  46. U.S. Criminal Justice SystemTechnology High-Tech Crime Fighting: • DNA Typing • AFIS • Crime Analysis • Surveillance • LoJack Systems • GPS Technology • Video-equipped Cars • Electronic Monitoring

  47. U.S. Criminal Justice SystemInternational Cooperation

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