CHAPTER 4 (The Punishment of Offenders Four basic purposes: 1. Retribution (deserved punishment) (Utilitarian based) 2. Deterrence 1) General deterrence = boundary maintenance general deterrence presumes that members of the general public will be deterred by observing the punishments of others and will conclude that the costs of crime outweigh the benefits. They must be leave that they will be caught prosecuted and given a specific punishment if they commit a particular crime. 2) Special deterrence = focus on the individual: special deterrence, also called specific or individual deterrence, targets for decisions and behavior of offenders who have already been convicted. this means that the amounts and kind of punishment are calculated to discourage the criminal from repeating the offense. 3. Incapacitation: incapacition means that we prevent potential offenders of the opportunity to commit crimes by isolating them. SELECTIVE INCAPACITY NATION means making the best use of expensive unlimited prison space by targeting for incarceration those offenders whose incapacity will do the most to reduce crime in society. For example three strikes laws, that attempts to keep repeat offenders off the streets, have as their goal removing habitual criminals from society. 4. Rehabilitation: rehabilitation means restoring offender is to a constructive place in society through some form of vocational or educational training were therapy. 5. NEW APPROACHES TO PUNISHMENT one of the most common new approaches to punishment has been the RESTORATION, which means the attempt to repair the damage done to the victim and the community by an offender's criminal act. this is often called RESTORATIVE JUSTICE. Creative approaches? FORMS OF THE CRIMINAL SANCTION: the continuum of sanctions concept associated with Joan Petersilia, suggests that there are many options between doing nothing and some sending somebody to prison. On one level these include a slap on the wrist, to probation, intensive supervision probation, restitution and filings, community service, substance abuse treatment, gay reporting, house arrest and electronic monitoring, halfway house, boot camp, prisons and jails. 1) INCARCERATION Explain and determined and determine its sentences. Explain PRESUMPTIVE SENTENCE: a presumptive sentence is a sentence for which the Legislature or somebody sets a minimum and maximum range of months in years. Judges are to fix the length of the sentence within that range, but can allow for special circumstances. MANDATORY SENTENCES are sentences stipulating that some minimum period of incarceration must be served by people convicted of specific crimes regardless of background or circumstances. Good time is the reduction of the sentence for good behavior. In Illinois there is mandatory good time, meritorious good time, and supplemental good time. Sentencing: --DETERMINATE/INDETERMINATE --TRUTH IN SENTENCING, refers to the policy in which inmates have to do 80 percent of their time for violent crimes. --Mandatory INTERMEDIATE SANCTIONS (from nothing to execution) (See Table 4.2) FACTORS IN PUNISHMENT 1) PSR (pre-sentencing report) 2) Politics/legislatures 3) Public opinion 4) Discretion (judges, prosecutors, etc) 5) Sentencing Guidelines CLEAR/COLE: Punishment of Offenders
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