Subject was received into the California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitations (CDCR) on February 16, 2000 for burglary in the 1st as a third striker. Subject arrived at CCI on July 7, 2015. Subject will be housed in Administrative Segregation Unit (ASU) placement in Facility A Housing Unit 6 cell B 106L, for self-expressed safety concerns. Subject explained that he was assigned as a porter in Facility A Housing Unit 3, and that Officer Lopez caught him with a kite/note that he was supposed to take to Inmate with the aka of “Black” in A section cell 106.…
Commerce law assessment task 3- Lachlan O’Malley Mandatory Sentencing in New South Wales 1. Mandatory Sentencing- a mandatory sentence is a court decision where legal discretion is limited by law. Most frequently, people convicted of certain crimes such as armed robbery or murder must be punished with at least a minimum number of years set in prison. 2.…
I wrote this paper to argue that incarceration does not affect crime rates like we would think. From researching the topic of incarceration as it relates to crime I have learned various things. I learned that America has the highest incarceration rate in the world, and Louisiana is at the forefront. I also learned that incarceration and crime are multifaceted. Some of the factors I went over were policing, the economy growing, community response, and demography.…
I am writing to endorse an amendment to the Youth Criminal Justice Act and Bill C-10. Youth that have committed violent crimes are dangerous and should be held accountable. The system in place is already lenient with minor offences and offers many chances at rehabilitation. Most importantly, violent crimes deserve adult sentencing. I would like to endorse the aspect of the Bill that states adult sentences can be imposed on young people over 14 years of age.…
The first suggestion focuses on rehabilitation, “Advocates of this approach argue that research has demonstrated that rehabilitation programs can reduce recidivism rates by 20 percent or more” (Clear 161). Twenty percent is a big number. With twenty percent of the released population not coming back to prison, the prison system would most likely begin to decline, slowly, every single year. McBride 3 This would dismantle a good portion of the punishment imperative being recidivism rates would decline dramatically.…
Punishment Philosophy Punishment is seen as one of the pillars of life and society. Yet the view of punishment is deeply intertwined with the different philosophies of punishment that have become norms throughout time. While many see punishment through polarized lenses of retribution and vengeance, it should be utilized as a positive tool towards rehabilitation which in turn turns the heart away from sin.…
Many Americans are aware that little is being done about the current issue involving the increasing prison population in their country. As of two years ago, The United States was home to less than five percent of the population in the world, yet home to approximately one fifth of all prisoners in the world. This has become a problem that has been extensively discussed in recent years. This issue has and will continue to negatively affect the image of the United States, its citizens, and its law enforcement agencies. It seems as though the United States has been overcome by an obsession with prison.…
There has been a widely talked about debate in the United States centering around the incarceration problem. The budget has been farmost the most talked issue including the quality of life for the inmates. Two theories have been specifically been discussed: rehabilitation and deterrence. Deterrence has been the leading theory for the twenty years, in the past decade some views have been shifted to rehabilitation. Evidence from the Department of Justice have backed these claims with shifting towards rehabilitation.…
I believe in the beginning the sentence goal he was describing was incapacitation. This can be seen when he keeps eight inmates in a single cell with one toilet. He tires to keep everyone together to prevent chaos from the inmates. However, he later finds out that it increase the chances of the inmates creating chaos. I think he wants our "corrections" system to focus on restoration and rehabilitation.…
Crimes are normally re-committed because when the offender is released they go back to the same…
Days without end Doing time in prison is difficult for any individual. It’s the hardest thing they face mentally. Separated from their families, friends, and loved ones, these individuals face problems such as violence, assault and the possibility of serving life without parole. Records of close to 160,000 in 2012 are serving life behind bars and 49,000 are serving life without the possibility of parole.…
As we know today the war on drugs have failed, not only are nonviolent drug offenders risking their lives in prison, their causing corrections facilitates to be overcrowded and underfunded. It would seem that there should be other options rather than just sending nonviolent drug offenders to prison. “There is no evidence that imprisonment reduces the likelihood of recidivism. Instead, we find compelling evidence that offenders who are sentenced to prison have higher rates of recidivism and recidivate more quickly than do offenders placed on probation.” (Spohn, C., & Holleran, D, 2002)…
Tertiary prevention focuses on the offender after crime has happen, with the main focus being on deterrence and rehabilitation to prevent from re-offending. Tertiary prevention reduces the recidivism rate and insures that appropriate steps are taken so that the victim is not re-victimized. In the United States the primary form of tertiary prevention is incapacitation. Tertiary prevention does not stop criminals from committing crimes after their release but protects the population from victimization of criminals. Specific deterrence is achieved by instilling fear into individuals that are being punished with the prevention of the individual from future violations of the law.…
In the last 40 years, incarceration in the United States has reached epidemic proportions. We have the highest incarceration rate in the world; we hold 5% of the world’s population, but house 25% of the world’s prisoners (Kelly 2015). The use of incarceration has gradually become a more acceptable and more used form of punishment. As a result, our prison population is overflowing with offenders ranging from petty theft criminals to violent offenders. As cited in the textbook, purposes of our justice system should be retribution, deterrence, incapacitation, and rehabilitation, (Clear, Reisig, & Cole 2016, p.72-73) but we focus far too much on punishment first and rehabilitation second, if ever.…
Breaking the cycle: Effective Punishment, Rehabilitation and Sentencing of Offenders. Retrieved from http://webarchive.nationalarchives.gov.uk/20120119200607/http:/www.justice.gov.uk/consultations/docs/breaking-the-cycle.pdf Petersilia, J. (2011, October). Beyond the prison bubble. Retrived from the National Institute of Justice website:…