QUESTIONS AND CORRECT
DETAILED ANSWERS (VERIFIED
ANSWERS) |ALREADY GRADED
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Criminal Justice - Answer- Structure, functions, and processes of those agencies that
deal with the management of crime
Potential Biases in Major Sources of Info - Answer- Mass Media
Legislators/Politicians
Practitioners
Academia
Mass Media: Hollywood - Answer- For Profit
Entertainment
Mass Media: News Outlets - Answer- Sensationalized information
For profit
Not a public service
Legislators/Politicians - Answer- Have learned that they need to be tough on crime to be
elected
Don't want to educate the public on crime, on the cost of crime
Cost of Crime - Answer- Jail = $135/day = $49,275/yr
Execution = $1-5 Million
Practitioners - Answer- Law enforcement, district attorney
Knowledgeable about the system
Use fear as a motivator
Know that is the public is scared they will vote to raise taxes which gives them more
money
Academia - Answer- Have a strong incentive to publish research
2 checks against: empirical evidence, peer review system of research
Importance of critical thinking - Answer- Question sources of information
, Criminal Justice (vs. Criminology) - Answer- Focus on the system
3 banches:
1. Law enforcement
2. Courts
3. Corrections
Each branches decisions affect the other 2 branches
Criminology - Answer- Study of criminals
Theory
Causes of crime
Criminal Justice "Nonsystem" - Answer- System implies cooperation, communication,
harmony
This does not exist in the criminal justice system
No head of the criminal justice system
Political rivalry - zero sum game for money
Branches of justice work competitively as individual entities rather than as a part of an
integrated whole
History of Criminal Justice - Answer- 1931 - Wickersham Commission
1950 - Kefauver Committee
1964 - Presidential election
1967 - Presidential Commission & Report
1968 - Omnibus Crime Control & Safe Streets Act; Law Enforcement Asist. Admin
(LEAA)
Wickersham Commission (1931) - Answer- Organized crime tied to prohibition
Distractions from crime: WW2, Great Depression
Kefauver Committee (1950) - Answer- Organized crime post WW2
Distractions from crime: Korean War, Civil Rights movement
Presidential election (1964) - Answer- First time organized crime became a national
issue
Presidential Commission & Report (1967) - Answer- President Lynden Johnson
Officially launched the war on crime
The Challenge of Crime in a Free Society = effectively fight crime while preserving
individual rights
Recommendations from commission: lower poverty (not a cause of crime but a factor),
reduce injustice in the system, lack of professional training, is not empirically based,
seek to prevent crime before it happens, police, courts, and corrections need more
money, all need to be responsible for changing the system