Crime%20and%20Criminal%20Justice - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Crime%20and%20Criminal%20Justice

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Title: Crime%20and%20Criminal%20Justice


1
Chapter 9
  • Crime and Criminal Justice

2
Chapter Outline
  • Crime and Deviance
  • Types of Crime
  • Crime and Organization
  • Race, Class, Gender and Crime
  • The Criminal Justice System Police, Courts and
    the Law
  • Terrorism As International Crime A Global
    Perspective

3
Measuring Crime How Much Is There?
  • Data show that violent crime peaked in 1990, but
    decreased through the 1990s.
  • Since 2002, assault and robbery have continued to
    decrease, although murder and rape have
    increased.
  • Crime is greatly affected by how well the economy
    is doingparticularly the level of unemployment.

4
Personal and Property Crime
  • Personal crimes
  • violent or nonviolent crimes directed against
    people. (Murder, aggravated assault, forcible
    rape, and robbery).
  • Property crimes
  • theft without threat of bodily harm (burglary,
    larceny, auto theft, arson).

5
Personal and Property Crime
  • Victimless crimes
  • violate laws but are not listed in the FBIs
    serious crime index. (Gambling, illegal drug use,
    prostitution)
  • Hate crimes
  • assaults and other malicious acts motivated by
    bias, including those based on race, religion,
    sexual orientation, ethnic or national origin, or
    disability.

6
White-collar or Elite Crime
  • Criminal activities by persons of high social
    status who commit their crimes in the context of
    their occupation
  • Examples embezzlement, insider trading, tax
    evasion, accounting practices that make the
    company appear more wealthy.
  • In terms of dollars, white-collar crime is much
    more consequential for society than street crimes.

7
Organized Crime
  • Committed by organized groups, typically
    involving the provision of illegal goods and
    services.
  • Ethnic and family ties, are the basis for
    membership with groups dominating and replacing
    each other in different industries.
  • Industries are organized in the same kind of
    hierarchy as legitimate businesses.

8
State-Organized Crime
  • Committed by government officials in their jobs
    as representatives of the government .
  • Example
  • John M. Poindexter lied to Congress about the
    Iran-Contra scandal.
  • The scandal involved the U.S. sale of military
    weapons to Iran with the profits used to finance
    the Contras in Nicaragua.
  • The U.S. Congress had explicitly forbidden
    monetary aid to the Contras.

9
Organizational Crime and Deviance
  • Crime that occurs within the context of a formal
    organization and is sanctioned by the norms and
    operating principles of the organization.
  • Can occur within any kind of organizationcorporat
    e, educational, religious, and, governmental.

10
Examples of Organizational Crime and Deviance
  • Scandals involving sexual assault by Catholic
    priests, and cover-ups by assigning offending
    priests to different parishes.
  • In the 1980s, Beech Nut baby foods claimed their
    nutritionists prepare fresh-tasting fruits,
    cereals, and juices without artificial
    flavoring. They were found to be selling sugar
    water colored brown to resemble apple juice.
  • Deviant stock trading and accounting practices of
    the Enron Corporation of Houston, Texas led to
    its downfall early in 2002.

11
Race, Class and Crime
  • Arrest data shows a clear pattern of differential
    arrest along the lines of race, gender and class.
  • Poor are more likely to be arrested for crime.
  • African Americans are twice as likely to be
    arrested for crime than are Whites.

12
Gender and Crime
  • Womens participation in crime has been
    increasing.
  • Women continue to be disadvantaged in society
    are more likely to be in jobs that present
    opportunities for crimes.
  • Rape is one of the most underreported and highest
    growing crimes.

13
The Policing of Minorities
  • Minority communities are policed more heavily.
  • Police are more likely to use force against
    minority suspects.
  • Racial profiling is widely used by police.

14
Race and Sentencing
  • Minority citizens arrested for a crime
    experience
  • Higher bails
  • Less plea bargaining success
  • More guilty verdicts
  • Higher sentences
  • 42 percent of death row prisoners are black.

15
Law and Social Change
  • Brown v. Board of Education (1954) - legally
    sanctioned segregation.
  • Supreme Court decisions permitting abortion under
    certain conditions.

16
Terrorism
  • Motivated by political, ethnic and religious
    conflicts
  • Linked to other forms of deviance drug trade
  • Technology allows new risks computer viruses and
    bio terrorism
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