CCIB Intake received a call from a concerned parent named Maria (925) 202-9014 who disclosed that on Tuesday, June 7 the facility was having an air conditioner installed. During the installation the air conditioner the contracted propped opened a door. This allowed the unidentified male to enter the facility. The man was escorted out of the facility and the police were notified. According to the RP the unidentified man had been roaming through the neighborhood and appeared to be on drugs. The RP disclosed that the man was arrested earlier for his itinerant behaviors and later released. The parent believes the children were placed in an unsafe environment due to the door being opened, however the man had not access to the…
Jeffrey MacDonald was born on October 12, 1942. Jeffrey MacDonald was an intelligent and handsome man. He had a very beautiful family, including a wife and two young daughters. He attended Princeton University for 3 years in New Jersey while he was married to Colette MacDonald. While he was still in school at Princeton University his daughter Kim was born. After he was done at Princeton University he went to medical school in Chicago and later on had his other daughter Kristen. The family later on in life moved to North Carolina where Jeffrey would later on receive a job offer as a doctor in the Special Forces. Early in the year of 1970 Jeffery and his wife found out they were having another child.…
HORNELL, N.Y. (WENY) -- Police arrested two people for allegedly selling drugs on school property.…
Imagine being isolated because of a blizzard, and being a store owner you need to get more supplies, but can’t. This is what was going on with Justin, general store owner, until he found the town’s only hope the town bully, Billy. Billy would do the job, but he would also “tax” them by taking their items. Justin was getting real tired of Billy’s “tax”. When Billy was found dead, it was murder by Justin.…
The article is entitled “Teen charged with bullying boyfriend via text message to kill himself”. It is a Massachusetts criminal law case that is about a 17-year-old girl named Michelle Carter essentially pressuring her boyfriend into committing suicide .These pressuring text messages with her late 18- year-old boyfriend Conrad Roy III ultimately resulted in the teen being charged with involuntary manslaughter. The article displays both the prosecution and defence for this case with defense stating that Carter initially tried discouraged Carter from committing suicide and only supported his decision after thinking that his mind was made up. The text messages they used to support their claim included a text from Carter to Roy a month before…
On Wednesday, March 16, 2016 at 2144 hours, FHE Security Officers were dispatched to the Special Care Unit (SCU) E.D. #38 in reference to a (51D) Disorderly Baker Act Patient in E.D. who was being uncooperative and screaming at the medical staff. Security Officers Omar Alonso, Thomas Mejia and I, Shift Supervisor Steven Evans responded to the call. Upon arrival, we met with Registered Nurse Sadna Narvasa who stated that Baker Act Patient, Branden G. Melendez (DOB: 08/26/1991; FIN # 8531262), attempted to elope by ripping out his I.V. line with blood spurting all over his bed and on the floor. Nurse Sadna and Patient Tech Doran Edwards stopped him at the door and by the time Security arrived at 2145 hours, the patient was already back in his…
The four philosophical reasons for sentencing criminals are rehabilitation, incapacitation, deterance, and retribution. Rehabilitation is when a criminal is thought to be better off by being placed in a residential, or group home facility. Many times these crimes are drug releated and the courts feel that the criminal will be better off rehabilitating in a 12-step AA or NA drug program rather than being incarcerated for their crime. In any case that their case was not fueled by intenet rather than a need to feed a habit etc. Incapacitation is when the court feels that a criminal will be better off incarcerated and kept away from society. Many times these crimes are violent and incarceration is the best option to protevt the criminal and society. Deterance many times has to do with incarceration. For the criminal may feel incarceration has deterred them from recommitting the same act in fear that they may be incarcerated again and even face far more time. Also many times society watches as people are punshied for certain crimes and the judge may be making a example out of that certain case, in showing society that if you commit this crime than this is what can happen. Retribution can and often goes along with incarceration, though can be sentenced alone. Retribution is usually sentenced as a repayment for lost or damaged goods, or some type of community service time like 20 hours ordered to complete at an elderly housing home without pay. Basically either giving back to the victim, their family, or society, in an effort to pay back for their crime, and or repay the victim for pain and suffering.…
The amount of crime that is committed by juveniles in our country is astonishing. This crime is on the rise in many cities across our nation because we see news reports often concerning juveniles. The reasons behind this crime may be sociocultural or even biological. As a nation, we need to enforce ways to keep our youth from turning to a life filled with crime and ultimately, a life inside the correctional system. There are programs, but the final decisions lies within the juvenile himself.…
Punishment can be broke down into four fundamental objectives. These objectives are deterrence, retribution, rehabilitation, and incapacitation.…
My theory for the reasoning of punishment has two main goals which are to provide justice for the victims and a lesson to the convicted. When a judge sits in preparation to initiate sentencing they have to go through numerous thought processes because of the uniqueness of every case. Considerations such as what are they trying to accomplish with the punishment and who would benefit from such a sentence. General factors like the age of the convicted and the heinousness of the crime committed matters as well. When a criminal is sentence it is reasoned by retribution, deterrence, incapacitation, or rehabilitation.…
3. Beck, Allan, Darrell Gilliard, Lawrence Greenfeld, Caroline Harlow, Thomas Hester, Louis Jankowski, Tracy Schnell, James Stephan, and Danielle Morton. 1993. Survey of State Prison Inmates. Washington, D.C.: Bureau of Justice Statistics.…
Sentencing is very important and usually the last stage of the criminal process. The purpose of sentencing is to punish the criminals while at the same time stopping crime from continuing. The five philosophical reasons for sentencing are retribution, deterrence, incapacitation, rehabilitation and restoration. Retribution is the philosophy that those who commit criminal acts should be punished based on the severity of the crime and that no other factors need be considered. Deterrence is the strategy of preventing crime through the threat of punishment. It assumes that potential criminals will weigh the costs of punishments versus the benefits of the criminal act so then the punishments will more then likely be more severe. Incapacitation is a strategy for preventing crime by detaining wrongdoers in prison, separating them from the community and reducing criminal opportunities. Then there is rehabilitation, which is the philosophy that society is best served when wrongdoers are not simply punished, but provided the resources needed to eliminate criminality from their behavioral patterns. Restoration is a sentencing goal that seeks to address the damage by making the community and the victim “whole again”.…
Fines are one of the oldest forms of punishment, the use of fines as criminal sanctions suffers from built in inequities and a widespread failure to collect them (Schmalleger, 2011). Fines can deprive offenders of the proceeds of criminal activity, and also promote rehabilitation by enforcing economic responsibility (Schmalleger, 2011). People have to pay fines when they break minor laws, such as driving while intoxicated, reckless driving, disturbing the peace, public drunkenness, and vandalism (Schmalleger, 2011).…
1. What has been the primary factor in the growth in the number of individuals under correctional supervision over the past twenty years? The primary factor in the growth of individuals under correctional supervision in the past twenty years has been due to tougher laws, correctional supervision also has a broader scope of people under supervision and there are more offenders that are sentenced with drug and property offences. Correctional supervision also includes people out on bond, probation and parole.…
Everyone has rights. A man working in a factory, a mother taking care of her children, a girl attending college, a boy playing football, they all have rights, but what about criminals? Yes, everyone has rights. What happened when those rights are violated? Who does a criminal have to turn to? Or even who will believe them? Inmate on inmate victimization is not uncommon especially in physical abuse, but what about the sexual abuse? And what about when it is not just inmate on inmate victimization, what if it is guard on inmate victimization? This is not right, not only are most inmates stripped down to their basic rights; there are some that are even having those torn away from them as well. These are problems that have not been addressed until recently and still lacking solid solutions. Although much has been done to prevent abuse, especially sexual abuse, there is still not much to be done until after the fact.…