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Amunoz0512 Amunoz0512
wrote...
Posts: 567
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6 years ago
Cases in which courts make policy determinations usually involve government and the Fourteenth Amendment.
 
  Indicate whether the statement is true or false



What are the possible consequences of delay in the courts, and what are some possible solutions to this problem?
 
  What will be an ideal response?



Studies show that as supermax inmates face greater restrictions and social deprivations, their levels of social withdrawal
 
  a. decrease.
  b. increase.
  c. tend to lessen the effects of depression, hostility, severe anger, sleep disturbances, and anxiety.
  d. increase and tend to result in depression, hostility, severe anger, sleep disturbances, and anxiety.



Truth-in-sentencing laws or policies involve restriction or elimination of parole eligibility and good-time credits.
 
  Indicate whether the statement is true or false



Should plea bargaining and courtroom cameras be kept or barred from our legal system? Why or why not?
 
  What will be an ideal response?
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Replies
wrote...
6 years ago
TRUE

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 The consequences of delay can be severe. It can jeopardize the values and guarantees inherent in our justice system. Delay deprives defendants of their Sixth Amendment right to a speedy trial. Lengthy pretrial incarceration pressures can cause a defendant to plead guilty. The reverse is also true: Delay can strengthen a defendant's bargaining position; prosecutors are more apt to accept pleas to a lesser charge when dockets are crowded. Delays cause pretrial detainees to clog the jails, police officers to appear in court on numerous occasions, and attorneys to spend unproductive time appearing on the same case.
 The best-known legislation addressing the problem is the Speedy Trial Act of 1974, amended in 1979. It provides firm time limits: 30 days from the time of arrest to indictment, and 70 days from indictment to trial. Thus, federal prosecutors have a total of 100 days from the time of arrest until trial. This speedy trial law has proven effective over the years. A number of proposals have emerged to alleviate state and local courts' logjams, ranging from judicial jury selection and limits on criminal appeals to six-person juries.

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d

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TRUE

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 Some people within the court system believe that plea bargaining reduces the courthouse to something akin to a bazaar, where people barter over price. They see it as justice on the cheap. Others believe that plea bargaining makes the job of the judge, prosecutor, and defense attorney much easier. Primary opposition to plea bargaining involves ideological preferences. Regardless of which side of the issue one supports, however, it is ironic that both police and civil libertarians oppose plea bargaining, but for different reasons. Police and others in the crime control camp view plea bargaining as undesirable because defendants can avoid conviction for crimes they actually committed while pleading to and receiving a sentence for lesser offenses. The police see victims at their worst and would much prefer to see the defendant convicted for the crime charged . Civil libertarians and supporters of the due process model oppose plea bargaining because, when agreeing to plead to a crime(s), the accused forfeits a long list of due process protections afforded under the Bill of Rights. Another concern is that an innocent defendant might be forced to enter a plea of guilty. Defendants who gain the most from plea bargaining are the less serious, marginal offenders in cases lacking evidence. By contrast, defendants in serious cases who have prior criminal histories do not benefit. In short, plea bargaining appears to reflect a rational rather than a coercive process.
 Opponents of cameras in courtincluding due process advocatescomplain that televising trials distorts the process by encouraging participants to play to the cameras, and that by covering only sensational trials and presenting only dramatic moments of testimony, television does not portray the trial process accurately. They argue that in celebrity cases even the witnesses exaggerate things to give themselves a bigger role . Supporters of the practice, conversely, maintain that televising trials has educational value, providing the public with a firsthand view of how courts operate. Indeed, studies have found that viewers of a television trial of moderate interest became more knowledgeable about the judicial process. The Supreme Court unanimously held that electronic media and still-photographic coverage of public judicial proceedings does not violate a defendant's right to a fair trial; states are therefore free to set their own guidelines.
Amunoz0512 Author
wrote...
6 years ago
Exactly what I needed for my quiz Smiling Face with Open Mouth
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