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IS A CRIME CRACKDOWN.doc
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Set Work

I. What would you have done?

If

I

‘d

had

hadn’t

had not

done that

been there

I

‘d

would

wouldn’t

would not

‘ve

have

done this.

been there.

II. Look at these statements. What do you think about them?

  1. An eye for an eye. A tooth for a tooth.

  2. Judge not – lest you be judged.

  3. Certain criminals – sex murderers, terrorists and so on, deserve to die.

  4. Justice is nothing, unless it is tempered with mercy.

  5. Everyone deserves a second chance.

  6. If the state kills someone, then it admits there are circumstances where killing is justified. Having admitted that, it is then in no position to condemn murder.

III. Look at this list of ‘crimes’. Try and rate each crime on a scale from 1-10. (1 is a minor misdemeanor, 10 is a very serious crime.) They are in no order.

  1. driving in excess of the speed limit

  2. common assault (e.g. a fight in a discotheque)

  3. drinking and driving

  4. malicious wounding (e.g. stabbing someone in a fight)

  5. murdering a policeman during a robbery

  6. murdering a child

  7. causing death by dangerous driving

  8. smoking marijuana

  9. selling drugs (such as heroin)

  10. stealing £1,000 from a bank, by fraud

  11. stealing £1,000 worth of goods from someone’s home

  12. rape

  13. grievous bodily harm (almost killing someone)

  14. shoplifting

  15. stealing £1,000 from a bank, by threatening someone with a gun

  16. possession of a gun without a licence.

IV. Compare your list with another student’s. Which of you would be the harsher judge? Which would be the kinder?

V. Penalties – England. In England there are no minimum sentences, except for murder, which carries a penalty of life imprisonment. There are maximum sentences for other crimes. Crimes are first heard by a magistrate who can either pass sentence, or refer the crime to a Crown Court with a judge and jury. Here are maximum sentences for some crimes:

Crime

Magistrates Court

Crown court

Burglary

Grievous bodily harm

Possession of firearm

Possession of cannabis

Common assault

‘Going equipped for stealing’

Murder

Fine

Prison

Fine

Prison

£1000

£1000

£1000

£500

£200

£1000

6 months

6 months

6 months

3 months

2 months

6 months

unlimited

unlimited

unlimited

unlimited

unlimited

14 years

5 years

5 years

5 years

3 years

life imprisonment

How do you think these compare with sentences in our country? Remember they are maximum, not average!

Thief challenges dose of shame as punishment

A mail thief who was sentenced to wear a large sign publicizing his crime will appeal in a case that could have broad implications for so-called shaming punishments.

Shawn Gementera’s appeal is due to be filed by Monday, his lawyer says. If the case is accepted by the San Francisco-based 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, it probably will mark the first time that a full federal appeals court has scrutinized sentences that require convicted criminals to make themselves look foolish in ways befitting the crime.

For instance, one California purse snatcher known for his stealth was ordered in 1976 to wear noisy tap shoes in public. A state rather than a federal court reviewed that case and upheld the punishment.

In Gementera’s case, a federal judge in March 2003 ordered him to stand for eight hours outside a San Francisco post office wearing a two-sided “sandwich board” bearing the words: “I stole mail. This is my punishment.”

His lawyer says judges are overstepping their bounds by adding public humiliation to a criminal sentence.

“If there’s an absence of similar (appeals) cases, it may be because other courts have not seen fit to impose such unlawful and unconstitutional sentences,” says Arthur Wachtel, Gementera’s lawyer.

Gementera, then 24, was charged in May 2001 with pilfering U.S. Treasury checks and other mail from boxes along San Francisco’s Fulton Street. He pleaded guilty to mail theft and was sentenced by federal Judge Vaughn Walker to two months in prison followed by supervised release, which included wearing the embarrassing sign in public for one day.

Walker told him: “You need to be reminded in a very graphic way of exactly what the crime you committed means to society. … (You need) a wake-up call.”

Before Gementera could serve his sentence, he was arrested again for mail theft, convicted and sentenced to two years in prison.

In court papers, Wachtel says that the sandwich board punishment violates federal sentencing law by seeking to “humiliate” rather than “rehabilitate” the mail thief.

He also argues that the sentence amounts to “cruel and unusual punishment,” which is barred by the U.S. Constitution.

Papers filed by the Justice Department, which is defending the sentence, argue that “shame” is the usual result of a criminal conviction and that it can be useful in rehabilitation.

Wearing a sandwich board is “less onerous” than the prison sentence, which Gementera did not appeal, the Justice Department says.

Shaming sentences have increased in popularity since the early 1990s. Most are imposed by local judges for less-serious crimes. They are sometimes called Scarlet Letter punishments, after Nathaniel Hawthorne’s 1850 novel in which an adulteress is forced to wear a scarlet “A” on her clothes.

  • In Maryland, Texas, Georgia and California, shoplifters have been required to stand outside stores with signs announcing their crimes.

  • In Escambia County, Fla., and in Ohio, drunken drivers are issued special license plates that identify them to fellow motorists.

  • In Houston and Corpus Christi, Texas, convicted sex offenders have been ordered to place signs on their front lawns that warn away children.

  • In Pennsylvania last year, the driver of a car that caused a fatal accident was forced to carry a picture of the victim.

Richard Willing

/USA Today, Aug.18, 2004/

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