Chapter 1. The Evolution of Law Enforcement

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Across
  1. 2. A mutual transfer of resources; a balance of benefits and deficits that flow from behavior based on decisions about the values and costs of alternative courses of action.
  2. 4. A person who takes the law into his or her own hands, usually in the absence of effective policing.
  3. 7. A document charging an individual with a specific crime. It is prepared by a prosecuting attorney and presented to a court at a preliminary hearing.
  4. 9. A system consisting of a separate judicial system for each state in addition to a national system. Each case is tried in a court of the same jurisdiction as that of the law or laws broken.
  5. 10. Offenses prohibited by law but not necessarily wrong in themselves.
  6. 14. Unknowingly associating individuals with stereotyped characteristics of a demographic group and potentially using these stereotyped assumptions in reacting to these people.
  7. 18. Policies developed through guidance from research studies that demonstrate which approaches are most useful and cost-effective for advancing desired goals.
  8. 19. A screening operation; a process by which criminal justice officials screen out some cases while advancing others to the next level of decision making.
  9. 21. A document that made law enforcement a public matter and separated offenses into felonies and misdemeanors.
  10. 23. Differential treatment of individuals or groups based on race, ethnicity, gender, sexual orientation, or economic status, instead of on their behavior or qualifications.
  11. 26. The physical taking of a person into custody on the grounds that there is reason to believe that he or she has committed a criminal offense. Police are limited to using only reasonable physical force in making an arrest. The purpose of the arrest is to hold the accused for a court proceeding.
  12. 27. A model of the criminal justice system that assumes freedom for individuals who are wrongly accused and risk unjust punishment is so important that every effort must be made to ensure that criminal justice decisions are based on reliable information; it emphasizes the adversarial process, the rights of defendants, and formal decision-making procedures.
  13. 28. Actions that violate laws defining which socially harmful behaviors will be subject to the government’s power to impose punishments.
  14. 29. A model of the criminal justice system that assumes freedom for the public to live without fear is so important that every effort must be made to repress crime; it emphasizes efficiency, speed, finality, and the capacity to apprehend, try, convict, and dispose of a high proportion of people facing criminal charges.
Down
  1. 1. A document returned by a grand jury as a “true bill” charging an individual with a specific crime on the basis of a determination of probable cause as presented by a prosecuting attorney.
  2. 3. Serious crimes usually carrying a penalty of death or of incarceration for more than one year.
  3. 5. An eye for an eye.
  4. 6. A court order authorizing police officers to take certain actions. For example, to arrest suspects or to search premises.
  5. 8. A way of thinking, a view of the world.
  6. 11. A penitentiary system, developed in Auburn, New York, in which each inmate was held in isolation during the night but worked and ate with others during the day under a rule of silence.
  7. 12. A difference between groups that may be explained either by legitimate factors or by discrimination.
  8. 13. Offenses that are wrong by their very nature.
  9. 15. A defendant’s plea of guilty to a criminal charge with the reasonable expectation of receiving some consideration from the state for doing so, usually a reduction of the charge. The defendant’s ultimate goal is a penalty lighter than the one formally warranted by the charged offense.
  10. 16. Offenses less serious than felonies and usually punishable by incarceration of no more than one year in jail, or by probation or intermediate sanctions.
  11. 17. A system of government in which power is divided between a central (national) government and regional (state) governments.
  12. 20. Responding to crimes after they have been committed.
  13. 22. A shout by a citizen who witnessed a crime, enlisting the aid of others in the area to chase and catch the offender; may be the origin of the general alarm and the citizen’s arrest.
  14. 24. The authority to make decisions without reference to specific rules or facts, using instead one’s own judgment; allows for individualization and informality in the administration of justice.
  15. 25. The process of determining whether the defendant is guilty.