Thursday, February 24, 2011

Due Process of the Law

An important and valued goal in our society is preserving and protecting the
individual liberties that are found in the first eight amendments to the United States Constitution. Some of these highly valued rights are: the right to a speedy and public trial by an impartial jury; the protection against unreasonable searches and seizures; the freedoms from being tried twice for the same crime; and
the protection against self-incrimination.
Is it possible to effectively control crime in our society while at the same time protect the individual rights of the people from infringement by the government? Which side do you take: "The most important concern is that society must be made safer and criminals must go to jail" or "It is better that a guilty person occasionally remains free from going to jail than for individual rights to be eroded."

Wednesday, February 16, 2011

Police officers and the law

Many times I am driving on 283 doing the speed limit. In the other lane a police officer will speed past me doing way over the speed limit. Very rarely do I ever see them in the right lane on a highway. I also seem them doing several other acts that would constitute a wrong against a citizen. Such as, parking in handicap spaces and fire hazards, not paying for their food and not obeying traffic laws. Do you believe that police officers should be allowed to do this? Are they above of the law? Take into this statement from a Long Island Police Department: in case the car stopped for a traffic violation happens to be that of a police officer, “you don’t summons another cop”. “It has been union policy to discourage Suffolk police officers from issuing tickets to fellow officers, regardless of where they work. ‘Police officers have discretion whenever they stop anyone, but they should particularly extend that courtesy in the case of other police officers and their families,’ Frayler said …. ‘It is a professional courtesy.’”

Friday, January 28, 2011

Blog_Juvenile Records

When an adult is found guilty of a crime, he is convicted and his conviction becomes part of his permanent record. When a juvenile is found guilty of committing a crime, he is adjudicated delinquent and his record is sealed (except under extraordinary circumstances). Once he becomes an adult, his juvenile delinquency record disappears. When an adult is sentenced to jail or prison, he has to serve his sentence until it is completed, no matter how old he becomes. When a juvenile is sentenced to a juvenile detention facility, he must be released by his 21st birthday, no matter what crime he has committed. Do you think this is fair? Why or Why not?