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Juvenile justice chapter 2
Juvenile justice system
Juvenile justice quizlet
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Officers were dispatched to 452 West Ridge Road (Popeyes Chicken) in reference
to six individuals in the parking lot that look as if they are going to start
fighting.
I officer Beck arrived on scene and observed several people inside and outside
of a vehicle that was parked in the middle of a traffic lane of the parking lot.
As I got out of the vehicle, a Katharine Bizzotto rushed up to me saying she
observed Courtney Milby walking in the middle of Cline Avenue crying. Katharine
stated she picked Courtney up and drove her to the Popeyes parking lot. As she
was trying to help Courtney a vehicle pulled up next to her saying Courtney was
with them. Katharine repeated the same story to this officer five times. As this
officer was trying to interview another subject involved,
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Katharine kept interrupting to tell her story again. This officer asked Katharine to go back to her vehicle while we speak with other parties involved. Katharine complied at first but returned to tell this officer her story once more. This officer again advised Katharine to stand by her vehicle. This officer could smell an intoxicating drink emitting from Katharine's person. Katharine's eyes were blood shot with dilated pupils. She was unsteady a foot and keep swaying back and fourth as she spoke with this officer. I asked Katharine is she had any alcoholic drinks tonight. Katharine stated she had a few drinks at a friends house but was not at a bar. This officer then spoke with James Liles. James stated he was inside the vehicle with Courtney driving north on North Cline Avenue. James then stated when they approached the intersection of N Cline Ave and Ridge Road, Courtney started crying for no reason. James advised Courtney just yelled out, "I can't take this anymore" and then got out of the vehicle and started walking northbound on N Cline Ave. James stated they met back up with Courtney in the Popeyes parking lot to try and calm her down. James advised this officer Courtney suffers from a medical condition and sometimes acts out for no reason. While speaking with James I observed Katharine to walk over and try to get into the conversation Sgt. Sines was having with other people involved with the incident. Sgt. Sines told Katharine to go back to her car and stay there. Katharine complied briefly but was soon seen trying to intervene into the situation again. After being told to stay at her car three times, Ofc. Hemphill walked Katharine to the back of my vehicle. Ofc. Hemphill tried to administer a portable breath test to Katharine. Katharine refused to take the test. She was advised she is being arrested for public intoxication and disorderly conduct. As Ofc. Hemphill tried to place handcuffs on Katharine she started to pull away and struggled with him so not to be handcuffed. Once handcuffed Ofc.Hemphill and Sgt. Sines tried to place Katharine in the back of unit #62. Katharine fought with officers by trying to struggle away from the officers when they tried placing her in the back seat. After struggling with Katharine for several minutes officers were finally able to place Katharine in the back seat.
As
officers walked away to address other individuals involved, Katharine was
observed exiting the police vehicle. Sgt. Sines and myself quickly grabbed her.
Katharine became irate and tried pushing herself away from the officers. Sgt.
Sines and myself escorted Katharine to unit #70 (vehicle with a cage). As we
approached my vehicle Katharine placed her right foot in the door well not
allowing officers to place her in the back seat. Officers informed Katharine to
stop resisting. Katharine was advised several times to sit in the back seat of
the vehicle, Katharine refused. Once officers were able to get Katharine in the
back seat, she used her feet to kick the door open, not allowing officers to
close it. After several minutes of struggling with Katharine, officers were able
to secure her in the back of unit #70. Katharine was transported directly to
Lake County Jail. Once at Lake County Jail this officer turned Katharine over to
the S.O.R.T. team who escorted her out of my vehicle and into a cell.
Katharine is being charged with public intoxication, disorderly conduct,
resisting arrest, and possession of controlled
substance.
Kelle is forced to run back home to avoid these reporters. She calls Rayna straight away. Rayns tells Kelle that Buddy broke out of jail and that they think Kelle drove the getaway car. Her name was in all the papers. She had nothing to do with it. She hadn’t known that Buddy broke out until just then. She was in trouble.
After some time driving around, they eventually decided to drive past Timothy Smith’s house but were stopped by a roadblock that had been set up by police. When someone from the car asked an officer if a traffic accident was causing the delay the officer responded by saying there had been a “people accident,” Frida Smith said.
either get a ride or to have someone take her girls for her. She was forced however to leave the
forced to drive around and was raped so she should have known who it was.
to stop in the middle of the road. She claimed that she begged for the release
Nereim, Vivian. 2010. “243 cited, 84 towed during Southside parking blitz.” Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, October 11. Retrieved January 18, 2011 (http://www.postgazette.com/pg/10284/1094213-53.stm).
Intuitional theory it’s defined in different ways for instance, “Institutional theory addresses the central question of why all organizations in a field tend to look and act the same (DiMaggio & Powell, 1983).” This definition illustrates how organizations change their response to their institution based on the environment, and can achieve stability in their own. An organization when it comes to surviving tents to turns its focus outwardly in order, to acknowledge their influence constituencies and the value that they represent. Police agencies are ideals samples of an institutional organization, for the reason being that they have to display in their organizational performance and policy’s that they care about citizens concerns.
A 1996 Ford Mustang next to my car revs the engine and my mind loses interest in the squirrel and moves to the cars next to and opposite of me. There are two cars, a BMW and an old pickup truck; the name is not visible. You can see the eagerness of each car; the impatience in these cars is more than of child the day before their birthday. These cars remain perpendicular to the lanes but are moving freely to their destination and seem to be mocking the stationary cars at the red light. The BMW reacts by slowly creeping up as close to the edge of the intersection as possible.
into a house, the bully pushing to the front of a queue, the driver trying to
“In the front seat was Gregg, driving, Sarah, in the middle, and Robyn, on the passenger side. In the rear seat was Jeff, behind the driver, Haley, in the middle, and Rachel, on the passenger side. EVERYONE was wearing their SEAT BELTS, as is our family habit. EVERYONE walked away from this accident with only bruises. The only blood was Robyn had small nicks from glass in a couple of places on her right arm and right leg.
The Uniform Crime Report, which was developed in the 1930s, is commonly used by the Federal Bureau of Investigation as a record of crimes committed all across the United States. These crimes, which fall under two categories, Part I and Part II offenses, are reported by local police to the Federal Bureau of Investigation each year. Part I offenses are considered to be the more serious of crimes recognized by society. Such examples of this are homicide, forcible rape, robbery, arson, motor vehicle theft, etc. Part II offenses are those that are considered less serious, such as fraud, simple assault, drug abuse, gambling, stolen property, embezzlement, etc. Part I crimes can also be subdivided into what are known as violent crimes and property crimes. (Barkan, 2012). However, there are both some positive and negative aspects of this type of crime measurement. The following paper will explore the small amount of pros and numerous cons associated with the Uniform Crime Report.
I participated in a police ride-along with the Fairfax County Police Department on October 30th. I chose the Fair Oaks District Station for the ride since my home falls within that particular district’s boundaries. At 8 p.m., I was introduced to Officer Crutchman; the police officer I would be accompanying for the night. We headed out after a brief overview of some safety rules and expectations. Over the course of the shift I was able to observe many of the routine duties of a FCPO such as responding to calls, setting speed traps, performing traffic stops, assisting fellow officers, and patrolling neighborhoods and public parks. Officer Crutchman provided valuable insight into police work, beyond the procedural knowledge that Mason classes
placed her ravaged body under the wheel of their car, braking over her, as they drove off
The intellectual battle between police officers and suspects has been ongoing since laws were created. Who did it? Being one of the most popular questions around the globe. There is a multitude of different way to figure out who did it, but one of the most common, and often the only, piece of evidence and investigator can gather is a confession. To get these confessions investigators often use a harsh and aggressive method of interrogation known as the Reid technique. The Reid technique uses a multitude of morally questionable methods to gather a confession such as intimidation, telling the suspect that there is evidence placing them at the scene, and continually refusing to accept the denial of the suspect. These interrogations can also last
Crime is everywhere and it takes a special group or team of people to stop it, or make crime less tempting to do. The main job of police and security officers is to maintain justice, order and peace. In order to keep peace police officers must go through an academy that will prepare them for most situations that they will have to face later on in their career. Some situations require a more intense way to solve a problem such as using force or putting the perpetrator in fear so they will give in to what the police are asking. In some cases the peretrator(s) are too volatile or risky for the basic trained police officer, so the swat team must be used. The swat team unit or “special weapons and tactics” is a higher trained police force. It is a select group of officers that have been through more training and more experience than the average cop. Without the police or security civilians may not feel as safe as they do now when they are walking in the streets or going to a public event. For the people who want to be part of such a unit and are willing to put people before themselves will need to know what it takes to be a police officer.