How far would one have to think back in history that the first reported criminal trial happened? Would it be similar or different than the ones held today? What would it be about? Would the punishment be similar to ones that are issued today? This article by William R. Riddell gives the audience an inside look to what happened in history on that fateful day.
This particular crime was recorded, but it wasn't until the first century of our era that was shown to our world. Since the record was in an ancient piece of document, Riddell is wanting to bring out the fact that he is not writing this article as a story but as breaking the story down as a lawyer for the audience. Any guesses as to what might be this first crime? It was all based from a lie. A simple white lie that couldn't possibly do any harm. The Bible was written in Hebrew thousands of years ago. The first crime was reported in the “first book” of the Bible, Genesis. After God made the heavens and Earth, he made man. The first man, Adam, was told by God to not eat the fruit on the tree in the middle of the Garden of Eden(which was Adam's home at the time). “From ever tree which in the park, eat thou food, but from the tree of knowing good and evil, eat ye not from that, but in whatever day ye eat from that ye will die by death.” (Riddell, 1916) Soon, God gave Adam a companion to live with him in the garden. Adam told Eve, the woman, to not eat of the fruit of the the tree in the middle of the garden. Riddell thinks that he paraphrased what exactly God told him when he told Eve the rule. Therefore, Eve only knew the law and not the consequences of what would happen if that law shall break. One day, the serpent coerced her into taking a piece of fruit from the forbid...
... middle of paper ...
...ges need to focus on the right kind of punishment to give to individuals, instead of “diagnosing the wrong treatment” for their “patients”. This metaphor is used again to emphasize that trial judges and physicians are similar because they misdiagnose a patient, and society has to deal with the reprecussions of what that patient(or criminal) would bring back into society. A lot of the time, prisoners are released due to lack of funding to keep them locked up for their entire sentence, because jails and prisons are becoming too overcrowded. The judges are punishing the wrong people harsher than the ones who actually deserve to be in there and letting the wrong people out too soon, just so they can “save money and lessen prison overcrowding.” According to this article, the criminal justice system need to reevaluate their priorities when it comes down to their patients.
Ever since human civilization came into existence, people have been putting rules in place to determine who is behaving according to social norms and moral values and who is not. Because the majority of Western societies have historically been democratic, it makes sense that the public have a say in the enforcement of said rules. It is for this reason that the trial became a popular means of deciding upon punishment for those perceived to have broken the law, while also allowing them an opportunity to testify against their charges. Socrates underwent this process in 399 BC on charges of impiety and corruption of the youth of Athens , as did Louis Riel in 1885 on charges of treason for leading a Métis rebellion . Although they lived during vastly
Robinson trial; (2) prejustice and its effects on the processes of the law and society; (3)
Randa, Laura E. “Society’s Final Solution: A History and Discussion of the Death Penalty.” (1997). Rpt.in History of the Death Penalty. Ed. Michael H. Reggio. University Press of America, Inc., 1997. 1-6 Print.
The aim of this paper is study the same primary sources that other historians have studied and see what conclusions if any can be drawn from them. The primary sources that will be used in this paper include but are not limited to online transcripts of the trial records, and other material written by the many historians of the years.
Garrett, Brandon. Convicting the Innocent: Where Criminal Prosecutions Go Wrong. Cambridge, MA: Harvard UP, 2011. 86. Print.
Linder, Douglas. “The Trial of Bruno Hauptmann.” Jurist Law. Jurist, 2002. Web. 6 Nov. 2013. Oxford, Edward. "The Other Trial Of The Century." American History 30.3 (1995):
“ ….Judgments, right or wrong. This concern with concepts such as finality, jurisdiction, and the balance of powers may sound technical, lawyerly, and highly abstract. But so is the criminal justice system….Law must provide simple answers: innocence or guilt, freedom or imprisonment, life or death.” (Baude, 21).
In closing, the criminal trial process has been able to reflect the morals and ethics of society to a great extent, despite the few limitations, which hinder its effectiveness. The moral and ethical standards have been effectively been reflected to a great extent in the areas of the adversary system, the system of appeals, legal aid and the jury
Seltzer, T., 2005, ‘Mental health courts – A misguided attempt to address the criminal justice system’s unfair treatment of people with mental illnesses’, Psychology, Public Policy and Law, vol. 11, no. 4, pp. 570-586.
Rafter, Nicole. "American Criminal Trial Films: An Overview of Their Development, 1930-2000." Journal of Law and Society 28.1 (2001): 9-24. JSTOR. Web. 17 Mar. 2014.
Centuries : Notorious Crimes, Criminals, and Criminal Trials in American History: H-R, 2016. EBSCOhost, proxygsu-afpl.galileo.usg.edu/login?url=http://search.ebscohost.com/login.aspx?direct=true&db=edsgvr&AN=edsgcl.6482900301&site=eds-live&scope=site.
Clinicians are instructed to do no harm and to provide some type of benefit towards people. Providing rehabilitation instead of punishment would benefit not only the wards but, members of the community as well. We could do this by demolishing the vast majority of our prison systems and replacing them with secure housing where they are “re-structured” as individuals. Restructuring them as individuals allows many opportunities for them such as, earning high school and college degrees, job opportunities, as well as, teaching them how to treat others and what is morally right and wrong. Rehabilitating them with the necessities of life on the inside can deter crime rates on the outside because, they will have survival skills. Prisoners should be taught with the same respect in which, we would want them to treat others with on the
Prior to taking this course, I generally believed that people were rightly in prison due to their actions. Now, I have become aware of the discrepancies and flaws within the Criminal Justice system. One of the biggest discrepancies aside from the imprisonment rate between black and white men, is mental illness. Something I wished we covered more in class. The conversation about mental illness is one that we are just recently beginning to have. For quite a while, mental illness was not something people talked about publicly. This conversation has a shorter history in American prisons. Throughout the semester I have read articles regarding the Criminal Justice system and mental illness in the United States. Below I will attempt to describe how the Criminal Justice system fails when they are encountered by people with mental illnesses.
Along with the irrational means of conviction came harsh punishments that ignored the degree to which they matched the crime. In the Justinian code of Roman law there is an excellent example of the amplification of sentencing that declares “anyone who composes a libellous song to the injury of another” or some other form of publically ridiculing another would be banished to “an island by the authority of a Decree of the Senate”. This declaration is representative of most sentences of ancient codes of laws and further into history, although many verdict...
Incarceration has been the center of the United States justice system ever since the opening of the nation’s first prison. In order to understand how the aspects of the first corrections institutions correlate to later correctional practices seen today. Whether it was temporary or permanent, there has always been some form of detainment for offenders, and they were always held against their will. Imprisonment of offenders in earlier times was done primarily to hold the accused until the authorities determined the offender’s actual punishment. Jails and prisons create a vicious and expensive cycle of crime that usually just end up overcrowding correctional facilities.