Plea Bargains: The Pros And Cons Of The Criminal Justice System

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“Our criminal justice system is fallible. We know it, even though we don 't like to admit it. It is fallible despite the best efforts of most within it to do justice. And this fallibility is, at the end of the day, the most compelling, persuasive, and winning argument against a death penalty.” -Eliot Spitzer

Plea bargains are exceptionally normal in the American legal system, representing about 90% of all criminal cases. However, many countries do not allow plea bargains because they are being considered as unethical and immoral. A plea bargain comes with many pros and cons. Many people tend to take the plea deal thinking that they would decrease their sentencing not knowing that plea bargains are quite complicated and doesn 't simply rely on one 's guilt or innocence. Plea bargains are regularly alluded to as truly simply setting up a "shared affirmation" of the case 's qualities and shortcomings, and don 't …show more content…

Paul Butler believes that the criminal justice system uses the system for the wrong reasons. The United States has one of highest incarceration rates in the world and the highest according to peer economies. You would never know that there 2.5 million people in prisons. Book TV interviewed Georgetown Law Center professor Paul Butler about his book, "Let 's Get Free: A Hip-Hop Theory of Justice." Butler talked about his life as a federal prosecutor and his decision to leave the job after being wrongfully arrested and charged with assault. Butler writes that “I became a prosecutor because he hates bullies I stop being a prosecutor because I hate bullies.” Growing up Butler heard that prosecutors had “power” the way to make a change is to make change from the inside. Butler states that rather than change the system the system change him. The way you move ahead in a prosecutor’s office is to lock up as many as you can as long as you

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