Repeat Offenders Essays

  • We MUST Keep Repeat Offenders in Jail

    573 Words  | 2 Pages

    We MUST Keep Repeat Offenders in Jail Why do killers, rapists, and child molesters go free? A large portion of early release prisoners commit serious crimes after being released. In fact, "in a three year follow-up of 108,850 state prisoners released in 1983 from institutions in 11 states, within three years sixty percent of violent crime offenders were re-arrested. More than half of those charged with violent crimes were discharged within two years."(from Truth In Sentencing by James Wooton)

  • Chemical Castration for Repeat Sex Offenders

    2271 Words  | 5 Pages

    Chemical Castration for Repeat Sex Offenders Child molestation and sexual assault is an ever growing problem in the United States today, but an even bigger problem is that these pedophiles are being released after only serving as little as one quarter of their sentence. In California alone (at the time the bill was first passed), there was an estimated 680 individuals on parole for molestation and other sexual assaults including sodomy by force with a victim under the age of thirteen as well

  • Repeat Offenders

    1543 Words  | 4 Pages

    said to have revolving doors and there seems to be no stopping the large number of repeat offenders who return to our prison systems through these doors. Many prisoners successfully return to their communities once released from incarceration, however, a large percentage find themselves unprepared to deal with the challenges and hardships stemming from the process of social reintegration and become repeat offenders. This fact is made evident by the pattern of inmates who serve their sentences, get

  • Why Criminals Repeat Offenders

    693 Words  | 2 Pages

    According to the Bureau of Justice Statistics (2014), 3 in 4 former prisoners in 30 states are arrested within 5 years of release. One of the main questions about this issue is what cause criminals to repeat crime even though they know what the consequence will be. This topic is not something new for sociologist and criminologist, but this topic can be tracked back to the early school of criminology, where their main focus was to understand why good people did not commit any crime as compared to

  • The Death Penalty is An Effective Weapon Against Crime

    1293 Words  | 3 Pages

    violence and that it should be banished from the justice system all together.  The thought of playing God also is another aspect of the situation.  Despite these allegations however, the facts still remain.  The death penalty deters crime, stops repeat offenders, and gives Americans a real sense that justice has been served, and should therefore remain legal and in practice. Despite recent ridiculing of capital punishment, the sentence has popular and political support.  A poll in a 1997 Time magazine

  • Juvenile Justice

    1319 Words  | 3 Pages

    olds accused of murder or rape automatically be tried as adults? Should six-teen year olds and seven-teen year olds tried in adult courts be forced to serve time in adult prisons, where they are more likely to be sexually assaulted and to become repeat offenders. How much discretion should a judge have in deciding the fate of a juvenile accused of a crime - serious, violent, or otherwise? The juvenile crime rate that was so alarming a few years ago has begun to fall - juvenile felony arrest rates in

  • The Use of Capital Punishment in America

    1429 Words  | 3 Pages

    electric chair, and the most popular lethal injection (“Ways” 1-4). The debate about the death penalty consists in both ethical and religious viewpoints. The death penalty should be legalized in all fifty states, to deter from crime, keep repeat offenders off the streets, and alleviate prison costs from the taxpayers. On the other hand, there have been some men and women that have been wrongfully accused and executed for murder. Since the 1900’s at least 416 people have been wrongfully executed

  • Capital Punishment Essay - Death Penalty is Neither Cruel Nor Unusual

    1150 Words  | 3 Pages

    Death Penalty is Neither Cruel Nor Unusual A man sits immobile in a steel chair with a metal cap resting on his bald head. A priest reads selections from the Bible telling him he will go to Heaven if he confesses his sins to God. The man just smiles as the security guard pulls the switch, and one thousand volts of electricity flows through the man's body. His entire frame shakes in convulsions as his head bobs up and down with the shock. In a couple of seconds the man's life is over. The priest

  • We Do NOT Need the Death Penalty

    810 Words  | 2 Pages

    Gandalf, the powerful wizard of The Lord of the Rings, sagely reminds us “Many that live deserve death. And some that die deserve life.” (Tolkien 92). There are arguments both for and against administration of capital punishment in our society. This paper will list a few arguments that oppose the death penalty. In this time when advanced technology assists in collecting and interpreting evidence, it is incredible that we still make mistakes in our legal administration and our decision-making. Also

  • The Use of Capital Punishment to Eliminate Repeat Offenders

    1261 Words  | 3 Pages

    The Use of Capital Punishment to Eliminate Repeat Offenders Capital punishment is the only way to eliminate repeat offenders, to deter potential murderers and is the ultimate retribution. “When I think of all the sweet, innocent people who suffer extreme pain and who die every day in this country, then the outpouring of sympathy for cold-blooded killers enrages me. Where is your sympathy for the good, the kind and the innocent? This fixation on murderers is a sickness, a putrefaction of the

  • Three Strikes: Harsher Sentencing of Repeat Felony Offender

    792 Words  | 2 Pages

    Between 1993 and 1995, twenty four states enacted three strikes sentencing policy which calls for much harsher sentencing of repeat felony offender. Most sentences for these repeat offender called for a minimum punishment of a life sentence with possibility of release until twenty five years have been served (1 Marvell, Moody 89). These laws where created to target and punish what lawmakers believed to be the small percentage of criminals that where committing the majority of serious crimes such

  • Literature Review

    515 Words  | 2 Pages

    conducted. 3.     Repeat offenders in the county jail who had been diagnosed with mental illnesses where the population studied. 4.     The study indicated that inmates who received ACT and TAU both showed improvement in all areas studied. They found however, that participants in the ACT group reported higher levels of success in reducing drug problems and gaining independent living skills. This would help me in my profession, as I may be able to work in a jail and help repeat offenders become more independent

  • The Code of Hammurabi

    748 Words  | 2 Pages

    morals that he does. He writes as if everyone will agree with each law written, and makes no provision for members of society to disagree with him. Hammurabi also assumes that the punishment he prescribes will be enough to deter crime and prevent repeat offenders. When prescribing the incentives given to doctors, Hammurabi made assumptions about how much money it would take to encourage doctors to practice medicine and shipbuilders to build ships. The Code of Hammurabi, carved into stone, leaves no questions

  • Death Penalty

    640 Words  | 2 Pages

    a drunk driver smashed into his parents van. His Dad, a physician, had to hold Julian while he died on the side of the road. The drunk driver was a three-timed convicted, repeat offender. He was convicted of second-degree murder and was ordered to serve eight years in jail. Doesn’t something seem wrong with this picture? Repeat crime convicts are running down the streets rapid: endangering our children, our loved ones, and even us. What can us, as citizens, do to stop these heinous crimes? The Death

  • Nonviolent Offenders

    1487 Words  | 3 Pages

    Nonviolent Offenders – Is Incarceration the Answer? “It’s really clear that the most effective way to turn a nonviolent person into a violent one is to send them to prison,” says Harvard University criminologist James Gilligan. The American prison system takes nonviolent offenders and makes them live side-by-side with hardened killers. The very nature of prison, no matter people view it, produces an environment that is inevitably harmful to its residents. America locks up five times more of its'

  • Investigating the Relationship Between Women and Crime

    1489 Words  | 3 Pages

    A consistent feature of the statistics, not only in England and Wales but across Europe and America, is that far fewer women are convicted of crime than men – a fact which has changed little over the years. Female offenders also show a different pattern of offending being less involved in violent offences and proportionately more involved in theft. In general most now accept that girls and women do commit fewer offences than boys. GENDER AND PATTERNS OF CRIME Writing in 1977 Carol Smart

  • Treatment is More Effective Than Jail for Drug Offenders

    2459 Words  | 5 Pages

    drug-addicted offenders by placing them in jails for a year or longer, only to have them come back out to society when their sentence is over. They are still drug-addicts and so they return to the street only to commit yet another crime. From here the cycle of crime, arrest, jail, and return to society continues, solving absolutely nothing. Therefore, placing drug-addicted offenders in jails fails to confront the major problem at hand which is that of the drug abuse. If drug-addicted offenders were placed

  • Enzyme Temperature Lab Report

    616 Words  | 2 Pages

    Investigation to Determine the Effect of Temperature on the Activity of the Enzyme Amylase I am trying to find out if changing temperatures affects the activity of enzymes. The Input variable I will test is temperature; the range I will use for this is 0-80°C. The out come variable to be measured is the speed of the reaction. Hypothesis I believe that at a higher temperature the enzyme will react quicker, but at a certain temperature the enzyme it will stop working

  • Daphnia Heart Rate Lab Report

    1236 Words  | 3 Pages

    settle for about 5 minutes, in order for the daphnia to adapt the temperature and the limited space. Locate the hear and count the heart beat for 15 seconds. Multiply by 4 to give the rate per minute. Repeat several times. Return the daphnia to the container and repeat using at least two other similar sized animals. Collect the class results. Record your results as a table. All counts should be made as quickly as possible as the daphnia may not be able to survive in

  • Similarities Between A Turn With The Sun And A Separate Peace

    1820 Words  | 4 Pages

    Essay Comparing A Turn with the Sun and A Separate Peace        Although many similarities exist between A Turn with the Sun and A Separate Peace, both written by John Knowles, the works are more dissimilar than alike.  A Separate Peace is a novel about the struggle of a senior class in the face of World War II, and it focuses on two best friends, Gene Forrester and Phineas.  A Turn with the Sun is about a young man who struggles to fit in as a freshman in the closed microcosm of a senior dominated