Insanity Defense
Judges and Juries
Risk Assessment
Corrections
100
What is the Insanity Defense?

Lack of moral responsibility and culpability for a crime, therefore, they should not be held fully responsible for their actions

100

What are the three models of decision-making?

Mathematical model, story model, and newer story model

100

What is the decision to place someone in a psychiatric facility against their will?

Involuntary civil commitment; criteria: having a mental disorder affecting functioning, danger to self or others

100
What is determinate sentencing?

Judges hand down a specific sentence that falls within a prespecified range if a defendent is found guilty of a specific crime

200

What are two perspectives on the purpose of punishment?

The Deterrence (specific and general) and Retribution perspectives

200

What stage of deliberation might a hung jury occur? 

Reconciliation 
200

What are two forms of risk assessment?

Unstructured clinical judgement and actuarial prediction

200
Three ways to reduce prison population

Preventing crime, reducing sentence length, reducing recidivism, treating mental health and substance abuse, rehabilitation via CBT, probation more effective than prison time for drug, violent, and property offenders.

300

What is a "mens rea" defense?

"Guilty mind;" diminished capacity; defendant lacks the capacity to posesss the mental state required for the crime

300

What are three potential methods to improve juries?

Simplify instructions, provide preinstructions, allow just discussion during trial,

300

Name three risk factors that predict violent behavior

historical markers, dynamic markers, risk-management markers

300

Three considerations in a sentencing

Seriousness of crime, internal & external causes, controllability and stability, 

age, intellegence, education, family relationships, drug addition usually NOT apart of calculation at federal level

400

What are three tests/standards that shaped the definition of the insanity defense?

Cognitive Test: "irresistible impulse" and "volitional capacity;" Policeman at the elbow test     -Durham Standard: product of mental disease/defect    -American Law Institute (ALI) standard     -Burden of proof    -Expert Testimony


400

What are four influences on jury group dynamics?

Jury size, jury leaders, diversity, propensity of criminal behavior, race in racially charged trials, defendant-victim moral character, (NO straightforward effect of wealth, social status, gender, attractiveness)
400

What are three potential moral problems with the process of SPV laws?

Double Jeopardy, ex post facto, substantive due process, inaccurate clinical judgement, (overpredection of base-rates)

400

What is the difference between jail, prisons, parole, and probation?

jail- short term holding cells for before trial, short sentences, violent and nonviolent offenders

prison- hold convicted criminals for long periods of time

parole- releasing inmate from prison under supervision of a parole officer

probation- withholding a prison sentence and releasing criminal under supervision of probation officer

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