Compare felonies, misdemeanors, and violations. Provide an example of each

What will be an ideal response?


We divide felonies into capital felonies, punishable by death or life imprisonment, and ordinary felonies, punishable by one year or more in prison. So felonies include serial killers at one extreme and individuals who steal $500 at the other. The breadth of its scope makes the classification largely meaningless in any sociological sense. It serves mainly as an administrative device to determine who gets the death penalty, life imprisonment, or incarceration in a state prison.

Misdemeanors are minor offenses punishable either by fines or by up to one year in jail. Common misdemeanors include simple assaults and battery, prostitution, and disorderly conduct. Most jurisdictions divide misdemeanors into gross misdemeanors (30 days to one year in jail) and petty misdemeanors (a fine and/or up to 30 days in jail). Violations are punishable by a small fine, and they do not become part of your criminal history. (Remember that criminal history is one of the major legitimate criteria for decision making in criminal justice.) The most common violations are traffic offenses.

Criminal Justice

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Answer the following statements true (T) or false (F)

The Golden Mean rule may mean different things when applied to different people.

Criminal Justice

What is a civil commitment examination?

What will be an ideal response?

Criminal Justice

If the lawyer has accepted a criminal case but then finds out that the client is clearly guilty but wants to fight the charges, the lawyer ______.

a. is required to withdraw from the case b. may withdraw from the case if the judge is informed of this reason c. can continue and require that the prosecution prove the case beyond a reasonable doubt d. enter a plea of guilty on behalf of the client

Criminal Justice

The criterion of a suspect initiating three or more instances of violence in the preceding year is used to identify ____________________risk offender cases

Fill in the blank(s) with the appropriate word(s).

Criminal Justice