1 / 14

Chapter 3

Chapter 3 . Sentencing and the Presentence Investigation Report. Philosophy of Community Corrections.

trapper
Download Presentation

Chapter 3

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Chapter 3 Sentencing and the Presentence Investigation Report

  2. Philosophy of Community Corrections An offender can learn best how to live productively in a community by remaining in free society under supervision, as opposed to being transferred to a warehouse-like setting of a jail or prison

  3. Factors That Affect Granting a Community Sentence • Eligibility for community corrections • Conditions of probation fixed by statute • Availability and quality of intermediate sanctions and other community-based services • Factors such as the social stability of the offender, family ties, marital status, employment and drug abuse history

  4. Sentencing Guidelines • Goals include: • Reduction or elimination of sentencing disparity • Increased judicial accountability • Increased punishment for violent offenders • A basis for population projections and resource allocation

  5. Sentencing Guidelines, cont. • Presumptive sentencing guidelines require judges to use the guidelines and provide written reasons for any deviation • Voluntary sentencing guidelines are suggestions that judges may or may not accept • Punishment Units is a system tried by Oregon that converted sentences into predefined unit numbers

  6. Sentencing Commissions • Sentencing commissions exist in about half the states and the federal government and monitor the judicial use of the guidelines • The commissions are responsible for evaluating and revising the guidelines as appropriate

  7. Conditions of Community Corrections • Standard Conditions are imposed on all persons with community sentences regardless of the offense • Special Conditions are in addition to standard conditions and are tailored to fit the problems and needs of the offender

  8. Conditions of Community Corrections, cont. • Limitations of special conditions • Must be clear and specific • Must be reasonable • Must either protect society or rehabilitate the offender • Must be related to the offense of conviction

  9. Conditions of Community Corrections, cont. • Supervision conditions must be constitutional • The government must establish a “compelling state interest” • First Amendment rights of religion, speech, assembly, press, and the right to petition the government for redress of grievances • Searches and seizures • The privilege against self-incrimination

  10. The Presentence Investigation Report • The PSI is a document prepared by a probation officer to aid judges in the sentencing decision, and • Used by prosecutors, defense attorneys, parole boards and probation and parole officers • Describes the nature of the offense, offender characteristics criminal history, loss to the victim and sentencing recommendations

  11. Offender-Based PSI Reports: 1920s- 1980s, were: focused on rehabilitation utilized an indeterminate sentencing structure Offense-Based PSI Reports: 1980s-Present: focus on the crime committed utilize a determinate sentence structure Contents of the PSI Report

  12. Contents of the PSI Report • A Victim Impact Statement is required in all federal and most state PSIs • Includes physical injuries and emotional and psychological toll on victim and victim’s family • Federal PSIs must include the defendant’s ability to pay fines and restitution

  13. Preparing the PSI Report • The PSI is ideally prepared after adjudication of guilt but before sentencing • The PSI process consists of: • The initial interview • Investigation and verification • The evaluative summary • The sentence recommendation

  14. Legal Issues Concerning the PSI Report • Disclosure • Inaccuracies • Hearsay • The Exclusionary Rule • The Miranda Warning • The right to a lawyer

More Related