L12 - Criminal Offenders: Sentencing & Risk Assessment Flashcards

1
Q

Describe the history of sentencing

A
  • The mentality of centuries ago held that crime was due to sin, and the suffering was the culprit’s due
    o Judges were therefore expected to be really harsh and strict
  • Late 18th-early 19th centuries:
    o Enlightenment philosophers put an emphasis on deterrence through rational punishment
    o Severity of punishment became less important than quick, certain penalties
  • Early 20th century:
    o Focus on rehabilitation, based largely on Positivist philosophies
  • Recent thinking has emphasised the need to limit offenders’ potential for future harm by separating them from society
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2
Q

What are the 5 goals of modern sentencing practices?

A
  1. Retribution
  2. Incapacitation
  3. Deterrence
  4. Rehabilitation
  5. Restoration
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3
Q

Describe the RETRIBUTION goal of modern sentencing practice

How does it compare from then to now?

A

 The act of taking revenge upon the criminal perpetrator
 Predicated upon a felt need for vengeance
 Goal: satisfaction

Then:
• In early societies death and exile were commonly imposed for relatively minor offences
• “An eye for an eye, a tooth for a tooth” (quote from the Bible), often cited as justification for retribution was actually intended to reduce the severity of punishment for minor crimes

Now:
• “Just desserts” model of retribution: criminals deserve the punishments they receive at the hands of the law, and that punishment should be appropriate to the type and severity of the crime

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4
Q

Describe the INCAPACITATION goal of modern sentencing practice

Then vs. now

A

 The use of imprisonment or other means to reduce the likelihood that an offender will be capable of committing future offences
 This rationale seeks to protect innocent members of society from offenders who might do them harm if they were not prevented in some way
 Can be seen as a nicer and more protective version of jail
 Goal: protect innocent

Then:
• In ancient times mutilation and amputation of the extremities to prevent offenders from repeating crimes

Now:
•	Lock ‘em up approach
•	Goal: restraint, not punishment
•	Electronic confinement
•	Biomedical intervention (e.g. chemical castration)
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5
Q

Describe the DETERRENCE goal of modern sentencing practice

Specific vs. general deterrence

A

 A goal of criminal sentencing which seeks to prevent people from committing crimes similar to the one for which an offender is being sentenced
 Deterrence focuses on the future, whereas retribution focuses on the past
 Goal: crime prevention
 Specific deterrence seeks to prevent a particular offender from recidivism (repeat offences)
 General deterrence seeks to prevent others from committing crimes similar to the one for which a particular offender is being sentenced by making an example of the person sentenced

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6
Q

Describe the REHABILITATION goal of modern sentencing practice

Then vs. now

A

 The attempt to reform a criminal offender
 Rehabilitation seeks to bring about fundamental changes in offenders and their behaviour
 Goal: reduce future crime

History:
• 1930s: Therapists such as Freud entered popular culture. Psychology introduced the possibility of a structured approach to rehabilitation through therapeutic intervention
• 1970s: ‘Nothing works’ philosophy. Studies on recidivism showed that rehabilitation didn’t work

Now:
• More recent studies are more methodologically sound and also slightly more optimistic
• Focus now is on ‘what works?’
• Evidence has begun to suggest that effective treatment does exist, however effect sizes are small
• Cognitive Behavioural Therapy (CBT)
o ABC technique: Activating events lead to beliefs which lead to consequences – the client works to understand this relationship then reframes the situation to re-interpret the situation in a more realistic way

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7
Q

Describe the RESTORATION goal of modern sentencing practice

A

 Attempts to make victim ‘whole again’
 Sentencing options that seek to restore the victim have focused primarily on restitution payments that offenders are order to make

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8
Q

When are risk assessments conducted?

A
  • Risk assessments conducted at major decision points:
    o Pretrial
    o Sentencing
    o Release
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9
Q

Which types of prediction outcomes do we want to maximise?

Which do we wish to minimise?

A

Maximise = True Positive and True Negatives

Minimise = False Negatives and False Positives

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10
Q

What are 3 types of risk and dangerousness assessment?

A
  1. Unstructured clinical judgment
  2. Statistical or acturaial assessment
  3. Structured professional judgment
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11
Q

Describe the UNSTRUCTURED CLINICAL JUDGMENT type of risk assessment

Example of Dr. James Grigson

A

 Decisions characterised by professional discretion and lack of guidelines
 Subjective
 No specific risk factors
 No rules about how risk decisions should be made
 Many studies show clinical assessments of risk to be poor
 Clark (1999) reviewed studies and concluded that clinical risk assessment is weak at best, at work totally ineffective
 Even experienced clinicians fail to predict future violence in cases with clear indicators, such as previous recidivism

EXAMPLE – Dr. James Grigson
• Nicknamed “Dr Death” or “the hanging shrink”
• Forensic psychiatrist in Dallas
o Used unstructured clinical judgement
o Expelled from professional association for claims of 100% accuracy in predicting violence
o Sometimes made these decisions without even meeting the person
o One person who was on death row, Grigson said was 100% likely to reoffend. Was killed, and then later found to have been innocent

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12
Q

Describe the STATISTICAL OR ACTUARIAL ASSESSMENT type of risk assessment

A

 Decisions based on risk factors that are selected and combined based on empirical or statistical evidence
 Calculates risk by comparing characteristics of the individual to those of individuals for whom we know behaviour
 Evidence favours actuarial assessments over unstructured clinical judgment

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13
Q

Describe the STRUCTURED PROFESSIONAL JUDGMENT type of risk assessment

A

 Provision of guidelines to help structure clinical decision-making can improve performance
 Decisions guided by predetermined list of risk factors derived from research literature
 Judgement of risk level is based on professional judgement
 E.g. Hare’s psychopathy checklist revised

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14
Q

Define Risk factors, static risk factors and dynamic risk factors

A

Risk factor
o Measureable feature of an individual that predicts the behaviour of interest (e.g. violence, or psychopathology)

Static risk factors
o Historical
o Factors that cannot be changed

Dynamic risk factors
o Fluctuate over time
o Factors that can be changed
o Acute vs. stable dynamic risk factors

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15
Q

What are 4 important risk factors?

A
  1. Dispositional risk factors
  2. Historical risk factors
  3. Clinical risk factors
  4. Contextual risk factors (or situation risk factors)
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16
Q

What are dispositional risk factors?

A
Demographics
	Age
•	If you are arrested prior to the age of 14, you are more likely to reoffend
	Gender
•	Men tend to be more likely to reoffend

Personality characteristics
 Impulsivity
• Those we are impulsive are more likely to reoffend
 Psychopathy
• Psychopaths are 80% likely to reoffend, non-psychopaths are only 32% likely to reoffend
• And for violent crimes psychopaths are 35% likely to reoffend, non-psychopaths are only 5% likely

17
Q

What are historical risk factors?

A

o Past antisocial behaviour
o Age of onset of antisocial behaviour
o Childhood history of maltreatment
 Only includes physical abuse or neglect
 Doesn’t include sexual abuse
o Past supervision failure, escape, or institution maladjustment

18
Q

What are clinical risk factors?

A

o Substance use
o Mental disorder
 Diagnosis of schizophrenia or affective disorders
 “Threat/control override” symptoms: psychotic symptoms overriding a person’s self-control or threatening a person’s safety

19
Q

What are contextual risk factors?

A

o Lack of social support to help individual in his or her day to day life
o Easy access to weapons
o Easy access to victims

20
Q

What are protective factors?

How is this shown children/youth and in adults?

A
  • Factors that reduce or mitigate the likelihood of violence
  • Can help explain why some individuals with many risk factors do not become violent

Research done on children/youths:
o Prosocial involvement
o Strong social support
o Positive social orientation (school, work)
o Strong attachment (except with antisocial other)
o Intelligence

In adults:
o Employment stability (for high-risk)
o Strong family connections (for low-risk males)