CRIME & JUSTICE NEWS YOUR DAILY NEWSFEED

Police Using YouTube, Facebook To Gather Crime Evidence

Police increasingly are using YouTube and other online social networks to root out criminals, says USA Today. In January, police in Chattanooga, Tn., discovered an online forum in which local residents were planning illegal drag races. Officers staked out an area where a drag race was expected and ticketed four racers caught in the act. Los Angeles police used images on YouTube and the photo website Flickr to identify people involved in riots after the June 2009 NBA Championship.

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ABA Seeks Overhaul Of Besieged U.S. Immigration Courts

Responding to pleas from immigration judges and lawyers who say U.S. immigration courts are faltering under a crushing caseload, the American Bar Association has called for Congress to scrap the current system and create a new, independent court for immigration cases, the New York Times reports. The ABA endorsed a recommendation for a separate immigration court system that would be similar to federal courts that decide tax cases.

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U.S. Begins Another Drive Against Afghan Opium Production

A U.S.-led offensive that’s expected to start soon in southern Afghanistan’s Helmand province will be a battle not only against the Taliban but also against an insurgent-backed narcotics trade that provides a livelihood for thousands of residents, McClatchy Newspapers report. Helmand produces more than half the world’s opium; Marjah, the town targeted, is its thriving drug capital. Residents say the Taliban promote and tax the opium business and ally with the drug lords who organize the distribution and export.

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Judges Split On Restitution In Child-Porn Distribution Cases


TN Ponders How To Fix Oversight Of Juvenile Center Sex Abuse


Key Issue In Jackson Dr. Case: Negligence In Giving Anesthetic


Drug Trafficking Expected To Rise In Haiti In Post-Earthquake Chaos


How Advocates Plot To Legalize Marijuana in California


Pittsburgh Plainclothes Officers Seize Guns, Cause Controversy


As MA Cuts Bonuses For Police, Chiefs And Officers Depart


Baltimore Explains Its Community Policing To Iraqi Official


Mexico Drug War Failing, Nation On The Verge Of “Narco-State”


To read all the top stories of the day, click here.

Inside Criminal Justice

GUGGENHEIM SPECIAL REPORT

Throw-Away Children: Juvenile Justice in Collapse

The system is failing thousands of our most vulnerable youth. Is it time for reform?

The U.S. spends $5 billion a year on juvenile courts, but it’s hard to argue that taxpayers are getting what they paid for.  Many criminologists already agree that the country’s criminal justice system is overdue for reform; but no area seems more in need of urgent attention than juvenile justice.

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Unilaterally Punitive

The following essay received an Achievement Award in the PEN 2009 Prison Writing Contest. Mr. Dole has allowed us to share his work.
The United States is unique in the world for its overzealous love affair with life without parole sentences (LWOP). It is one of the few western countries to have LWOP sentences and [...]

GUGGENHEIM SPECIAL REPORT

Supreme Politics: Jeffrey Toobin on the Supreme Court

CNN analyst and New Yorker staff writer Jeffrey Toobin delivered the keynote address at this past week’s 5th annual John Jay/Harry Frank Guggenheim Journalism Awards luncheon. He spoke afterwards with The Crime Report’s West Coast Bureau Chief, Joe Domanick about his prizewinning  2007 book, The Nine: Inside the Secret World of the Supreme Court, the [...]

NEW AND NOTABLE CUTTING EDGE INFORMATION

Legislation Proposed in NY to Ban “Carrying While Intoxicated”

New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg and State Senator Jeffrey D. Klein today announced the introduction of legislation that would criminalize carrying a gun in New York while under the influence of alcohol. The proposed law would make carrying a gun with a more than 0.08 blood alcohol content a class-A misdemeanor punishable by one year in jail and a $10,000 fine, but will not apply to guns inside the home. 20 other states currently have similar legislation.

“If you are too intoxicated to drive a car, you should not be carrying a gun,” said Mayor Bloomberg. “The law would apply the same standards and tests that are now used to prevent and punish driving while intoxicated.”

Click here to read the state’s pre-legislation report.

The Staggering Toll of Homicide in the Black Community

According to a new report by the Violence Policy Institute, blacks make up 13 percent of the population and 49 percent of all homicide victims. VPI analyzed data from the FBI’s 2007 Supplemental Homicide Report and found that the homicide rate for blacks in the U.S. is five times the national average and nearly seven times greater than for whites. 86 percent of black homicide victims were male and 82 percent were killed by guns.

Click here to read the full report.

The “Extravagance” of Imprisonment

A new report from the National Council on Crime and Delinquency shows how expensive imprisonment is compared to alternative sanctions that are just as effective for low-level offenders. Focusing on prison populations in Florida, California, Texas, and New York, the report compares costs between the imprisonment route and using a mixture of different correctional routes such as; electric monitoring, drug courts  and work release programs.

Read the report here.

Use the Crime Report to find out more information on Prisons.

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Blog Corner

Outsourcing Prisons? Hola Mexico!

Read more of Mark’s work at his blog D.A. Confidential

Gotta love California.  Not only do they produce our movies, our wackiest news stories, and some of our avocados, but they have Arnie.  And he hit the headlines Monday while talking about the state’s massive budget deficit.  His idea is that California could save a billion dollars if 20,000 illegal immigrants currently held in the state were housed across the border in Mexico.

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The REAL reason black cops test poorly

Philosophical Cop is a serving police officer in an urban city. Read his  blog here.

The US Justice Department recently accused New Jersey of using a discriminatory civil service test.  The test in question is multiple choice, covering laws and regulations and other dry, memorization – based trivia.  Candidates just fill in the bubbles.

Now, I could forcefully argue that this is not the best way to evaluate cops (I find them mind-numbing and useless), but to say it is racist is a cheap side step of the true issue at play here. More on that true issue later.

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Qualifying for the Death Penalty

Mark Pryor, Assistant District Attorney in Travis County, Texas writes the blog DA Confidential. He will be blogging for The Crime Report every other Wednesday. Read his blog here.

The New York Times recently wrote about the American Law Institute’s decision to, essentially, walk away from the death penalty.  This is significant in that the ALI is the body responsible for the synthesis and (usually theoretical) standardization of our system of laws.  Thus, the ALI developed the model penal code (the “MPC”), including language providing for the death penalty.  Some states adopted the language of the MPC, some didn’t, but now the ALI has decided that, in the words of the NYT, “the system could not reconcile the twin goals of individualized decisions about who should be executed and systemic fairness.”

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