"Parole revocation" Essays and Research Papers

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    is why in the case Morrissey v Brewer‚ Morrissey was being viewed by the Supreme Court which gave him the parole revocation process that had two types of process‚ the first process was the arrest of the parolee and a preliminary hearing and the second process was the revocation.(Abadinsky‚Howard.198) The Supreme Court did make some recommendations dealing with the due process for the revocation hearing which included written notice for the parolees‚ disclosures to the parolee of evidence against the

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    Morrissey v. Brewer Morrissey v. Brewer accrued in 1972 and was marked the beginning of the United States supreme court involvement with parole revocation procedures. The problem with this certain case was whether the due process clauses of the Fourth Amendment required that a state give a person the chance to be heard before canceling their parole. This happened when Morrissey was charged with false drawing of checks in 1967 in Iowa. After he pled guilty‚ he was sentenced seven years in prison

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    Gagnon I Hearing Analysis

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    In just a year period‚ the United States Supreme Court issued rulings in Morrissey v. Brewer and Gagnon v. Scarpelli (O’Leary & Hanrahan‚ 1978). These cases set a precedence on how the process for depriving liberty for those on probation or parole (O’Leary & Hanrahan‚ 1978). It ultimately created the two-part hearing process‚ which is know as Gagnon I and Gagnon II hearings (O’Leary & Hanrahan‚ 1978). The Gagnon I hearing is what is commonly known as the preliminary hearing (O’Leary & Hanrahan

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    Do parole boards have to specify why they deny parole? 17. What percentage/number of offenders get prison vs community based sanctions? 18. Difference b/w parole and probation 19. Powers of probation officers 20. Advantages/ disadvantages of being a parole/ probation officer 21. What are examples of community based corrections? 22. Conditions of probation- know the types of

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    as the number of probationers successfully completing probation. When considering a probation officer contemplating a decision to seek revocation of a client’s probation‚ the theories of probation supervision might underlie such a decision because it is pervasive and gives particular warp and depth to the components. The officer’s decision on considering revocation will depend solely on the motivating factor or rather his belief into the client’s obedience towards the law and rules of which are set

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    arguments do they think have merit? What values underlie each position? How does medical parole or release fit into this discussion? Provide alternative solutions to the problem and discuss their overall impacts. Parole for the elderly CJHS/430 Parole for the elderly The idea of sympathetic release of ill and elderly prisoners is not new. In 1994‚ Professor Russell published consideration of medical parole and compassionate release programs of district and fifty states of Columbia. Only three

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    Mempa V. Rhay

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    burglary and sentenced to 10 years in prison but only would receive 1 year with the advice from the parole. This was achieved due the fact that the probation officer questioned by the probationer about the incident and the parolee admitted his involvement. The offender filed a petition of habeas corpus in the State Supreme Court claiming that he had been denied the right to counsel during the probation revocation hearing‚ the court denied the petition. In later years the offender reoffended and convicted

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    In the case US v. Calandra (1974)‚ Calandra was being questioned by the federal grand jury about loan sharking business. The reason the jury was asking these question were based on the evidence obtained at his company. Calandra didn’t want to answer any questions because he felt that the search of the company was an unlawful search and that it violated his fourth amendment exclusionary rule. The refusal to answer the grand jury‚ was what was being question about this case. Calandra felt like because

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    are not imprisoned‚ and more than 90 percent 0f all imprisoned offenders are eventually released. If laws are enacted that limit probation or increase the length of imprisonment by abolishing parole‚ there must be corresponding increases in prison space to accommodate the results. Limiting or abolishing parole release causes increases in the use of probation. “Truth-in-sentencing” laws permit only small grants of good time‚ while “three-strikes-and-you’re-out” statutes mean lifetime imprisonment on

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    Cj 474

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    2-18-10 Aggressive Enforcement -It reduces’ residents’ fear -Dealing with low-level offenders leads to serious offenders -Quality of life is improved by not having to deal with “street people” -Cooperation/assistance in community increase when serious crime erupts -Encourages citizens to uphold neighborhood standards for behavior in public spaces Against Aggressive Enforcement -Police resources should be focused on serious crime -The link between disorder‚ fear‚ and crime is uncertain

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