1 / 43

Welcome to Unit Two AP-362 Kaplan University

AP-362. Welcome to Unit Two AP-362 Kaplan University. Introduction to Astrophysics. AP-362. Wrong slide???. CJ101. Welcome to Unit #2 Crime Statistics and Classifications. CJ101. What’s Due This Week?. This week (Unit), you will be completing the following assignments:

Download Presentation

Welcome to Unit Two AP-362 Kaplan University

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. AP-362 Welcome to Unit Two AP-362 Kaplan University Introduction to Astrophysics

  2. AP-362 Wrong slide???

  3. CJ101 Welcome to Unit #2 Crime Statistics and Classifications

  4. CJ101 What’s Due This Week? This week (Unit), you will be completing the following assignments: • The Unit #2 Discussion Board • The Unit #2 Quiz • The Unit #2 Live Seminar or the 300-word Alternate Essay Assignment

  5. CJ101 Grading Tips for the Live Seminars • Arrive BEFORE the scheduled start time (5 minutes?) • Stay on topic • Avoid side conversations • Participate (post) regularly during the hour • 10 to 12 times minimum once the lecture starts • Avoid posts such as “I agree”, “Good point”, “Nice answer”, etc.

  6. CJ101 Grading Tips for the Live Seminars • Make good posts: “ I believe the 4th Amendment is the most important because it protects use against unreasonable searches”. • Don’t log out of the seminar early • While I may not be able to respond to each comment posted, I do review the seminar log when evaluating your level or participation for your grade.

  7. CJ101 Just in case! • Each Unit/Week begins on Wednesday and ends the following Tuesday @ 12:00 midnight, ET. • I have until the following Sunday to enter your grades into the Gradebook (I try to post them sooner) • You can NEVER make up a missed quiz!

  8. CJ101 Just in case! • Each Unit has a Discussion Board Question • Must post a 100 word answer to that question as early in the week as possible. • Must post at least two additional100-word quality reply to other students by Tuesday, midnight, ET • You must post on 3 different days each week • Spelling, punctuation, and grammar do count

  9. CJ101 Alternate Seminar Essays • For students that missed the Thursday evening Seminar, you can still make up the lost points by completing the 300-word alternate seminar essay assignment. The essay should be a summary of the unit topic, and you can review the archived file in the KHE Seminar window.

  10. CJ101 Select the correct date for the missed Seminar (listed by Year/Month/Day) by clicking on it with your mouse. Click on the “Load Class” button and the seminar will load and play for your review.

  11. CJ101 Have you joined the Photo Wall yet? E-mail me your photo so I can add your “Mug Shot” to the wall.

  12. CJ101 The Crime Picture

  13. CJ101 Terminology • Violent Crime • Crimes against people that are violent in nature • Property Crime • Crimes committed against property • Clearance Rates • Number of crimes reported versus number of crimes solved

  14. CJ101 Crime Statistics • Provide an overview of crime in this country • Decision makers use crime statistics to: • Evaluate existing programs • Plan new legislation • Design new programs • Determine needs

  15. CJ101 Sources of Crime Statistics • Uniform Crime Report (UCR) * Crimes reported to police • National Crime Victimization Survey (NCVS) * Crimes reported by victims

  16. CJ101 Uniform Crime Report • Since 1930, FBI has been compiling statistics on crimes known to police • Police departments (about 16,000) voluntarily submit data • FBI puts data into the Crime Index

  17. CJ101 What is the Crime Index? • Measures Part 1 offenses of the UCR • Gives crime rate number and comparisons for regions, dates, crimes per 100,000 population

  18. CJ101 These 8 crimes make up the Part I category of the Uniformed Crime Report Be sure to phrase your response in the form of a question!

  19. CJ101 What is?

  20. CJ101 Murder The unlawful killing of another human being. • Least likely of the part 1 crimes • Most likely to be cleared

  21. CJ101 Forcible Rape Sexual relations with another by force and/or without consent • Least reported of all crimes • Rape is broken down into a variety of categories (sexual battery, statutory rape, date rape)

  22. CJ101 Property v. Person

  23. CJ101 These are examples of crimes that make up the Part II category of the Uniformed Crime Report Be sure to phrase your response in the form of a question!

  24. CJ101 What is?

  25. CJ101 The New UCR • To enhance the quantity, quality and timeline of crime data collection the National Incident-Based Reporting System (NIBRS) was created • Looks at every single crime that is committed

  26. CJ101 The New UCR Advantages • Looks at all crimes • More accurate • Differentiates between attempt and commission of a crime • Collect weapon information • Restructures assault and rape

  27. CJ101 National Crime Victimization Survey (NCVS) • Began in 1972 to discover the “dark figure of crime” • Based on victims self reporting crimes • Gathered by the US Bureau of Justice Statistics (BJS) • Include 6 Part 1 crimes (not Murder or Arson)

  28. CJ101 UCR v. NCVSHow are they the same? • Both provide crime estimates • Both limit types of crimes • Both limit how they collect info

  29. CJ101 UCR v. NCVSHow are they different? • NCVS crimes are reported by victims. May not have been reported to police • NCVS looks at household crimes (total crimes per household, not person) • NCVS polls more people

  30. CJ101 Classifications of Crime • Define Felony crimes…..Not the type of crime, but what makes the crime a felony.

  31. CJ101 Classifications of Crime A felony crime is any crime that carries, upon conviction, a prison sentence of more than 1 year, and/or a fine that is equal to or exceeds $5,000.00 (Florida)

  32. CJ101 Classifications of Crime • Define misdemeanor crimes…..Not the type of crime, but what makes the crime a misdemeanor.

  33. CJ101 Classifications of Crime A misdemeanor crime is any crime that carries, upon conviction, a jail sentence of less then 1 year, and/or a fine that is equal to or less than $1,000.00 (Florida)

  34. CJ101 Crime Typology Classification of crimes along a particular dimension • Legal categories • Offender motivation • Victim/offender characteristics

  35. CJ101 Crimes against the elderly • Crimes committed against elderly people • Victim and offender usually strangers • Both property and violent crimes • Abuse/neglect by caregivers/family • Often victims of theft/fraud schemes

  36. CJ101 Hate Crimes • Crimes which there is evidence of prejudice bases on race, color, gender, sexual orientation, ethnicity, religion • Hate crimes are punished more severely

  37. CJ101 Corporate & White Collar Crimes • Corporate • Violation of statute by a corporate identity (those acting on behalf of a corporation) • “crime in the suits” • Usually non-violent • White Collar Crimes • Unlawful activity of members of highly organized group • Usually they supply illegal goods and services

  38. CJ101 Gun Crime • The 2nd Amendment provides the Constitutional right to bear arms • Approximately 1 million serious crimes committed a year involve the use of handguns • Public concern has lead to creation of new laws regarding firearms • The Brady Handgun Bill (1994)

  39. CJ101 Drug Crime • Drugs and Crime • Drug crimes not accounted for by UCR or NCVS • Over ½ of inmates admit to being under the influence of drugs/alcohol when they committed their offense • Using drugs/alcohol leads to other crimes

  40. CJ101 High Technology and Computer Crime • Computer Crime • Any crime perpetrated through the use of a computer • Software piracy • Unauthorized duplication of software and other data • Computer virus • A computer program designed to secretly invade other systems and alter the information/how they operate

  41. CJ101 Terrorism • No single definition • In general, defined as: • a violent act or an act dangerous to human life committed in violation of criminal laws to intimidate to coerce a government or civilian population

  42. CJ101 The Cost of Crime • Crime costs individuals about $17.6 billion dollars a year • That doesn’t include time lost from work, medical expenses • Commercial costs about $1.2 billion dollars a year • State, local and federal expenditures total over $147 billion (investigation-prosecution)

  43. CJ101 Questions????

More Related