最大限度的指控:犯罪下降期间的过度定罪和检察实践

H. Schoenfeld, Rachel M. Durso, Katherine Albrecht
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引用次数: 1

摘要

自20世纪70年代以来,刑法得到了极大的扩展。尽管美国的大众和学术界关注过度定罪,但关于法院行为者,特别是检察官如何使用与过度定罪相关的法律工具的实证研究很少。在本章中,我们描述了三种形式的过度刑事化,从理论上讲,它们为检察官创造了新的工具:新行为的刑事化,强制性最低量刑法规,以及刑法的内部扩展。然后,我们使用佛罗里达州1995年至2015年重罪立案和处置的独特数据集来测试一系列假设,研究过度刑事化如何影响检察官实践,考虑到这段时间政治经济的三个变化:暴力和财产犯罪的下降,大衰退,以及刑事司法改革的呼声越来越高。我们发现检察官没有受到犯罪率下降的约束。然而,他们没有依靠新的刑事法规或强制性最低量刑法,而是通过提高传统暴力、财产和毒品犯罪的立案率来维持案件量。与此同时,数据显示,在2005年至2015年期间,在近20%的重罪案件中,非暴力的其他犯罪是最主要的指控。我们的研究结果还表明,尽管有改革的言论,但申请和定罪率的下降是由于经济衰退,而不是法律的变化。我们将讨论这些发现对刑事司法改革的影响。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Maximizing Charges: Overcriminalization and Prosecutorial Practices During the Crime Decline
Criminal law has dramatically expanded since the 1970s. Despite popular and academic attention to overcriminalization in the United States, empirical research on how court actors and, in particular, prosecutors, use the legal tools associated with overcriminalization is scarce. In this chapter, we describe three forms of overcriminalization that, in theory, have created new tools for prosecutors: the criminalization of new behaviors, mandatory minimum sentencing statutes, and the internal expansion of criminal laws. We then use a unique dataset of felony filings and dispositions in Florida from 1995 to 2015 to test a series of hypotheses examining how overcriminalization influences prosecutorial practices given three changes to the political economy during this time: the decline in violent and property crime, the Great Recession, and a growing call for criminal justice reform. We find that prosecutors have been unconstrained by declining crime rates. Yet, rather than rely on new criminal statutes or mandatory minimum sentence laws, they maintained their caseloads by increasing their filing rates for traditional violent, property and drug offenses. At the same time, the data demonstrate nonviolent other offenses are the top charge in almost 20% of the felony caseload between 2005 and 2015. Our findings also suggest that, despite reform rhetoric, filing and conviction rates decreased due to the Recession, not changes in the law. We discuss the implications of these findings for criminal justice reform.
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