CRIMINAL JUSTICE SYSTEM Lecture 2023
CRIMINAL JUSTICE SYSTEM Lecture 2023
TERMS TO PONDER:
▪ Criminal Justice System – the totality of all the concerted efforts and activities
of all agencies involved in the prevention, reduction, and control of crime.
▪ Social Defense – refers to all the systems and interplay of activities in the
community which addresses all the negative factors affecting the health, security,
and welfare of the public e.g.natural calamities, disaster, famine, drought,
criminality, health epidemic, etc.
▪ Criminology – is the entire body of knowledge regarding crime and criminals
and the efforts of the society to prevent and repress them.
▪ Criminological Enterprise – refers to all disciplines involved in the study of
crime and criminals. The practice of certain disciplines such as research and
statistics, natural science law, penology, sociology, psychology, medicine,
forensic science, etc, make up the entire criminological venture.
▪ Corrections – are the process or system of taking care of the custody,
treatment and rehabilitation of all convicted persons or prisoners punished by law
for the commission of an offense.
▪ Police – a body of civil authority, which is tasked to maintain peace and order,
enforce law, protect lives and properties and ensure the public safety.
▪ Prosecution – the CJS pillar mandated by law to bring to justice all criminal
cases for prosecution and prove the guilt of the accused beyond reasonable
doubt.
▪ Court – a court is a body or tribunal officially assembled under authority of the
law in which judicial power is vested or the administration of justice is delegated.
Crime Prevention – pertains to all government and non-government activities or
programs designed to thwart, deter, preempt, and stop the crime from
happening.
▪ Crime Deterrence – refers to the political will of the State to punish all criminals
in accordance with law, to serve a lesson for others to refrain from further
committing crime.
▪ Crime Control – refers to restraining or isolating criminals behind prison to
effectively controlling them from further endangering the society thus protecting
the public from harm and damage.
SCHOOL OF THOUGHTS AND CONCEPTS ON CJS
1. Positive Law Theory - Justice is a creature of law made by men, or what is
called positive law. Actions are unjust if they violate or are contradictory to the
law, and justice is served by adhering to the law.
2. Social Good Theory – Justice is more than what one finds in positive law, that
there are standards or concepts of what is in the best interests of society, and
that man-made laws can be judged against these standards or concepts and
found lacking. The principles of what is right and just may change as social
conditions and needs change and vary from society to society.
3. Natural Right Theory - holds that a natural law exists that governs the affairs of
men as much as it does the phenomena of the physical universe. This law may
be divine in origin, as Aquinas and Augustine insist, but divine or not it is
universal in application.
4. Substantive Justice - is that which is concerned with how best to allocate,
distribute, and protect the substantive values of society, these values include
power, wealth, status, order, peace, and whatever other “goods” a society
cherishes.
5. Procedural Justice - is that which is concerned with how the law is administered
– the mechanisms or processes are used applying the law and making decisions
in specific cases.
6. Law - is a method of social control that is formally enacted or promulgated by
the agency or agencies of government duly authorized in that society to make
law and that is subject to interpretation by and through the courts. It is society’s
primary instrument for making known what acts are crimes and what sanctions
may be applied to those who commit acts defined as crimes.
7. Common Law – body of principles, practices, usages and rules of action.
8. Statutory Law – a legislated law; or law made by legislatures.
9. Case Law – law made by justices in cases decided in the appellate courts
especially by the Supreme Court.
10. Civil Law – law which has something to do with such things as contracts, wills,
inheritances, marriage, property, divorce, adoption and the like, and with private
injuries which are called “torts”.
11. Criminal Law – is that branch or division of law which defines crimes, treats of
their nature and provides for their punishment.
12. Criminal Justice System – is the process in the community by which crimes are
investigated, and the persons suspected thereof are taken into custody,
prosecuted in court, and punished if found guilty, provision being made for their
correction and rehabilitation.
13. CJS as a System - the machinery which society uses in the prevention of crime.
The process is the totality of the activities of law enforcers, prosecutors, defense
lawyers, judges and correction personnel, as well as those efforts of the
mobilized community in crime prevention and control.
14. System - is one which consists of several parts that interacts with each other to
produce some results, serve some functions, or meet some objectives. Each part
of the system is expected to perform their responsibilities for the attainment of
their common goals and objectives.
15. CJS as a Process - refers to the orderly progression of events from the time a
person is arrested or taken out of the community,investigated, prosecuted,
sentenced, punished, rehabilitated, and eventually returned back to the
community.
STAGES IN THE CRIMINAL JUSTICE SYSTEM
1. Arrest Stage - criminal justice process begins with the commission of a
crime. But it is more accurate to say that it begins with the detection of crime.
Detection is taken to mean not only observed acts of crime but the results of
a crime.
Arrest is the taking of a person into custody in order that he may be bound to
answer for the commission of an offense.
Booking - suspect is taken and booked into the city or municipal police
station and will later be detained. This procedure involves such things as
fingerprinting, identification check, and reading of rights and charges.
Investigation - purpose of developing a prosecutable case against the
suspect. If the police feel that is warranted, they pass the case into the next
stage.
▪ Uniform Procedure