The underreporting of sexual assault is well known to researchers, practitioners, and victims. When victims do report, their complaints are unlikely to end in arrest or prosecution. Existing research on police discretion suggests that the police decision to arrest for sexual assault offenses can be influenced by a variety of legal and extra-legal factors particularly challenges to victim credibility.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAs a result of the growing trend toward criminalisation of cases of domestic violence, there has been a great increase in the number of jurisdictions in the United States that have implemented 'pro-arrest' and 'mandatory arrest' laws. One of the objectives of this legislation is to encourage arrest when there is probable cause to believe that an assault has occurred. Along with the increase in the overall rate of arrest for intimate partner violence there has been a dramatic increase in the arrest of both the parties involved in an incident.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIt has been argued that the police do not respond to domestic calls involving same-sex couples in the same manner as they respond to calls involving heterosexual couples. A major problem facing researchers examining the police response to cases involving same-sex couples has been the lack of adequately sized samples. In this article, the authors utilize the 2000 National Incident Based Reporting System database, which contains 176,488 intimate partner assaults and intimidation incidents reported to 2,819 police departments in 19 states.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Health Care Poor Underserved
November 2005
Minority (over) representation in the criminal justice system remains a puzzle, both from a policy and an intervention perspective. Cross-sectional reviews of the policies and practices of the criminal justice system often find differential rates of involvement in the criminal justice system that are associated with the nature of the criminal charge/act or characteristics of the offender; however, longitudinal reviews of the race effect often show it to be confounded by procedural and extralegal variables. This review focuses on how the cumulative policies and practices of the criminal justice system contribute to churning, or the recycling of individuals through the system.
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