Judicial Process Impact Policy

Judicial Process Impact Policy

Judicial Process Impact Policy

Turnitin® enabledThis assignment will be submitted to Turnitin®.

Instructions

This assignment will allow you to gain an understanding of how the judicial process impacts policy and procedure.

The three cases below resulted in judicial decisions that influenced policy and procedure. In this short paper, you will analyze a judicial case and write a policy and procedure based on the reforms needed. Choose one of the following scenarios, below. Read the decision and write an appropriate policy and procedure to comply with the Court. Use the Supreme Court site to research details about your chosen case.

ORDER ORIGINAL, PLAGIARISM-FREE ESSAY PAPERS HERE

Bailey v. United States (2013) (Police case): In this scenario, you are the chief of police. Write a policy and procedure about search and seizure.

Florence v. Burlington County Board of Chosen Freeholders (2012) (Corrections case): In this scenario, you are the warden of a prison. Write a policy and procedure about who is subject to various types of searches.

Alleyne v. United States (2013) (Court case): In this scenario, you are a court administrator. Write a policy and procedure about the rules of evidence.

As you write your short paper, consider the following:

Who are the stakeholders in your scenario? For example, the stakeholders in scenario one may be the citizens, offenders, police personnel, police union, and police administrators.

How can you balance the wishes of all stakeholders?

What training may be needed, and how will it be implemented?

What are the important aspects to be included in the policy and procedure?

  • attachment

    judicialprocessimpactspolicyandRubric.pdf

    CJ560ModuleEight Short Paper Guidelines and Rubric

    Overview: This assignment will allow you to gain an understanding of how the judicial process impacts policy and procedure.

    Prompt: The three cases below resulted in judicial decisions that influenced policy and procedure. In this short paper, you will analyze a judicial case and write a policy and procedure based on the reforms needed. Choose one of the following scenarios, below. Read the decision and write an appropriate policy and procedure to comply with the court. Use the Supreme Court site to research details about your chosen case.

     Bailey v. United States (2013) (Police case): In this scenario, you are the chief of police. Write a policy and procedure about search andseizure.  Florence v. Burlington County Board of Chosen Freeholders (2012) (Corrections case): In this scenario, you are the warden of a prison. Write a policy and

    procedure about who is subject to various types of searches.  Alleyne v. United States (2013) (Court case): In this scenario, you are a court administrator. Write a policy and procedure about the rules ofevidence.

    As you write your short paper, consider the following:

     Who are the stakeholders in your scenario? For example, the stakeholders in scenario one may be the citizens, offenders, police personnel, police union, and police administrators.

     How can you balance the wishes of all stakeholders?  What training may be needed, and how will it be implemented?  What are the important aspects to be included in the policy and procedure?

    Specifically, the following critical elements must be addressed:

    I. Summary: Provide a brief summary about the selected case. II. Stakeholders: Describe the stakeholders within the selected case. III. PolicyandProcedure: Create a policy and procedure that thoroughly complies with the court’s decision in the selectedcase. IV. Justification: Provide a justification for the policy and procedure that addresses the unique characteristics of the selectedcase.

     

     

    Rubric Guidelines for Submission: Your paper must be submitted as a 3- to 4-page Microsoft Word document with double spacing, 12-point Times New Roman font, one-inch margins, and at least four sources cited in APA format.

    Critical Elements Exemplary (100%) Proficient (90%) Needs Improvement (70%) NotEvident (0%) Value Summary Meets “Proficient” criteria and

    utilizes rich detail Provides a brief summary about the selected case

    Provides a brief summary about the selected case, but is inaccurate and/or missing details

    Does not provide a brief summary about the selected case

    20

    Stakeholders Meets “Proficient” criteria and utilizes rich detail

    Describes the stakeholders within the selected case

    Describes the stakeholders within the selected case, but is inaccurate and/or missing details

    Does not describe the stakeholders within the selected case

    20

    PolicyandProcedure Meets “Proficient” criteria and utilizes scholarly sources to support choices

    Creates a policy and procedure that thoroughly complies with the court’s decision in the selected case

    Creates a policy and procedure that thoroughly complies with the court’s decision in the selected case, but is inaccurate and/or missing details

    Does not create a policy and procedure that thoroughly complies with the court’s decision in the selected case

    25

    Justification Meets “Proficient” criteria and utilizes scholarly sources to support assertions

    Provides a justification for the policy and procedure that addresses the unique characteristics of the selected case

    Provides a justification for the policy and procedure that addresses the unique characteristics of the selected case, but is inaccurate and/or missing details

    Does not provide a justification for the policy and procedure that addresses the unique characteristics of the selected case

    25

    Articulationof Response

    Submission is free of errors related to citations, grammar, spelling, syntax, and organization and is presented in a professional and easy-to- read format

    Submission has no major errors related to citations, grammar, spelling, syntax, or organization

    Submission has major errors related to citations, grammar, spelling, syntax, or organization that negatively impact readability and articulation of main ideas

    Submission has critical errors related to citations, grammar, spelling, syntax, or organization that prevent understanding of ideas

    10

    Total 100%

  • attachment

    JudicialProcessImpactPolicy1.docx

    JUDICIAL PROCESS IMPACT POLICY: BAILEY V. UNITED STATES (2013) CASE 1

    JUDICIAL PROCESS IMPACT POLICY: BAILEY V. UNITED STATES (2013) CASE 2

    Judicial Process Impact Policy: Bailey v. United States (2013) Case

    Sandy Pennington

    Southern New Hampshire University

     

    Judicial Process Impact Policy: Bailey v. United States (2013) Case

    Overview of the Case

    Bailey v. United States, 568 U.S. 186 (2013), is one of the most controversial cases on search and seizure in the history of the United States of America. A 6–3 decision reversed the weapons conviction of Bailey, a Long Island man who suffered a conviction when police tracked his vehicle on leaving his apartment just before they had to search it. Justice Anthony Kennedy wrote the majority opinion, and while Antonin Scalia staked a concurrence, Stephen Breyer opposed.

    Meanwhile, the Second Circuit Court of Appeals maintained the sentence. It recognized and endorsed the argument of the government that the 1981 holding of the Court in Michigan v. Summers case that individuals in the immediate locality of searches can be apprehended while the execution of the searches continue was sufficiently comprehensive to cover the chase and arrest of the suspects who had left the scene in cars. In his opinion, Kennedy deferred holding that it did not, because one Bailey driving away, it meant that none of the law-enforcement interests the Michigan v. Summers holding identified were involved. Scalia, on the other hand, argued that what mattered the most was the fact that the vehicle was no longer in the direct vicinity of the locations warranted for search, and that harmonizing tests generated confusion. Breyer, on his part, held out that the police, in reality, had those interests despite Bailey’s exodus by his truck. As such, while there was a consensus over the case in the end of the day, both the agreement and the circumstances of its reaching were intensely debatable. To avoid such confusions in the future, there need to be a clear policy to govern search and seizure under such circumstances.

     

    Policy Derivation

    To achieve the above objective, there is necessity to understand and balance the interests of the main and all stakeholders in the case. In Bailey v. United States (2013) scenariothey included the defendant (Bailey) and the police officers who detained him and his colleague. A good policy should ensure the observance of the rights and freedoms of each party without the interference of those of the other. That is, the policy should conform to all other existing policies on the same issue to ensure there is no conflict of interest between the police officers and the defendants. It is only this way that we can solve the confusion and controversies involved in cases such as Bailey v. United States (2013), thereby easing the judicial process of the cases.

    Among the main components of controversy and confusion in this case was that there was no probable cause for the search and seizure of Bailey and that the police as well arrested them away from the immediate vicinity of the apartment warranted for search. Unlike in Michigan v. Summers, here, the intrusion of the detention is more prominent as the police detains the defendants outside their residence, in public, and transported back to the residence under search consequently spelling “inconvenience” and “indignity” to the defendants. Secondly, the search is conducted in the absence of the “occupant:” hence, severely undercutting the law enforcement interests. Since the suspect is away from the premises under search, he will not be aware of it, and so, there will be no threat of flight upon the unearthing of incriminating evidence. Similarly, an individual away from the under search premises poses no threat of harm to the police or the public. Given these factors, the following policy will work: “A search and seizure can only be conducted when there is a probable cause and while the suspect is in their premises warranted for search or their immediate vicinity. Only when they are aware of the search and are trying to flee, or possess weapons, which endanger the lives of the police officers and the public, can they be searched and seized outside and in a rangy vicinity of their premises.” The only thing needed to implement this policy is to educate the police officers of its elements so that they understand how it works and how to apply it.

     

    References

    Justia US Supreme Court, (2013).Bailey v. United States, 568 U.S. 186 (2013). Retrieved from https://supreme.justia.com/cases/federal/us/568/11-770/case.pdf