fbpx
Wikipedia

Public-order crime

In criminology, public-order crime is defined by Siegel (2004) as "crime which involves acts that interfere with the operations of society and the ability of people to function efficiently", i.e., it is behaviour that has been labelled criminal because it is contrary to shared norms, social values, and customs. Robertson (1989:123) maintains a crime is nothing more than "an act that contravenes a law". Generally speaking, deviancy is criminalized when it is too disruptive and has proved uncontrollable through informal sanctions.

Public order crime should be distinguished from political crime. In the former, although the identity of the "victim" may be indirect and sometimes diffuse, it is cumulatively the community that suffers, whereas in a political crime, the state perceives itself to be the victim and criminalizes the behaviour it considers threatening. Thus, public order crime includes consensual crime and victimless crime. It asserts the need to use the law to maintain order both in the legal and moral sense. Public order crime is now the preferred term by proponents as against the use of the word "victimless" based on the idea that there are secondary victims (family, friends, acquaintances, and society at large) that can be identified.

For example, in cases where a criminal act subverts or undermines the commercial effectiveness of normative business practices, the negative consequences extend beyond those at whom the specific immediate harm was intended. Similarly, in environmental law, there are offences that do not have a direct, immediate, and tangible victim, so crimes go largely unreported and unprosecuted because of the problem of lack of victim awareness. In short, there are no clear, unequivocal definitions of "consensus", "harm", "injury", "offender", and "victim". Such judgments are always informed by contestable, epistemological, moral, and political assumptions (de Haan, 1990: 154).

A vice squad is a police division whose focus is stopping public-order crimes like gambling, narcotics, prostitution, and illegal sales of alcohol.

England and Wales

Note that under English and Welsh law, a "public order offence" is a different category of crime related to disorderly conduct and other breaches of the peace. See the following:

Crimes without apparent victims

In public order crimes, there are many instances of criminality where a person is accused because he/she has made a personal choice to engage in an activity of which society disapproves, e.g., private recreational drug use. Thus, there is continuing political debate on criminalization versus decriminalization, focusing on whether it is appropriate to use punishment to enforce the various public policies that regulate the nominated behaviours. After all, society could deal with unpopular behaviour without invoking criminal or other legal processes.

Following the work of Schur (1965), the types of crime usually referred to include the sexually based offences of prostitution, paraphilia (i.e., sexual practices considered deviant), underage sex, and pornography; and the offences involving substance abuse which may or may not involve some element of public disorder or danger to the public as in driving while intoxicated. Since 1965, however, societal views have changed greatly, for example, prostitution, often considered a victimless crime, is classified by some countries as a form of exploitation of women—such views are held in Sweden, Norway, and Iceland, where it is illegal to pay for sex, but not to be a prostitute (the client commits a crime, but not the prostitute), see Prostitution in Sweden.

When deciding whether harm to innocent individuals should be prohibited, the moral and political beliefs held by those in power interact and inform the decisions to create or repeal crimes without apparent victims. These decisions change over time as moral standards change. For example, Margaret Sanger who founded the first birth control clinic in New York City was accused of distributing obscene material and violating public morals. Information about birth control is no longer considered obscene (see the U.S. case law examples). Within the context of a discussion (Feinberg: 1984) on whether governments should regulate public morals in the interest of the public good, Meier & Geis (1997) identify which social problems might be deemed appropriate for legal intervention and the extent to which the criminal law should enforce moral positions which may lack societal consensus.

This reflects a more fundamental problem of legal consistency. People have the right to engage in some self-destructive activities. For all its carcinogenic qualities, tobacco is not a prohibited substance. Similarly, the excessive consumption of alcohol can have severe physical consequences, but it is not a crime to consume it. This is matched in gambling. The state and its institutions often rely on lotteries, raffles, and other legal forms of gambling for operating funds, whether directly or indirectly through the taxation of profits from casinos and other licensed outlets. Qualitatively, there is nothing to distinguish the forms of gambling deemed illegal. A side effect of turning too many people into criminals is that the concept of crime becomes blurred and genuine criminality becomes less unacceptable. If the key distinction between real crime and moral regulation is not made clearly, as more consensual activities become crimes, ordinary citizens are criminalized for tax-evasion, illegal downloading, and other voluntary rule-breaking. A further perceptual problem emerges when laws remain in force but are obviously not enforced, i.e. the police reflect the consensus view that the activity should not be a crime. Alternatively, if the activities prohibited are consensual and committed in private, this offers incentives to the organizers to offer bribes in exchange for diverting enforcement resources or to overlooking discovered activity, thereby encouraging political and police corruption. Thus, any deterrent message that the state might wish to send is distorted or lost.

More generally, political parties find it easier to talk dismissively about crimes if they are classified as victimless because their abolition or amendment looks to have fewer economic and political costs, i.e., the use of the word "victimless" implies that there are no injuries caused by these crimes (Robertson 1989:125) and, if that is true, then there is no need to create or retain the criminal offences. This may reflect a limited form of reality that, in the so-called "victimless crimes", there are no immediate victims to make police reports and those who engage in the given behaviour regard the law as inappropriate, not themselves. This has two consequences:

  • Because these crimes often take place in private, comprehensive law enforcement (often including entrapment and the use of agent provocateurs) would consume an enormous amount of resources. It is therefore convenient for the law enforcement agencies to classify a crime as victimless because that is used as a justification for devoting fewer resources as against crimes where there are "real" victims to protect; and
  • These crimes usually involve something desirable where large profits can be made, e.g., drugs or sex.

The hidden crime factor

Because most of these crimes take place in private or with some degree of secrecy, it is difficult to establish the true extent of the crime. The "victims" are not going to report it and arrest statistics are unreliable indicators of prevalence, often varying in line with local political pressure to "do something" about a local problem rather than reflecting the true incidence of criminal activity. In addition to the issue of police resources and commitment, many aspects of these activities are controlled by organized crime and are therefore more likely to remain hidden. These factors are used to argue for decriminalization. Low or falling arrest statistics are used to assert that the incidence of the relevant crimes is low or now under control. Alternatively, keeping some of these "vices" as crimes simply keeps organized crime in business.

Decriminalization of public order crimes

Maguire and Radosh (1999: 146/7) accept that the public order crimes that cause the most controversy are directly related to the current perceptions of morality. To assert that the shades of behaviour represented by such "crimes" should be retained or decriminalized ignores the range of arguments that can be mustered on both sides, but the most fundamental question remains whether the government has the right to enforce laws prohibiting private behaviour.

Arguments in favor of decriminalization

Those who favor decriminalization or legalization contend that government should be concerned with matters affecting the common good, and not seek to regulate morality at an individual level. Indeed, the fact that the majority ignore many of the laws, say on drug-taking, in countries founded on democratic principles should encourage the governments elected by those majorities to repeal the laws. Failure to do so simply undermines respect for all laws, including those laws that should, and, indeed, must be followed. Indeed, when considering the range of activities prohibited, the practical policing of all these crimes would require the creation of a police state intruding into every aspect of the peoples' lives, no matter how private. It is unlikely that this application of power would be accepted even if history showed such high-profile enforcement to be effective. Prohibition did not prevent the consumption of alcohol, and the present War on Drugs is expensive and ineffective. Those who favor decriminalization also point to experience in those countries which permit activities such as recreational drug use. There is clear evidence of lower levels of substance abuse and disruptive behavior.

  1. The presence of public order crimes encourages a climate of general disrespect for the law. Many individuals choose to violate public order laws, because they are easily violable, and there is no victim to complain. This encourages disrespect for the law, including disrespect for laws involving crimes with victims.
  2. To criminalize behavior that harms no other or society violates individual freedom and the human/natural rights of the individual. The right of the individual to do what they will, so long as they harm no other, or society as a whole, is a generally accepted principle within free and democratic societies;[1] criminalization of acts that others feel are immoral, but are not clearly proven to be harmful, is generally violative of that principle; although exceptions may—and do—apply. (For example, the simple possession of child pornography or engaging in animal cruelty is criminal, in most civilized nations; however, there is no direct victim (except the animal, whose rights are not cognizable by law); the reason for its criminalization is the "bad tendency" of these acts; persons who derive pleasure from acts such as these often have depraved desires—it can be inferred that people who abuse animals, rarely stop there—and that people who possess child pornography will seek more than just mere depictions.) There are questions of the victimlessness of such supposed "exception" crimes as well as criticisms of the validity of assuming "bad tendencies" though. One example of criticism of the idea of criminalizing cruelty to animals out of a bad tendency in the people who do it instead of animal suffering is that research on the ability of animals to suffer by studies of animal brains is often used to determine what animals should be covered by laws against cruelty to animals, as shown in controversies about extending such laws to fish and invertebrates in which animal brain studies (not forensic psychiatry on humans) are the main cited arguments both for and against criminalization. It is also pointed out that computer games with "cruelty" to virtual mammals are legal in most Western countries while cruelty to real mammals is not, again showing that it is inner animal suffering and not outer body language that is relevant regardless of whether or not animals are formally classified as victims in courts. The notion of cruelty to animals as a predictor of violence to other humans is also criticized for lacking consistency with the evolutionary notion of empathy being gradually extended from close relatives to more distant relatives according to which cruelty to other humans should predict cruelty to animals but not the other way, explaining the appearance of cruelty to animals being a risk factor for violence to humans as a result of criminal investigation spending more resources investigating people known to abuse animals for human violence while people with no history of animal abuse or animal neglect more easily get away with violence to other humans due to being less investigated. In the case of child pornography depicting real children (not cartoons), victimlessness is questioned as circulation of pornographic images of people taken when they were too young to consent to it may injure their personal integrity. In the case of cartoons, it is pointed out that the same psychiatrists who argued for criminalization (which in most countries where it is present happened later than criminalization of pornography with real children suggesting that it was not for the same reasons) have used the same arguments to acquit or strongly reduce sentences for statutory rape in cases where they deemed the victim to "look older", which critics cite as an example of it being counterproductive to protecting children, arguing that a societal transition from visual age guessing to ID checking would reduce statutory rape. There are other arguments than depravity to ban pornographic cartoons depicting minors however, including curtailment of profit from such cartoons which explains why such laws in some European countries have exceptions for cases when the creator and the possessor are the same person in which no transaction is involved. It is also argued that passive marijuana smoking de facto constitutes victimization in some cases of drug use. More generally it is argued that civilized punishment should be based on deterrence, while basing punishment on assumptions of depravity leads to inhumane and uncivilized punishment as the assumption that some people are inherently bad leads to an appearance of persecution being "necessary". It is also argued that since higher priorities of criminal investigation of people considered depraved can find statistical correlations by higher percentages of criminals in profiled groups being caught compared to non-profiled groups no matter if there is a link or not as a self-fulfilling prophecy, preventing it from being self-correcting and making it possible for depravity arguments to lead to anyone being classified as depraved and, as a result, a general loss of freedom. It is therefore argued that depravity arguments should be categorically avoided, as any "exception" would be a mobile goal post.[2][3]
  3. The cost of enforcing public order crimes is too high to individual and societal freedom, and will inevitably result in coercion, force, brutality, usurpation of the democratic process, the development of a carceral state, and finally, tyranny. Due to public order crimes not having a victim, someone aside from a victim has to be used to report public order crimes, and someone other than the sovereign people itself has to be delegated to enforce the public order laws (for examples of direct popular enforcement of laws, see hue and cry, posse comitatus, and the last vestige of democratic law enforcement today, the jury). This results in the development of an apparatus of coercion, a class of "law enforcers" within society, but separate from society, in that they are tasked with enforcing laws upon the people, rather than the people enforcing their own law. This inevitably results in violations of individual freedom, as this class of "law enforcers" seeks more and more power, and turns to more and more coercive means.
  4. Public order crimes often pertain to behavior engaged in especially by discernible classes of individuals within society (racial minorities, women, youth, poor people), and result in the criminalization or stigmatization of those classes, as well as resentment from those classes against the laws, against the government, or against society.
  5. Public order crimes will end up being selectively prosecuted, since it is not possible to prosecute them all. This creates or reinforces class, gender, or race based criminalization or stigmatization. It also is a very powerful tool for political persecution and suppression of dissent (see Selective enforcement). It produces a situation in which otherwise upstanding citizens are committing "crimes" but in the absence of mens rea (guilty mind) and without even being aware of the fact that their behavior is or was illegal until it becomes convenient to the state to prosecute them for it.
  6. The natural variation in internal moral compass, which often turns out to be beneficial to society, or to stem from variations of understanding which will always be with us to some degree, leads to individuals committing "crimes" in the absence of mens rea. Individuals of all political stripes and background who do not have an encyclopedic knowledge of the law are vulnerable to accidentally committing crimes and suffering punishment when they were not aware that the behavior was even considered problematic. For instance individuals who violate building or zoning codes on their own property may be stuck with large expenses, life disruptions, or fines unexpectedly.
  7. Public enforcement of morality will inevitably lead to individuals with underdeveloped moral compasses of their own, instead resulting in external restraint substituting for internal restraint, and, thus, greater immorality, deviance, and societal decadence. Or, they may give up on their internal compass and turn to a more Machiavellian approach if they are punished for following it.

Arguments against decriminalization

Those who oppose decriminalization believe that the morality of individuals collectively affects the good of the society and, without enforcement, the society will be damaged and lead to decadence. They believe that law shapes morality and builds a national character. If laws are not enforced, that is not the fault of the law. If people knew that they were likely to be arrested, they would modify their behavior. That current laws criminalizing theft do not deter thieves is not an argument for decriminalizing theft (although theft is not in any way a victimless crime). Rather it is an argument in favor of devoting more resources into enforcement so that there is greater certainty of arrest and punishment. Thus, in public order crimes, it is simply a lack of priority in current enforcement strategies that encourages such widespread public disobedience which, in all likelihood, would increase if the behavior was to be decriminalized.

Specific examples

Meier and Geis (1997) contrast the view that prostitution and drug offenses are crimes without victims, with the view that the participants involved are victims without crimes. The use of the term "public order crime" grew out of the research to test the hypothesis underlying the term "victimless crime". So-called victimless crimes or crimes without victims were tested to determine whether a case could be argued that the behaviour produced harmful consequences for innocent people (p19) recognising that there was substantial disagreement both about the degree of culpability inherent in the behaviour and the proper role for the law. Consequently, the effectiveness and scope of the law has proved limited, both creating and solving problems. The following are examples of the research findings used to construct arguments that there are victims. It is accepted that there are other arguments that many consider equally convincing (as an example).

Prostitution

Drugs

The use of drugs for religious and recreational purposes is historically verified among a wide range of cultures. In more modern times, Inciardi (1992: 1–17) reports that the use of opium, cocaine, and, later, morphine were common ingredients of patent medicines, and "opium dens" were not uncommon in the larger urban areas. Extracts from the coca leaf were included in the original Coca-Cola and, in 1900, heroin was promoted as a cough medication and a treatment for lung diseases. But problems flowing from addiction led many to perceive the drug element of medications to be morally destructive. In the United States, the Supreme Court decisions of Webb et al. v U.S. 249 U.S. 96 (1919) and U.S. v Behrman 258 U.S. 280 (1922) drove the use of narcotics underground and consolidated their criminal status.

In the terms adopted by Schur (1965), drug dealing is now victimless because neither the buyer nor the seller is likely to report it. The consumption of some drugs can damage the health of users causing indirect societal cost due to increased hospitalizations and, in some cases, cause death through overdose because substitution or poor quality, although this potential for harm may be operationally indistinct from the potentials for harm associated with other noncriminal behaviors, such as driving a car while tired or over-consumption of healthy foods. Some argue that if drugs were available legally, they would be less harmful (see the drug policy of the Netherlands). When drugs are illegal, the price is higher, and maintaining the habit takes the money that would otherwise be spent on food, shelter, and clothing. The resultant neglect is a contributory factor to the addict's physical deterioration. In Australia, Walker (1991) finds a strong link between substance abuse and crime. In general, making drugs illegal results in an exponential increase in their price so that addicts must indulge in theft, robbery, and burglary to support their habits. Those people who experience those crimes are indirect victims of the drug sale. The need to fund addiction also drives some into distribution where they are more prone to violent attack and murder. These findings are matched elsewhere. Meier and Geis (1997) confirm that drug dealing is an area where victims are third parties who experience harm only indirectly through, say, losses from drug-related crime, and the costs of enforcing drug laws and of treating addiction, and the public health costs for treating illness and disease consequent on the addiction, e.g., HIV infection through using the same needles. In Australia, for example, the National Campaign against Drug Abuse (see Collins & Lapsley 1991) gives a figure of just over $1.2 billion for total costs of the abuse of illicit drugs in Australia in 1988, including treatment of drug-related illness, accidents resulting from drug use/misuse, loss of productivity due to absenteeism, premature death, property crime and damage, and excluding justice system costs. Conklin (1997: 100) reports the cost of illegal drug use in the U.S. in 1989 at $60 billion a year, a 20% increase over the estimate in 1985. The rise in cost to the state can only be met out of tax revenue, but the burden is not shared equally. Income actually spent on drugs is displaced from purchases that would otherwise have generated sales tax and income tax revenue. Similarly, the substantial profits made by the dealers is not taxed. Thus, the citizens who declare income for tax purposes must pay more to offset the cost of non-capture of drug revenue in their society.

As with prostitution, crime related to drug dealing also affects the amenity of a neighbourhood, destroying property values and causing the flight of the middle class to the "safer" suburbs. If the police do intervene, they may alienate law-abiding community members who are stopped and questioned, and only displace the drug dealing indoors, thus making it more resistant to police interventions. Police may also use their power to extract rents from the drug selling community. Further, Sampson (2002) comments that because intensive police enforcement is by its very nature temporary, the impact is often only short-term and dependent on the resiliency of the market and the buyers which has been shown to be strong. Some officers have argued that intensive enforcement shows the community that the police care about the problem; however, some of the unintended effects may, in fact, have the opposite result. For a more general exposition, see arguments for and against drug prohibition.

See also

Notes

  1. ^ John Stuart Mill, On Liberty, for a discussion of the Harm Principle
  2. ^ "Rational Choice and Situational Crime Prevention: Theoretical Foundations" Graeme Newman, Ronald V. Clarke 2016
  3. ^ "Criminal Justice" Anthea Hucklesby, Azrini Wahidin 2013

References

  • Collins, D.J. & Lapsley, H.M. (1991). Estimating the Economic Costs of Drug Abuse in Australia Canberra: Dept. Of Comm. Health and Services.
  • Conklin, John E. (1997). Criminology. 6th edition. Allyn & Bacon. ISBN 0-205-26478-6
  • de Haan, Willem. (1990). The Politics of Redress: Crime, Punishment and Penal Abolition. Boston: Unwin Hyman. ISBN 0-04-445442-2
  • Ericsson, Lars O. (1980). "Charges Against Prostitution; An Attempt at a Philosophical Assessment". Ethics 90:335-66.
  • Feinberg, Joel (1984). Harm to Self: The Moral Limits of the Criminal Law. New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-505923-9
  • Garoupa, Nuno & Klerman, Daniel. (2002). "Optimal Law Enforcement with a Rent-Seeking Government". American Law and Economics Review Vol. 4, No. 1. pp116–140.
  • Inciardi, James A. (1992). The War on Drugs II: The Continuing Epic of Heroin, Cocaine, Crack, Crime AIDS, and Public Policy. Mountain View, CA: Mayfield.
  • Maguire, Brenan & Radosh, Polly F. (1999). Introduction to Criminology. Belmont, CA: West Wadsworth. ISBN 0-534-53784-7
  • Meier, Robert F. & Geis, Gilbert. (1997). Victimless Crime? Prostitution, Drugs, Homosexuality, Abortion. Los Angeles: Roxbury. ISBN 0-935732-46-2
  • Polinsky, A. Mitchell. (1980). "Private versus Public Enforcement of Fines." The Journal of Legal Studies, Vol. IX, No. 1, (January), pp105–127.
  • Polinsky, A. Mitchell & Shavell, Steven. (1997). "On the Disutility and Discounting of Imprisonment and the Theory of Deterrence," NBER Working Papers 6259, National Bureau of Economic Research, Inc. [1]
  • Robertson, Ian. (1989) Society: A Brief Introduction. New York: Worth Publishing. ISBN 0-87901-548-9
  • Sampson, Rana. (2002). Drug Dealing in Privately Owned Apartment Complexes Problem-Oriented Guides for Police Series No. 4
  • Schur, Edwin M. (1965) Crimes Without Victims: Deviant Behavior and Public Policy: Abortion, Homosexuality, Drug Addiction. Prentice Hall. ISBN 0-13-192930-5
  • Siegel, Larry J. (2006). Criminology: Theories, Patterns, & Typologies, 9th edition. Belmont, CA: Wadsworth Publishing. ISBN 0-495-00572-X
  • Walker, John. (1991). Crime in Australia. Canberra: Australian Institute of Criminology.

External links

  • Patterns and Trends in Public Order Crime

public, order, crime, public, order, redirects, here, confused, with, ordre, public, this, article, multiple, issues, please, help, improve, discuss, these, issues, talk, page, learn, when, remove, these, template, messages, this, article, needs, additional, c. Public order redirects here Not to be confused with Ordre public This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Public order crime news newspapers books scholar JSTOR May 2010 Learn how and when to remove this template message This article possibly contains original research Please improve it by verifying the claims made and adding inline citations Statements consisting only of original research should be removed May 2010 Learn how and when to remove this template message This article includes a list of general references but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations Please help to improve this article by introducing more precise citations November 2013 Learn how and when to remove this template message Learn how and when to remove this template message In criminology public order crime is defined by Siegel 2004 as crime which involves acts that interfere with the operations of society and the ability of people to function efficiently i e it is behaviour that has been labelled criminal because it is contrary to shared norms social values and customs Robertson 1989 123 maintains a crime is nothing more than an act that contravenes a law Generally speaking deviancy is criminalized when it is too disruptive and has proved uncontrollable through informal sanctions Public order crime should be distinguished from political crime In the former although the identity of the victim may be indirect and sometimes diffuse it is cumulatively the community that suffers whereas in a political crime the state perceives itself to be the victim and criminalizes the behaviour it considers threatening Thus public order crime includes consensual crime and victimless crime It asserts the need to use the law to maintain order both in the legal and moral sense Public order crime is now the preferred term by proponents as against the use of the word victimless based on the idea that there are secondary victims family friends acquaintances and society at large that can be identified For example in cases where a criminal act subverts or undermines the commercial effectiveness of normative business practices the negative consequences extend beyond those at whom the specific immediate harm was intended Similarly in environmental law there are offences that do not have a direct immediate and tangible victim so crimes go largely unreported and unprosecuted because of the problem of lack of victim awareness In short there are no clear unequivocal definitions of consensus harm injury offender and victim Such judgments are always informed by contestable epistemological moral and political assumptions de Haan 1990 154 A vice squad is a police division whose focus is stopping public order crimes like gambling narcotics prostitution and illegal sales of alcohol Contents 1 England and Wales 2 Crimes without apparent victims 3 The hidden crime factor 4 Decriminalization of public order crimes 4 1 Arguments in favor of decriminalization 4 2 Arguments against decriminalization 5 Specific examples 5 1 Prostitution 5 2 Drugs 6 See also 7 Notes 8 References 9 External linksEngland and Wales EditNote that under English and Welsh law a public order offence is a different category of crime related to disorderly conduct and other breaches of the peace See the following English criminal law Public order offences History of English criminal law Public order offencesCrimes without apparent victims EditMain article Victimless crime In public order crimes there are many instances of criminality where a person is accused because he she has made a personal choice to engage in an activity of which society disapproves e g private recreational drug use Thus there is continuing political debate on criminalization versus decriminalization focusing on whether it is appropriate to use punishment to enforce the various public policies that regulate the nominated behaviours After all society could deal with unpopular behaviour without invoking criminal or other legal processes Following the work of Schur 1965 the types of crime usually referred to include the sexually based offences of prostitution paraphilia i e sexual practices considered deviant underage sex and pornography and the offences involving substance abuse which may or may not involve some element of public disorder or danger to the public as in driving while intoxicated Since 1965 however societal views have changed greatly for example prostitution often considered a victimless crime is classified by some countries as a form of exploitation of women such views are held in Sweden Norway and Iceland where it is illegal to pay for sex but not to be a prostitute the client commits a crime but not the prostitute see Prostitution in Sweden When deciding whether harm to innocent individuals should be prohibited the moral and political beliefs held by those in power interact and inform the decisions to create or repeal crimes without apparent victims These decisions change over time as moral standards change For example Margaret Sanger who founded the first birth control clinic in New York City was accused of distributing obscene material and violating public morals Information about birth control is no longer considered obscene see the U S case law examples Within the context of a discussion Feinberg 1984 on whether governments should regulate public morals in the interest of the public good Meier amp Geis 1997 identify which social problems might be deemed appropriate for legal intervention and the extent to which the criminal law should enforce moral positions which may lack societal consensus This reflects a more fundamental problem of legal consistency People have the right to engage in some self destructive activities For all its carcinogenic qualities tobacco is not a prohibited substance Similarly the excessive consumption of alcohol can have severe physical consequences but it is not a crime to consume it This is matched in gambling The state and its institutions often rely on lotteries raffles and other legal forms of gambling for operating funds whether directly or indirectly through the taxation of profits from casinos and other licensed outlets Qualitatively there is nothing to distinguish the forms of gambling deemed illegal A side effect of turning too many people into criminals is that the concept of crime becomes blurred and genuine criminality becomes less unacceptable If the key distinction between real crime and moral regulation is not made clearly as more consensual activities become crimes ordinary citizens are criminalized for tax evasion illegal downloading and other voluntary rule breaking A further perceptual problem emerges when laws remain in force but are obviously not enforced i e the police reflect the consensus view that the activity should not be a crime Alternatively if the activities prohibited are consensual and committed in private this offers incentives to the organizers to offer bribes in exchange for diverting enforcement resources or to overlooking discovered activity thereby encouraging political and police corruption Thus any deterrent message that the state might wish to send is distorted or lost More generally political parties find it easier to talk dismissively about crimes if they are classified as victimless because their abolition or amendment looks to have fewer economic and political costs i e the use of the word victimless implies that there are no injuries caused by these crimes Robertson 1989 125 and if that is true then there is no need to create or retain the criminal offences This may reflect a limited form of reality that in the so called victimless crimes there are no immediate victims to make police reports and those who engage in the given behaviour regard the law as inappropriate not themselves This has two consequences Because these crimes often take place in private comprehensive law enforcement often including entrapment and the use of agent provocateurs would consume an enormous amount of resources It is therefore convenient for the law enforcement agencies to classify a crime as victimless because that is used as a justification for devoting fewer resources as against crimes where there are real victims to protect and These crimes usually involve something desirable where large profits can be made e g drugs or sex The hidden crime factor EditBecause most of these crimes take place in private or with some degree of secrecy it is difficult to establish the true extent of the crime The victims are not going to report it and arrest statistics are unreliable indicators of prevalence often varying in line with local political pressure to do something about a local problem rather than reflecting the true incidence of criminal activity In addition to the issue of police resources and commitment many aspects of these activities are controlled by organized crime and are therefore more likely to remain hidden These factors are used to argue for decriminalization Low or falling arrest statistics are used to assert that the incidence of the relevant crimes is low or now under control Alternatively keeping some of these vices as crimes simply keeps organized crime in business Decriminalization of public order crimes EditMaguire and Radosh 1999 146 7 accept that the public order crimes that cause the most controversy are directly related to the current perceptions of morality To assert that the shades of behaviour represented by such crimes should be retained or decriminalized ignores the range of arguments that can be mustered on both sides but the most fundamental question remains whether the government has the right to enforce laws prohibiting private behaviour Arguments in favor of decriminalization Edit Those who favor decriminalization or legalization contend that government should be concerned with matters affecting the common good and not seek to regulate morality at an individual level Indeed the fact that the majority ignore many of the laws say on drug taking in countries founded on democratic principles should encourage the governments elected by those majorities to repeal the laws Failure to do so simply undermines respect for all laws including those laws that should and indeed must be followed Indeed when considering the range of activities prohibited the practical policing of all these crimes would require the creation of a police state intruding into every aspect of the peoples lives no matter how private It is unlikely that this application of power would be accepted even if history showed such high profile enforcement to be effective Prohibition did not prevent the consumption of alcohol and the present War on Drugs is expensive and ineffective Those who favor decriminalization also point to experience in those countries which permit activities such as recreational drug use There is clear evidence of lower levels of substance abuse and disruptive behavior The presence of public order crimes encourages a climate of general disrespect for the law Many individuals choose to violate public order laws because they are easily violable and there is no victim to complain This encourages disrespect for the law including disrespect for laws involving crimes with victims To criminalize behavior that harms no other or society violates individual freedom and the human natural rights of the individual The right of the individual to do what they will so long as they harm no other or society as a whole is a generally accepted principle within free and democratic societies 1 criminalization of acts that others feel are immoral but are not clearly proven to be harmful is generally violative of that principle although exceptions may and do apply For example the simple possession of child pornography or engaging in animal cruelty is criminal in most civilized nations however there is no direct victim except the animal whose rights are not cognizable by law the reason for its criminalization is the bad tendency of these acts persons who derive pleasure from acts such as these often have depraved desires it can be inferred that people who abuse animals rarely stop there and that people who possess child pornography will seek more than just mere depictions There are questions of the victimlessness of such supposed exception crimes as well as criticisms of the validity of assuming bad tendencies though One example of criticism of the idea of criminalizing cruelty to animals out of a bad tendency in the people who do it instead of animal suffering is that research on the ability of animals to suffer by studies of animal brains is often used to determine what animals should be covered by laws against cruelty to animals as shown in controversies about extending such laws to fish and invertebrates in which animal brain studies not forensic psychiatry on humans are the main cited arguments both for and against criminalization It is also pointed out that computer games with cruelty to virtual mammals are legal in most Western countries while cruelty to real mammals is not again showing that it is inner animal suffering and not outer body language that is relevant regardless of whether or not animals are formally classified as victims in courts The notion of cruelty to animals as a predictor of violence to other humans is also criticized for lacking consistency with the evolutionary notion of empathy being gradually extended from close relatives to more distant relatives according to which cruelty to other humans should predict cruelty to animals but not the other way explaining the appearance of cruelty to animals being a risk factor for violence to humans as a result of criminal investigation spending more resources investigating people known to abuse animals for human violence while people with no history of animal abuse or animal neglect more easily get away with violence to other humans due to being less investigated In the case of child pornography depicting real children not cartoons victimlessness is questioned as circulation of pornographic images of people taken when they were too young to consent to it may injure their personal integrity In the case of cartoons it is pointed out that the same psychiatrists who argued for criminalization which in most countries where it is present happened later than criminalization of pornography with real children suggesting that it was not for the same reasons have used the same arguments to acquit or strongly reduce sentences for statutory rape in cases where they deemed the victim to look older which critics cite as an example of it being counterproductive to protecting children arguing that a societal transition from visual age guessing to ID checking would reduce statutory rape There are other arguments than depravity to ban pornographic cartoons depicting minors however including curtailment of profit from such cartoons which explains why such laws in some European countries have exceptions for cases when the creator and the possessor are the same person in which no transaction is involved It is also argued that passive marijuana smoking de facto constitutes victimization in some cases of drug use More generally it is argued that civilized punishment should be based on deterrence while basing punishment on assumptions of depravity leads to inhumane and uncivilized punishment as the assumption that some people are inherently bad leads to an appearance of persecution being necessary It is also argued that since higher priorities of criminal investigation of people considered depraved can find statistical correlations by higher percentages of criminals in profiled groups being caught compared to non profiled groups no matter if there is a link or not as a self fulfilling prophecy preventing it from being self correcting and making it possible for depravity arguments to lead to anyone being classified as depraved and as a result a general loss of freedom It is therefore argued that depravity arguments should be categorically avoided as any exception would be a mobile goal post 2 3 The cost of enforcing public order crimes is too high to individual and societal freedom and will inevitably result in coercion force brutality usurpation of the democratic process the development of a carceral state and finally tyranny Due to public order crimes not having a victim someone aside from a victim has to be used to report public order crimes and someone other than the sovereign people itself has to be delegated to enforce the public order laws for examples of direct popular enforcement of laws see hue and cry posse comitatus and the last vestige of democratic law enforcement today the jury This results in the development of an apparatus of coercion a class of law enforcers within society but separate from society in that they are tasked with enforcing laws upon the people rather than the people enforcing their own law This inevitably results in violations of individual freedom as this class of law enforcers seeks more and more power and turns to more and more coercive means Public order crimes often pertain to behavior engaged in especially by discernible classes of individuals within society racial minorities women youth poor people and result in the criminalization or stigmatization of those classes as well as resentment from those classes against the laws against the government or against society Public order crimes will end up being selectively prosecuted since it is not possible to prosecute them all This creates or reinforces class gender or race based criminalization or stigmatization It also is a very powerful tool for political persecution and suppression of dissent see Selective enforcement It produces a situation in which otherwise upstanding citizens are committing crimes but in the absence of mens rea guilty mind and without even being aware of the fact that their behavior is or was illegal until it becomes convenient to the state to prosecute them for it The natural variation in internal moral compass which often turns out to be beneficial to society or to stem from variations of understanding which will always be with us to some degree leads to individuals committing crimes in the absence of mens rea Individuals of all political stripes and background who do not have an encyclopedic knowledge of the law are vulnerable to accidentally committing crimes and suffering punishment when they were not aware that the behavior was even considered problematic For instance individuals who violate building or zoning codes on their own property may be stuck with large expenses life disruptions or fines unexpectedly Public enforcement of morality will inevitably lead to individuals with underdeveloped moral compasses of their own instead resulting in external restraint substituting for internal restraint and thus greater immorality deviance and societal decadence Or they may give up on their internal compass and turn to a more Machiavellian approach if they are punished for following it Arguments against decriminalization Edit Those who oppose decriminalization believe that the morality of individuals collectively affects the good of the society and without enforcement the society will be damaged and lead to decadence They believe that law shapes morality and builds a national character If laws are not enforced that is not the fault of the law If people knew that they were likely to be arrested they would modify their behavior That current laws criminalizing theft do not deter thieves is not an argument for decriminalizing theft although theft is not in any way a victimless crime Rather it is an argument in favor of devoting more resources into enforcement so that there is greater certainty of arrest and punishment Thus in public order crimes it is simply a lack of priority in current enforcement strategies that encourages such widespread public disobedience which in all likelihood would increase if the behavior was to be decriminalized Specific examples EditMeier and Geis 1997 contrast the view that prostitution and drug offenses are crimes without victims with the view that the participants involved are victims without crimes The use of the term public order crime grew out of the research to test the hypothesis underlying the term victimless crime So called victimless crimes or crimes without victims were tested to determine whether a case could be argued that the behaviour produced harmful consequences for innocent people p19 recognising that there was substantial disagreement both about the degree of culpability inherent in the behaviour and the proper role for the law Consequently the effectiveness and scope of the law has proved limited both creating and solving problems The following are examples of the research findings used to construct arguments that there are victims It is accepted that there are other arguments that many consider equally convincing as an example Prostitution Edit For a full discussion from a criminology perspective see Prostitution law Drugs Edit The use of drugs for religious and recreational purposes is historically verified among a wide range of cultures In more modern times Inciardi 1992 1 17 reports that the use of opium cocaine and later morphine were common ingredients of patent medicines and opium dens were not uncommon in the larger urban areas Extracts from the coca leaf were included in the original Coca Cola and in 1900 heroin was promoted as a cough medication and a treatment for lung diseases But problems flowing from addiction led many to perceive the drug element of medications to be morally destructive In the United States the Supreme Court decisions of Webb et al v U S 249 U S 96 1919 and U S v Behrman 258 U S 280 1922 drove the use of narcotics underground and consolidated their criminal status In the terms adopted by Schur 1965 drug dealing is now victimless because neither the buyer nor the seller is likely to report it The consumption of some drugs can damage the health of users causing indirect societal cost due to increased hospitalizations and in some cases cause death through overdose because substitution or poor quality although this potential for harm may be operationally indistinct from the potentials for harm associated with other noncriminal behaviors such as driving a car while tired or over consumption of healthy foods Some argue that if drugs were available legally they would be less harmful see the drug policy of the Netherlands When drugs are illegal the price is higher and maintaining the habit takes the money that would otherwise be spent on food shelter and clothing The resultant neglect is a contributory factor to the addict s physical deterioration In Australia Walker 1991 finds a strong link between substance abuse and crime In general making drugs illegal results in an exponential increase in their price so that addicts must indulge in theft robbery and burglary to support their habits Those people who experience those crimes are indirect victims of the drug sale The need to fund addiction also drives some into distribution where they are more prone to violent attack and murder These findings are matched elsewhere Meier and Geis 1997 confirm that drug dealing is an area where victims are third parties who experience harm only indirectly through say losses from drug related crime and the costs of enforcing drug laws and of treating addiction and the public health costs for treating illness and disease consequent on the addiction e g HIV infection through using the same needles In Australia for example the National Campaign against Drug Abuse see Collins amp Lapsley 1991 gives a figure of just over 1 2 billion for total costs of the abuse of illicit drugs in Australia in 1988 including treatment of drug related illness accidents resulting from drug use misuse loss of productivity due to absenteeism premature death property crime and damage and excluding justice system costs Conklin 1997 100 reports the cost of illegal drug use in the U S in 1989 at 60 billion a year a 20 increase over the estimate in 1985 The rise in cost to the state can only be met out of tax revenue but the burden is not shared equally Income actually spent on drugs is displaced from purchases that would otherwise have generated sales tax and income tax revenue Similarly the substantial profits made by the dealers is not taxed Thus the citizens who declare income for tax purposes must pay more to offset the cost of non capture of drug revenue in their society As with prostitution crime related to drug dealing also affects the amenity of a neighbourhood destroying property values and causing the flight of the middle class to the safer suburbs If the police do intervene they may alienate law abiding community members who are stopped and questioned and only displace the drug dealing indoors thus making it more resistant to police interventions Police may also use their power to extract rents from the drug selling community Further Sampson 2002 comments that because intensive police enforcement is by its very nature temporary the impact is often only short term and dependent on the resiliency of the market and the buyers which has been shown to be strong Some officers have argued that intensive enforcement shows the community that the police care about the problem however some of the unintended effects may in fact have the opposite result For a more general exposition see arguments for and against drug prohibition See also EditDrug related crime Public Order Act 1986 Victimless crime Sumptuary law Anti social behaviour order Broken windows theory Moral police Signal crime Islamic religious policeNotes Edit John Stuart Mill On Liberty for a discussion of the Harm Principle Rational Choice and Situational Crime Prevention Theoretical Foundations Graeme Newman Ronald V Clarke 2016 Criminal Justice Anthea Hucklesby Azrini Wahidin 2013References EditCollins D J amp Lapsley H M 1991 Estimating the Economic Costs of Drug Abuse in Australia Canberra Dept Of Comm Health and Services Conklin John E 1997 Criminology 6th edition Allyn amp Bacon ISBN 0 205 26478 6 de Haan Willem 1990 The Politics of Redress Crime Punishment and Penal Abolition Boston Unwin Hyman ISBN 0 04 445442 2 Ericsson Lars O 1980 Charges Against Prostitution An Attempt at a Philosophical Assessment Ethics 90 335 66 Feinberg Joel 1984 Harm to Self The Moral Limits of the Criminal Law New York Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 505923 9 Garoupa Nuno amp Klerman Daniel 2002 Optimal Law Enforcement with a Rent Seeking Government American Law and Economics Review Vol 4 No 1 pp116 140 Inciardi James A 1992 The War on Drugs II The Continuing Epic of Heroin Cocaine Crack Crime AIDS and Public Policy Mountain View CA Mayfield Maguire Brenan amp Radosh Polly F 1999 Introduction to Criminology Belmont CA West Wadsworth ISBN 0 534 53784 7 Meier Robert F amp Geis Gilbert 1997 Victimless Crime Prostitution Drugs Homosexuality Abortion Los Angeles Roxbury ISBN 0 935732 46 2 Polinsky A Mitchell 1980 Private versus Public Enforcement of Fines The Journal of Legal Studies Vol IX No 1 January pp105 127 Polinsky A Mitchell amp Shavell Steven 1997 On the Disutility and Discounting of Imprisonment and the Theory of Deterrence NBER Working Papers 6259 National Bureau of Economic Research Inc 1 Robertson Ian 1989 Society A Brief Introduction New York Worth Publishing ISBN 0 87901 548 9 Sampson Rana 2002 Drug Dealing in Privately Owned Apartment Complexes Problem Oriented Guides for Police Series No 4 2 Schur Edwin M 1965 Crimes Without Victims Deviant Behavior and Public Policy Abortion Homosexuality Drug Addiction Prentice Hall ISBN 0 13 192930 5 Siegel Larry J 2006 Criminology Theories Patterns amp Typologies 9th edition Belmont CA Wadsworth Publishing ISBN 0 495 00572 X Walker John 1991 Crime in Australia Canberra Australian Institute of Criminology External links EditPatterns and Trends in Public Order Crime Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Public order crime amp oldid 1135302925, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.