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The Disposition of Felony Arrests

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  20 November 2018

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Abstract

While we know a great deal about the disposition of felony arrests that reach the trial stage, we know little about the details of the dispositions reached without trial. And yet, this latter category forms as a rule over 90 percent, in New York City 98 percent, of all dispositions. Basing his analysis on a study done in the early 1970s, the author describes and presents data on the various stages in the process from arrest to final disposition through plea bargaining, trial, or dismissal of the case. For the first time, this usually opaque disposition pattern prior to trial emerges in the clarity of 23 graphs that illustrate the analysis. Of particular interest are some new insights into the mechanism of the plea bargaining process.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © American Bar Foundation, 1981 

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References

1 The study was financed by the New York State Division of Criminal Justice Services, the state funding branch of the Law Enforcement Assistance Administration of the U.S. Department of Justice.Google Scholar

2 (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1981?).Google Scholar

3 For the country as a whole, the average percentage for felony prosecutions reaching trial is closer to 10 percent.Google Scholar

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8 Congress, in its doubtful wisdom, has now ordered the inclusion of arson in the group of index crimes.Google Scholar

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15 There are serious problems about considering arrests that did not end in conviction as part of a criminal record.Google Scholar

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18 The custody was meant for at least one year or more but in fact ended much earlier. This disposition was abolished in 1975.Google Scholar

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21 It must be remembered that in this study we did not talk to the complaining witnesses.Google Scholar

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30 See fig. 22 infra. Since one cannot exclude the possibility that occasionally our inquiries may have missed weaknesses which the prosecutor saw, the figure could be slightly on the high side.Google Scholar

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33 Another consideration is the cost of going to trial, although there may be some problem as to whose cost interests will prevail in the frequently occurring case involving an indigent defendant.Google Scholar

34 There is a potential method, albeit an indirect one, of estimating the differential between the sentence after guilty plea and after trial for a general sample of cases, not only for those that go to trial. One would have to ask experienced lawyers, prosecutors, and judges what they would estimate the sentence to be if the case had gone to trial. A tentative effort we made in that direction failed. The defense lawyers tended to overstate the size of the differential in order to magnify their achievement; prosecutor and judge had the opposite tendency because too large a differential seemed difficult to justify. A better way of obtaining a realistic estimate of the sentence after trial would be to ask the question with respect to a particular case, but not of the immediate participants in the case and not by comparing it with the sentence after guilty plea. Prosecutors, defense lawyers, and judges should be asked: “If in this case the jury would find the defendant guilty—what sentence would he get?”.Google Scholar

35 The proportion of defendants reaching trial in the 400 sample was 6 percent; in the 2000 sample, it was 2 percent.Google Scholar