Technology and the Criminal Justice System
CRIM 2030
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Class Schedulefall, 2016



Class Date 

Topics

Reading

Week 1 (Sept 1)

An Overview of the course: Assessing the impact of technological change on crime, law, and social control

Byrne, chapter 1

 

Claremont Presentation

 

Week 2 (Sept.6,8)

The New Technology of Crime: Advances in both hard and soft technology have not been restricted to the criminal justice system’s response to crime; these advances have resulted in new opportunities for crime, new forms of criminality, new techniques for committing crime, and the creation of new categories of both offenders and victims.

 

 

 

Key Points:

New Technology of Crime : Crime at work, crime as work, and crime after work

 

New Technology of Crime: Identity Theft, Internet Crime schemes, and Internet Sex crimes

 

 

 
Reading: Chapter 2 in Text

Silk Road

silk-road-2

silk-road-ross-ulbricht-sentenced

watch?v=LkRhBOZSw38

Telemarketing Fraud

 

Techno-Crime in America spring 2016

 

Internet Crime Schemes Ppt.Internet Crime SchemesPPT Fall 2015

Electronic Crime Terms

 

Insider Threat Study:  Illicit Cyber Activity in the Government Sector

Taliban Using Facebook

Internet Crime Complaints Center

  Nigerian 419 scams:

watch?v=Vm77jHuOBi8&app=desktop

 

Popular new social media App:

social-media-apps-anonymous-kik-crime

 

 

Week 3  (Sept. 13,15)

 

 

 

Crime Prevention and Hard Technology: There are a number of recent hard technology advances that have general applications to crime prevention strategies, both at the individual and community level.

 

 

Crime Prevention and Hard Technology

 

Examples Include

  1. Taser guns as a citizen protection device
  2. Closed circuit video monitoring of hot spot areas
  3. Street lighting as a crime prevention strategy; other environmental    design options
  4. The application of other forms of hard technology to crime prevention (e.g. ignition interlock systems, alcohol censoring devices, mace, metal detectors, security systems, etc.)

 

 

Focus: How to prevent homicide, sexual violence, and other forms of violence in school/college settings using soft technology?

 

 

 

Reading:

Byrne text, chapter 4 

 

https://mail.google.com/mail/u/0/?tab=wm#inbox/14fdb3f790d8b7a7?projector=1

 

Crime Prevention and Soft Technology fall 2015

 

CCTV Video

Technological-innovations-in-crime-prevention-global-perspectives-on-CCTV

 

Hard Technology of Crime Prevention PPT

-

 

 

 

http://www.naomiklein.org/articles/2008/05/chinas-all-seeing-eye

 

 

big-brother-is-watching

 

Long Lens of the Law

 

Week 4 (Sept20,22 )

 

Online Reading and Lecture

 

 

 

Risk Assessment and Threat Assessment-MOSAIC

Reading: Chapters 5,14 in text

Online Reading: Read Byrne and Marx: Technological Innovations (In Materials link on this course page)

REVIEW THE Links in the FOLLOWING two power point lectures

:

Professor Andrew Harris 2012 Online Guest Lecture:

Risk Assessment and Threat Assessment_Sept2012

RISK ASSESSMENT instrument:

LSCMI blank paper version

Professor Byrne Lecture: Technology and Sex Offender Monitoring

Sex Offenders PPT

 

 

:Crime Prevention Technology lecture byrne

Focus: Predicting and preventing intimate partner violence using MOSAIC

 

 

 

 

Week 5 (Sept 27,29):

 

 

 

Crime Prevention and Soft Technology: Various forms of soft, information-based technology have been applied to the prevention of a diverse number of crimes, including terrorism, school violence, workplace violence and sex crimes. Examples include:

  1. Threat assessment instruments (e.g. prevent school violence, terrorism, etc.)
  2. Bullying identification protocol
  3. Sex offender registration; sex offender risk assessment devices
  4. The use of “profiling” to prevent crime
  5. The use of mental health data by school officials; and linking mental health, criminal record, and gun purchase data bases; lessons learned from Virginia Tech tragedy
  6. The application of other forms of soft technology to crime prevention (e.g. information sharing, improved nationwide data collection protocol for criminal histories, etc.)

 

 

Technologytermpaper_2015

 

Crime Prevention Technology lecture byrne

 

Technology Crime Prevention risk assessment

Crime Prevention Technology lecture byrne

risk assessment and crime prevention

 

the-future-of-crime-prevention

 

2Crime Prevention and Soft Technology_new

.

 Related Videos:

 

Surveillance Society:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7KYbaxmYlkg

 

Predicting Future Crime:

watch?v=aZXawn-HrGw&app=desktop

Edward Snowden interview:

watch?v=XEVlyP4_11M

 

Great Firewall: China's Golden Shield

watch?v=yrcaHGqTqHk&app=desktop

 

Predictive Analytics:

watch?v=m30LxzzbRik&app=desktop

watch?v=U0gX_z0V0nE&app=desktop

 

crime prevention technology

 

RAND review of research on behavioral detection software

 

The Unblinking Eye

Week 6 (Oct.4,6)

 

Day 1: Exam 1 Review

 

Day 2: Exam 1

 

 

Exam 1 Review emailed to all students:exam 1 review

preventing cybercrime

the new technology of risk assessment

 

Week 7 ( Oct.13)

No class Oct.11--Monday schedule

The Police and Hard Technology: Federal, state, and local police have applied hard technology not only in the area of individual offender apprehension, but also in the area of community-level surveillance and control. In addition, technological innovations have been used to improve the safety and protection of police officer.

Day 1: Police and Hard Technology

Day 2: Police and Hard Technology

 Examples include:

  1. Improvement in weaponry of police
  2. Less-than-lethal force technology used in mob/potential riot situations
  3. Computers in squad cars to improve criminal identification and /or for gang identification; computer-based strategies to identify criminal behavior on the internet (e.g. sex offenders, cyber crime, terrorism)
  4. Improvements in offender/citizen identification (e.g. biometrics, fingerprints, etc.)
  5. Improvements in police protection devices (e.g. bullet proof vests, new construction of police departments)
  6. Other applications of hard technology to policing

 

 

Police and Crime Prevention links:

www.predpol.com

https://www.aclu.org/map/stingray-tracking-devices-whos-got-them#agencies

 

Police Hard Technology PPT

Baltimore May Join 30 Cities Using Gunshot Detection Systems

 

/https://policearmor.org

 

Technology Skills and New Career Opportunities in Policing-1

The_Police_and_New_Technology lecture 2015

 

Boston Globe article:  Police crime watch

 

PERF Body Armor

index Body armor for female officers highlighted in Techbeat

PERF Taser

Metal Storm Weaponry

Police Use Of Force PPT (2)

 Body worn cameras: https://www.whitehouse.gov/the-press-office/2014/12/01/fact-sheet-strengthening-community-policing

fact-sheet-strengthening-community-policing

 

Effectiveness of body worn cameras in policing: http://www.policefoundation.org/content/body-worn-cameras-police-use-force 

body-worn-cameras-police-use-force

FBI:  DELIVERING THE FUTURE The Biometric Center of Excellence

 

city-of-tomorrow-video-data-surveillance

   

 

 

 

 

 

Week 8 ( Oct.18,20)

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

The Police and Soft Technology: The recent emphasis on intelligence-based policing has resulted in a wide range of soft technology advancements that have transformed police problem-solving strategies at the federal, state, and local level.  Examples include:

Day 1: Police and Soft Technology

Day 2: Police and Soft Technology

  1. Crime mapping technology (hot spots)
  2. Crime analysis technology (COMPSTAT)
  3. Improvements in criminal history data systems
  4. Other “soft” technology applications in policing (e.g. information sharing within the CJS; public-private information sharing.

 

Review of Police Technology: Case studies of Technological Change in Three U.S. Cities-Does Technology improve or impede police performance?

 

 

 

 

Predicive Policing video:

http://www.bloomberg.com/news/videos/2015-03-05/the-rise-of-predictive-policing-tech?utm_source=NON+Client+Newsletter+List+Updated+1%2F20%2F15&utm_campaign=040624c2d8-Newsletter_Non_Clients_012115&utm_medium=email&utm_term=0_dcce39a5b3-040624c2d8-95788701

15&utm_campaign=040624c2d8-Newsletter_Non_Clients_012115&utm_medium=email&utm_term=0_dcce39a5b3-040624c2d8-95788701

BPD Mayor's Performance Report

Police and Soft Tech PPT

 

Materials Link:

Straight Outta Boston: - Article on Operation: Ceasefire

 

"Police Don't Like Black People": African American Young Men's Accumulated Police Experiences

 Police Task Force Report link: http://www.justice.gov/sites/default/files/opa/press-releases/attachments/2015/03/04/ferguson_police_department_report.pdf

The Police and Soft Tech 11/6 ppt

Soft Tech & the police: Info Technology and the police eval

 

COMPSTAT in Los Angeles video

FBI Gang Video

Former New Orleans Police Detective Pleads Guilty; Confirms Danziger Cover-up

Technology Skills and New Career Opportunities in Policing PPT

HunchLab Software

 

 

 

Week 9 (Oct.25,27)

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Courts and Soft Technology

The Courts and Soft Technology: Improvements in information technology have been applied to the unique problems of offenders in specialized courts (e.g. drug courts, reentry courts, domestic violence courts, family courts), as well as the general court administration problems of intersystem coordination (mental health, public health, welfare) case processing, backlog, and decision making.  Examples include:

  1. Case flow management systems for prosecutors; the use of case management devices/instruments by court administrators, public defenders, and presiding judges (e.g. backlog reduction strategies, jury selection, case classification/ weighting systems, etc.)
  2. Mental health screening for pretrial detainees, at arraignment, competency, drug dependency/multiple problem offender identification.
  3. The use of objective risk screening devices by probation officers to aid in PSI completion, and to determine appropriate specialized court referrals
  4. Other soft technology applications in the courts (by court type, e.g. reentry courts, drug courts, etc.)

 

 

 

 

Court_System_Overview_(PPT)[1] (1)

Reforming-Federal-Sentencing-Guidelines-A-Modest-Proposal.pdf

The Implementation and Impact of Drug Courts (2)

Drug Courts PPT

NIJ%20Drug%20Courts

Drug Court video:

http://www.innovations.harvard.edu/drug-courts-reexamined-recording

Presentation-Drug-Court

Courts and Tech. PPT

technology and specialized courts

 

http://www.courtinnovation.org/topic/problem-solving-justice

 

AJA presentation court technology revised

 

 

Mass Bar Association
Week 10 (Nov.1,3)

 

The Courts and Hard Technology: Recent changes in court structure (e.g. the proliferation of specialized courts), operations, management, and administration have been facilitated by a number of specific technological advances, particularly related to computers, multimedia technology, and on-site drug testing. Examples include:

  1. The “High Technology” courtroom (computers, video, cameras, design features of buildings)
  2. Improvements in weapons detection devices used in courthouse settings
  3. Focus: the courtroom 21 project at the college of William and Mary Law School
  4. Other hard technology applications in court (e.g. drug testing for pretrial detaining)

 

 

 

 

Courtroom 21 video

Veteran's Court

Court Technology and Performance PPT

 

Technology of the Courts: An Overview of Hard and Soft Technology Innovations PPT

 

Center for Information Technology Policy  Website

 

Selling the Law PDF.

 

High-Tech Courtroom PPT.

 

Court Technology and Court Performance

 

New Ohio DNA Law Called Nation's Best In Protecting The Innocent

 

More DNA Tests In Property Crimes Could Pressure Justice System

 

Week 11(Nov.8,10)

Exam 2 in class review

 

 No Class Lecture on Nov.10th

 

Exam 2 Review and Exam

 

 

 

 

 

Week 12 (Nov.15)

No class Nov.17: ASC

 

 

Institutional Corrections and Hard Technology: The prison industry has advocated the utilization of a wide range of control technologies to manage an increasingly large federal, state, and local inmate population with a minimum number of line corrections officers.  Examples include:

Institutional Corrections and Soft Technology: There are a variety of current and potential soft technology applications to problem solving in institutional settings, both in terms of inmate (classification, treatment and control) and staff (management and protection) issues. 

Institutional Corrections and Technology

Soft Technology Examples Include:

  1. Contraband detection devices used in prison/jail
  2. Duress alarm systems for corrections officers in indoor and outdoor settings
  3. Language translation devices for use within prisons
  4. Remote monitoring of inmate movements in cells and throughout prison
  5. Perimeter security technology; new cell extraction technology
  6. Less than lethal force in prison
  7. Other hard technology applications in prisons and jails (e.g. the Supermax prison)

Hard Technology Examples Include:

  1. Improved inmate classifications systems
  2. Improved monitoring technology for inmate phone calls and financial transactions
  3. Improved within-prison crime analysis and response capabilities (examination of incident/sanctioning patterns, including transfer, segregation, loss of privileges, etc. identification of high rate offenders and/or prison hot-spot locations)
  4. Improved information sharing with community corrections, police, treatment providers (continuity/seamless system), and public health system
  5. Improved monitoring of inmate health problems (e.g. mental and physical)
  6. Other soft technology applications in prison and jails (e.g. testing new technologies in a simulated “mock” riot; using software to model death row outcomes


 

Electronic Monitoring

Technological_Innovations_in_Institutional_Corrections[1][2] (1)

 

Super-Max Prison Video

 

PrisonPPT (7)

 

HBO - A Search For Treatment Video

 

Prison Technology  Video

Technology and Prison pdf.

 

  

BJS corrections ppt

story Supermax Prison

Technology and Prison from preentry to Reentry

Byrne%20and%20Hummer%20in%20search%20of%20the%20tossed%20salad%20man

story Access to phones in prison

Technological%20Innovation%20and%20Offernder%20Reentry-%20Byrne%20and%20Pattavina

Field%20search

using prison technology to make prisons safer

prison-reform-international-examples_n_6995132

Week 13 (Nov.22)

No Class Nov.24

Thanksgiving Break

Community Corrections and Hard Technology: A number of recent hard technology advances have been applied directly to the problems associated with the community control of various federal, state, and local probation and parole populations.

Community Corrections and Soft Technology: One consequence of specialized caseloads in community corrections is the recognition that “one size fits all” classification and supervision schemes need to be replaced by state of the art offender/problem specific classification, and case management systems. In addition, the recent emphasis on seamless systems of care/control, as well as new partnership-driven reentry strategies have resulted in the development of a number of innovative data collection/information sharing systems

Hard Technology Examples Include:

  1. Electronic supervision tools (e.g. GPS)
  2. The use of breathalyzers and “instant” drug testing devices to monitor compliance with conditions of release/supervision
  3. The use of polygraph tests for selected offender groups (e.g. con artists, sex offenders)
  4. Language translators for improved communication between offenders and community corrections officers
  5. Kiosks to monitor offender location, using biometric devices
  6. Other hard technology applications (e.g. laptop computers for line staff, weapons in CBC, GPS monitoring of staff locations)

 Soft Technology Examples include:

  1. Drug offender Classification, sex offender classification, mentally ill offender classification, and multiple-problem offender classification for (1) risk, (2) treatment, and (3) control.
  2. New improved workload distribution and assessment instruments
  3. Improved analytic capabilities within probation and parole agencies, improvement in information sharing with other C.J. agencies, mental health, public health, and community groups
  4. Other soft technology applications in community corrections settings (e.g. MIS systems linking measurement of staff activities to offender outcomes (e.g. technicals, rearrests, return to prison, length of time in treatment, etc.)

 

           

Offender Reentry:  A Police Perspective Video

 

Tracking sex-crime offenders gets trickier article

 

 

TheNewTechnologyofCommunityCorrections (2) (1)

The Hard and Soft Technology in Community Corrections PowerPoint

The New Technology of Community Corrections[1]

 

Program helps identify likely violent parolee

Myths%20and%20realities%20of%20prisoner%20radicalization%20globally

 

Cell Phones in Prison

Maximum_Impact:Targeting Supervision on Higher-Risk People, Places and Times

 

 Video visitation: index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=31&Itemid=74&jumival=13522&utm_content=buffer4a296&utm_medium=social&utm_source=twitter

 

 Technological Innovations and Offender Reentry PPT

 

story Boston Globe report on offender reentry and the importance of community support during the initial 72 hours after release

Week 14 (Nov. 29, Dec.1)

 

 

New Directions in CJ Technology

 

 

 

 

OPTION TERM PAPER DUE:

 

 

 

Social media monitoring by Mass. Probation

 

Technological_Innovations in corrections

 

Week 2_RNR Risk Presentation (2)

Managing_the_Risk_Posed_by_Offender_Computer_Use

APPA%20issue%20paper%20on%20cyber%20supervision

2015-04-campaign-2016-and-criminal-justice

Week 15 : (Dec. 6,8)

EXAM PERIOD: Dec12-1th

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


 The Future of CJ TECHNOLOGY

Exam 3/Review: Date of Exam 3 To be announced

 

 

 

 

 

 


 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


 

 

 

 



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