Due Process Model and the Crime Control Model Research Paper

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Crime Control Model and the Due Process Model

In this paper we shall examine and differentiate between two "ideal type" models of the criminal process: the Crime Control Model and the Due Process Model. Crime control underlines an efficient criminal procedure by means of early determination of responsibility by law enforcement representatives (Aviram, 2010). The model necessitates considerable reverence to police officers and prosecutors, the "torchbearers" of the criminal process (Feeley, 2003). As a consequence, the model consents to patience with their mistakes. In comparison, the Due Process Model's main goal is safeguarding accuracy and steering clear of the conviction of the guiltless. (Packer, 1969) Under a due process model, law enforcement judgment is seen as possibly biased (Packer, 1969) and is consequently cautiously curtailed by constitutional assessment and procedural stumbling blocks as a "quality control" apparatus (Aviram, 2010).

Packer's models have been far and wide critiqued over the years (Feeley, 2003). Along with the more compelling critiques is the idea that the models do not contribute to an epistemological basis that the Due Process Model refers for the most part to doctrinal and normative authorizations, while the Crime Control Model is by design a pragmatic description of the daily organization of law enforcement (Aviram, 2010). Scholars nowadays widely recognize that the post-Warren Court's pronouncement reflect a pendulum sway toward crime management. The swing is enlightened in four major themes. First, the post-Warren Court highlighted that the final mission of the criminal justice system is to find guilty the accused and ensuring that the guiltless are acquitted, more willingly than creating bright-line rules.
The Court has additional emphasis on the defendant's real guilt -- a realistic application of Packer's "assumption of guilt." (Packer, 1969) Second, the Court moved away from depending on clear standards of achievement to consenting to an estimation of police behaviors through a "entirety of the state of affairs" test (Feeley, 2003). Third, the post-Warren Court articulated more reverence to police prudence, a frequent theme of recognizing that police act in good faith under complicated conditions (Feeley, 2003). Lastly, the Court happened to get involved less on behalf of the defendant on plea, mainly collateral attacks prior to state courts (Packer, 1969). Noteworthy for this paper, this distinctiveness of the post-Warren Court are intimately connected with a significant feature of the Crime Control Model -- the escalating reliance on previous steps in the criminal process and, especially, extensive reverence to police discretion. On a daily basis officers exercise incredible discretion and make on-the-spot choices about implementing their power (Aviram, 2010) or abstaining from doing so. Courts are quite aware of this trait but adjourn to indistinct standards when it comes to police judgment. Courts do not see police judgment as a "necessary evil" but as an advantageous feature of professionalism (Packer, 1969). Herring declares, keeping in mind, our frequent holdings that the restricted effect of restraint must be considerable and prevail over any damage….....

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