...The Lindbergh baby case was a big case for its time, and I’m going to be discussing how the three core components of the criminal justice system played into the case. The three core components are police, courts and corrections. I will also discuss how other things were applied to this case like sentencing and the preliminary hearing. The Lindbergh baby case was a case that was open for 2 years, during that time police and Federal law enforcement were trying their hardest to find the missing Lindbergh baby, and punish the kidnapper. On the initial night of the kidnapping in March of 1932, there was a ransom note found in the baby’s crib, asking for money and indicating the baby was in good hands. With how times were back then, the police did what they could with the resources they had, though it wasn’t enough as the baby’s body was found only 2 months after the investigation started, with evidence pointing to that the baby was murdered the night of the kidnapping. For the next 2 years police used their expertise in narrowing down suspects, when finally they received a bunch of hits on the ransom money. The dedication of the police force finally prevailed in the arresting of Bruno Richard Hauptman. Hauptman was indicted in September 1934, on charges for extortion, and again in October 1934 for murder. The courts took over and his trial began January 3rd, 1935 and lasted five weeks. The case was built on circumstantial evidence such as handwritten ransom notes found, and the...
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...close taken away, imagine how much pain and anguish one would feel. Well, this is how the Lindbergh’s felt when their son was snatched from their arms. The Lindbergh baby kidnapping resulted in the passage of the Lindbergh kidnapping law and the prohibition of courtroom photography. No one knew hat the night of March 1, 1932 was going to be the worst night for the Lindbergh’s on that evening Anne and the Nursemaid, Betty, put baby Charles to sleep. A while later Charles Lindbergh arrived at the house and ate dinner with Ann, after having dinner he went to his study while Anne got ready for bed; meanwhile Betty went to check on the baby, and she walked into the room, she didn’t hear anything, so she ventured closer to the crib, and when she got close enough to see, she realized the baby was gone. She raced to the study to see if the baby was with his father, but when she saw that he wasn’t their, she went to see if he was with his mother, but he wasn’t with her either. Charles Lindbergh couldn’t believe what was going he first said “Anne they have stolen our baby”(Beverly 15). After searching he found a ransom note but he did not touch it in case of finger prints, and then immediately he called the police saying “[T]his is Charles Lindbergh, my son has just been kidnapped” (Greg n.p.). In minutes the police arrived and Lindbergh told them everything, they took the note and immediately checked for prints, then they gave it to Charles to open. The note stated not to call the police...
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...What “REALLY” happened to Charles Augustus Lindbergh Jr.? Patience Smith Intro to CJ System CJ101-02 Prof. Dan Bilodeau On June 22, 1930, Charles Augustus Lindbergh Jr. was born to the infamous “Lucky Lindy” and his wife, Anne. When he was a mere 20 months old, he was kidnapped from his crib in the house where parents and staff were in the house beneath him. The kidnapping occurred from a second story window in a rainstorm where no one heard a thing! Here in lie the questions that we will discuss in this paper. The police suspected an inside job from the beginning. Whomever carried out the abduction knew the whereabouts of the nursery and the parent’s plans for the particular evening in questions. With the residence being in Morrow, New Jersey where the family stayed during the week then having a home in Hopewell where they stayed on the weekends. The abduction took place on a Tuesday night when the family had decided to stay longer in Hopewell because the baby came down with a fever and cold. The main question that appears here is that without an insider involved, how would the abductor have known that the baby was still in Hopewell. The first question asked is how the courts, police and corrections apply to the disappearance of the baby. The investigation was shoddy at best. The main concerns were that there was very little evidence to be found. Even though it was proven to be raining, there were no footprints left in the child’s bedroom where he was lifted...
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...Lindberg. Charles Lindbergh and Ann became really famous because of their name. Charles Augusta Lindbergh junior was born on June 22nd, 1932 and he got kidnapped from his home on the 1st of March, 1932. The kidnapping of the baby was immediately notified by the police that the child has been missing from home and then the police officers enforce the law that to look for the child. The matter of this type of case required investigation and that what the police are there for to investigate crimes and enforce laws. As the case continues the state police officer Norman H Schwarzkopf from the New Jersey state police department and the new york city police department including the FBI came to the scene to investigate the matter due to a Jurisdictional encounter of the event. They gathered enough evidence to make the case for the missing baby called Charles Augusta Lindberg. The evidence that was found at the scene was a useful product for the judge to help him through the case of the missing child. This type of evidence can be anything collected from the scene and it...
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...Lindbergh Kidnapping It was considered the “Crime of the Century” that is still captivating people. What truly happened on the night of March 1, 1932 in Hopewell, New Jersey is still being talked about decades later. Even though one man was tried and convicted for this crime, there are still many conspiracy theories that surround this case. Was it an inside job that had been carefully planned? Was it the result of skillful fabrication done by investigators and police to wrongfully accuse one man? Or was the verdict correct and it was all done by one man alone? The question still remains, who kidnapped the Lindbergh baby? Due to the considerable evidence against Bruno Hauptmann, it is believed that Mr. Hauptmann was the one to kidnap...
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...The Lindbergh kidnapping was deemed the “Crime of the Century” in the 20th century much like how 9/11 was a very serious and detrimental terrorists attack in this century . It all started when Charles Lindbergh was an American pilot who made the first transatlantic non-stop flight from New York to France, which took about 33 and a half hours (James 1). Charles Lindbergh was staying at his home in Hopewell, New Jersey with his wife and 20 month old son Charles Augustus Lindbergh, Jr. On the night of March 1, 1932, Charles Lindbergh Jr., was kidnapped from his crib in the Hopewell house and was never seen until a bystander found the dead body on the side of the road years later. All of the evidence produced from the crime scene pointed to only...
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...Lindbergh Baby Case Suzanne Lopez 4/06/2015 CJ 101 High profile cases can receive a lot of unwanted media attention. As a result of this media attention, this can lead to an unfair advantage for the three components of the criminal justice system especially within police investigations. As high profile cases tend to get more media exposure, the pressure that the state enhances its authority over the police to solve the case tends to get swifter than they would any other investigation. This result can be disastrous because police investigators will try to work through a case quickly and efficiently to satisfy the media, victims, victims’ families as well as the state. Especially with high profile cases where appearances isn’t always what it seems, mistakes are more apt to happen and can lead to a lot of circumstantial evidence which may or may not be enough to prove guilt in a court of law and may or may not be just and fair. It would depend on the individual efficiency and experience as well as the intuition of the police investigators. Police investigators have the most important and more prevalent jobs out of the three components in the criminal justice system. The police has to investigate, analyze, recreate, and actually put together a case enough so that there is enough evidence, whether circumstantial or concrete, to convict a perpetrator beyond a reasonable doubt in a court of law. That is a tall order for any branch of government to try to accomplish...
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...The Lindbergh Baby Kidnapping Jeff Harris 5/19/2015 There are three main parts that make up our criminal justice system in America, the police, courts, and corrections. The Lindbergh baby, Charles Lindbergh Jr., was kidnapped from his bed sometime between the hours of 7:30pm and 10pm on March 1, 1932. (www.History.com). He was suffering from a cold and was left to drift off to sleep by his nanny, Betty Gow, with the window open. (www.clickamericana.com). When his father came to check on him and found him gone, he found a note demanding a $50,000 ransom. Three days later, another ransom note was found demanding $70,000. March 9, 1932 a man named John F. Condon, a retired teacher, claimed to have made contact with the kidnappers. He placed an ad in the Bronx Home News offering to be an intermediary. Mr. Condon alleged to have met with the kidnapper in several graveyards. He used the alias “Jafsie” and he dubbed the kidnapper “Graveyard John.” (www.pbs.org). The ransom was delivered on April 2, 1932 and the parents were told they could find the child on a boat off the Massachusetts coast called Nelly. The baby was not there. Finally, on May 12, 1932 the baby was found less than a mile from the New Jersey mansion. He had been dead from a fractured skull since the night he was taken. The case became a murder case at this point. Many people were involved in the investigation but few clues were found. Colonel H. Norman Schwarzkopf was the official lead investigator. The police...
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...| Lindbergh Baby Analysis | Intro to Criminal Justice | Courtney Brown 10-20-2015 | The Lindbergh baby case was one of the most controversial cases due to the families’ popularity and it highlighted some questionable actions within the criminal justice system. The case was a pivotal point in history and shaped the justice system for that era. All of the components, police, courts and corrections, played a significant role in the case. Each component highlighted distinct and questionable actions within their scope of responsibilities. Due to this being such a high profile case these controversial actions were magnified. As with any crime that is committed, the police are the initial point of contact. The police are there to provide emergency services and to investigate crimes. The police played an important role in the process by investigating the crime and finding evidence that would eventually lead them to apprehend and offender. From the beginning the police were already experiencing setbacks due to a lack of detail and information. The offender left no footprints and the only evidence were scratches made by a ladder that was used to gain entry into a window. Although the police did not have much evidence in the beginning they eventually complied a significant about of forensic evidence against Mr. Hauptmann. According to encyclopida.com the most important piece of evidence was the wooden ladder that was examined by numerous wood experts. The case was then...
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...The Lindbergh case, the kidnapping of Charles, Jr, of 20-months-old. the son of the famous aviator and his wife, Anne Lindbergh. the baby was kidnapped from the nursery on the second floor. from the lindbergh home at 9:00 pm, on march 1, 1932. the baby's parents were notified an hour later, while they were with the child's nurse, Betty they immediately made search of the house. they found a ransom note demanding $50,000. then after the hopewell police were notified, they reported through telephone to the New Jersey police. during the search they found evidence. there were blood stains in or about the nursery, and no fingerprints were found. the evidence they found during the search were footprints , two sections of a ladder, and a ransom...
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...will examine both sides of the argument and leave it up to you to make your own decision on whether or not cameras should be allowed into the courtroom. The media has been reporting trials for decades by the use of newspapers and or radio. But in 1935 television broadcasted one of the first trials which they called “The Trial of the Century”. The trial that I am speaking about is the Lindbergh baby trial, it was a highly publicized trial that may have started the debated on whether or not cameras should be allowed into the courtrooms. From the day the trial started hundreds of reporters would flack to the court house in the town of Flemington, New Jersey. The media had gotten so out of control that judge Trenchard had to ban the use of all typewriters within the courthouse which eventually led to “one of the consequences of the 1935 Lindbergh baby kidnapping trial was that the cameras were banned in all federal and most state courts” (Constitutional Rights Foundation, 2011). But in the 1970s, media coverage began in state courts only; they were only allowed to have access to civil and criminal cases under special conditions that...
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...twelfth note was arranging a meeting to talk to “John” about reducing the price of ransom money to $50,000. Condon had gave “John” $50,000 in mostly gold certificates, which come into play later in the case, he also got in exchange for the money he got the thirteenth note and a receipt. (www.lindberghkidnappinghoax.com) The thirteenth note had said that the baby could be found at Martha’s Vineyard. (www.lindberghkidnappinghoax.com) Authorities searched the area twice and had found nothing, making this an uneventful trip and the money was gone for nothing. The serial numbers of the gold certificates were released to the public, the serial numbers were in the newspapers and was released to the banks. (www.lindberghkidnappinghoax.com) Condon had said if he ever saw “John” again he would recognize him. (www.fbi.gov/)...
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...All summer, the case against Casey Anthony in an Orlando courtroom had audiences discussing her life as if she were the star of a reality television show. The narrative became familiar: Hard-partying single mother fails to report her toddler missing for a month, then lies to police about a kidnapping by a non-existent nanny. Then there was the suspiciously foul smell in the trunk of the mother's car before Caylee Anthony's remains were found in a wooded area. Inside Courtroom 23, however, the seven women and five men of the jury in the Anthony case had to look beyond the salacious details and decide: Was there enough evidence to prove Casey Anthony killed her 2-year-old daughter, Caylee? Their answer was no. On Tuesday, the jury acquitted Anthony, 25, of murdering her child in June 2008. The reason, legal analysts and court watchers said, is that despite the seemingly endless hype surrounding the investigation and trial, the prosecution's case simply didn't hold up. There was no forensic evidence — such as DNA or fingerprints — directly linking Anthony to her daughter's death. In fact, the precise cause of the girl's death was unclear. "The prosecution put out a lot of dots, but they couldn't connect them," says Lawrence Kobilinsky, chairman of the Department of Sciences at John Jay College of Criminal Justice in New York. Kobilinsky had advised Anthony's attorneys on the forensic case against her but was not involved in the trial. After a trial of a month and a half, jurors...
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...jury and making critical decisions. A fairly new trend in jury selection is that of trial consulting, which gained notoriety in the mid 1990’s in the O.J. Simpson trial. The application of scientific jury selection (SJS) was first applied in 1971, and has grown tremendously in recent years for those who have the means to employ such methods. The goal of the trial consultant is to find persons to fill the jury seats who optimally will arrive at a decision that will be favorable to their client. The tools used by the trial consultant include “…community surveys, focus groups, mock trials, pretrial investigations of prospective jurors, and voir dire assistance.” (Cleary, 2005, p.3). It appears that in the O.J. Simpson case in the mid 1990’s, the trial consultant hired by his team did an effective job as Simpson was acquitted of all charges. However, there are those that believe the Simpson verdict was an anomaly and the...
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...语法改错总结 基本方法 : 每题5个选项,相对正确,排除法,挑错 宏观策略 : 1. 每题的错误类型都在划线部分的前三和后三个单词,先读原文,竖着看选项前3跟后3个单词,找出选项差别,从选项差异看错误类型。一但发现选项错误,立即在其他选项找同样的错误。 1-228-9 The first trenches that were cut into a 500-acre site at Tell Hamoukar, Syria, have yielded strong evidence for centrally administered complex societies in northern regions of the Middle East that were arising simultaneously with but independently of the more celebrated city-states of southern Mesopotamia, in what is now southern Iraq. A. that were cut into a 500-acre site at Tell Hamoukar, Syria, have yielded strong evidence for centrally administered complex societies in northern regions of the Middle East that were arising simultaneously with but B. that were cut into a 500-acre site at Tell Hamoukar, Syria, yields strong evidence that centrally administered complex societies in northern regions of the Middle East were arising simultaneously with but also C. having been cut into a 500-acre site at Tell Hamoukar, Syria, have yielded strong evidence that centrally administered complex societies in northern regions of the Middle East were arising simultaneously but D. cut into a 500-acre site at Tell Hamoukar, Syria, yields strong evidence of centrally administered complex societies in northern regions of the Middle East arising simultaneously but also E. cut into a 500-acre site at Tell Hamoukar, Syria, have yielded strong evidence that centrally administered complex societies in northern regions of the Middle East arose...
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