welcome to unit two ap-362 kaplan university

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Welcome to Unit Two AP-362 Kaplan University Introductio n to Astrophysi cs

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Welcome to Unit Two AP-362 Kaplan University. Introduction to Astrophysics. Wrong slide???. What’s Due This Week?. This week (Unit), you will be completing the following assignments: The Unit #2 Discussion Board The Unit #2 Quiz - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Welcome to Unit Two AP-362 Kaplan University

Welcome to Unit TwoAP-362

Kaplan University

Introduction to Astrophysics

Page 2: Welcome to Unit Two AP-362 Kaplan University

Wrong slide???

Page 3: Welcome to Unit Two AP-362 Kaplan University

What’s Due This Week?

• This week (Unit), you will be completing the following assignments:

• The Unit #2 Discussion Board• The Unit #2 Quiz• The Unit #2 Live Seminar or the 300-word Alternate

Essay Assignment

CRIMINAL JUSTICE TODAY, 9E

PRENTICE HALLby Frank Schmalleger

©2007 Pearson Education, Inc.

3

Page 4: Welcome to Unit Two AP-362 Kaplan University

Unit Two- CJ101

The Crime Picture

Page 5: Welcome to Unit Two AP-362 Kaplan University

Grading Tips for the Live Seminars

• Arrive BEFORE the scheduled start time (5 minutes?)

• Stay on topic• Avoid side conversations• Participate (post) regularly during the hour• Avoid posts such as “I agree”, “Good point”,

“Nice answer”, etc.

Page 6: Welcome to Unit Two AP-362 Kaplan University

Grading Tips for the Live Seminars• Make good posts: “ I believe the 4th

Amendment is the most important because it protects use against unreasonable searches”.

• Don’t log out of the seminar early• While I may not be able to respond to each

comment posted, I do review the seminar log when evaluating your level or participation for your grade.

Page 7: Welcome to Unit Two AP-362 Kaplan University

Just in case!• Each Unit/Week begins on Wednesday and

ends the following Tuesday @ 12:00 midnight, ET.

• I have until the following Sunday to enter your grades into the Gradebook (I try to post them sooner)

• You can NEVER make up a missed quiz!

Page 8: Welcome to Unit Two AP-362 Kaplan University

• Each Unit has a Discussion Board Question• Must post a 100 word answer to that question

as early in the week as possible.• Must post at least two additional100-word

quality reply to other students by Tuesday, midnight, ET

• Spelling, punctuation, and grammar do count

Page 9: Welcome to Unit Two AP-362 Kaplan University

Alternate Seminar Essays• For students that missed the Thursday

evening Seminar, you can still make up the lost points by completing the 300-word alternate seminar essay assignment. The essay should be a summary of the unit topic, and you can review the archived file in the KHE Seminar window.

• To access the Seminar Archive….

Page 10: Welcome to Unit Two AP-362 Kaplan University

Select “Enter KHE Seminar” from the remote window the appears when you first enter the

Kaplan website.

Page 11: Welcome to Unit Two AP-362 Kaplan University

Select the correct date for the missed Seminar (listed by Year/Month/Day) by clicking on it with your mouse.

Click on the “Load Class” button and the seminar will load and play for your review.

Page 12: Welcome to Unit Two AP-362 Kaplan University

Terminology

• Violent Crime– Crimes against people that are violent in nature

• Property Crime– Crimes committed against property

• Clearance Rates– Number of crimes reported versus number of

crimes solved

Page 13: Welcome to Unit Two AP-362 Kaplan University

Crime Statistics

• Provide an overview of crime in this country• Decision makers use crime statistics to – Evaluate existing programs– Plan new legislation– Design new programs– Determine needs

Page 14: Welcome to Unit Two AP-362 Kaplan University

Sources of Crime Statistics

• Uniform Crime Report (UCR)* Crimes reported to police

• National Crime Victimization Survey (NCVS)* Crimes reported by victims

Page 15: Welcome to Unit Two AP-362 Kaplan University

Uniform Crime Report

• Since 1930, FBI has been compiling statistics on crimes known to police

• Police departments (about 16,000) voluntarily submit data

• FBI puts data into the Crime Index

Page 16: Welcome to Unit Two AP-362 Kaplan University

What is the Crime Index?

• Measures Part 1 offenses of the UCR• Gives crime rate number and comparisons for

regions, dates, crimes

Page 17: Welcome to Unit Two AP-362 Kaplan University

Part 1 Offences (8)

• MurderThe unlawful killing of another human being.

● Least likely of the part 1 crimes ● Most likely to be cleared

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Part 1 Offences (8)

• Forcible RapeSexual relations with another by force and/or

without consent ● Least reported of all crimes ● Under UCR, only includes rapes of females Rape is broken down into a variety of categories

(sexual battery, statutory rape, date rape)

Page 19: Welcome to Unit Two AP-362 Kaplan University

Part 1 Offenses (8)

• RobberyThe unlawful taking or attempted taking of the property of another in the presence of the victim with the use of threat or force

Page 20: Welcome to Unit Two AP-362 Kaplan University

Part 1 Offenses (8)

• Aggravated AssaultThe unlawful, intentional inflicting or attempting to inflict serious bodily harm or injury of another● Assaults broken down into 2 categories

SimpleAggravated

Page 21: Welcome to Unit Two AP-362 Kaplan University

Part 1 Offenses (8)

• Theft/LarcenyThe unlawful taking or attempting to take the

property of another with the intent to permanently deprive the other

● often not reported because loses are small ● includes trains, planes, boats, most farm

equipment

Page 22: Welcome to Unit Two AP-362 Kaplan University

Part 1 Offenses (8)

• Motor Vehicle TheftThe theft or attempted theft of a motor vehicle

● motor vehicle is anything that is a self propelled road vehicle that runs on land surface and not on rails

● high reporting rates/low clearance rates

Page 23: Welcome to Unit Two AP-362 Kaplan University

Part 1 Offenses (8)

• BurglaryThe unlawful entry of a dwelling to commit a felony

or theft

Page 24: Welcome to Unit Two AP-362 Kaplan University

Part 1 Offenses (8)

• ArsonMalicious, intentional burning of a structure.

●damage must occur

Page 25: Welcome to Unit Two AP-362 Kaplan University

Property v. Person

PropertyTheft

Motor Vehicle TheftBurglary

Arson

PersonMurder

Forcible RapeRobbery

Aggravated Assault

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Part II Offenses

• All crimes except Part 1 crimes and traffic offenses

• Less serious crimes– Fraud– Vandalism– DUI– Gambling

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The New UCR

• To enhance the quantity, quality and timeline of crime data collection the National Incident-Based Reporting System (NIBRS) is being created

• Will look at every single crime that is committed

Page 28: Welcome to Unit Two AP-362 Kaplan University

The New UCR

• Advantages– Looks at all crimes– More accurate– Differentiates between attempt and commission

of a crime– Collect weapon information– Restructures assault and rape

Page 29: Welcome to Unit Two AP-362 Kaplan University

National Crime Victimization Survey (NCVS)

• Began in 1972 to discover the “dark figure of crime”

• Based on victims self reporting crimes• Gathered by the US Bureau of Justice Statistics• Include 6 Part 1 crimes (not arson or murder)

Page 30: Welcome to Unit Two AP-362 Kaplan University

UCR v. NCVSHow are they the same

Both provide crime estimates

Both limit types of crimes

Both limit how they collect info

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UCR v. NCVSHow are they different

• NCVS crimes are reported by victims. May not have been reported to police

• NCVS looks at household crimes (total crimes per household, not person)

• NCVS polls more people

Page 32: Welcome to Unit Two AP-362 Kaplan University

Crime typology

• Classification of crimes along a particular dimension– Legal categories– Offender motivation– Victim/offender characteristics

Page 33: Welcome to Unit Two AP-362 Kaplan University

Crimes against women

• Crimes in which a women is the victim• Crimes committed specifically targets women• Usually crimes of violence– Rape– Domestic abuse– Stalking

Page 34: Welcome to Unit Two AP-362 Kaplan University

Crimes against elderly

• Crimes committed against elderly people• Victim and offender usually strangers• Both property and violent crimes• Abuse/neglect by caregivers/family• Often victims of theft/fraud schemes

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Hate Crimes

• Crimes which there is evidence of prejudice bases on race, color, gender, sexual orientation, ethnicity, religion

• Hate crimes are punished more severely

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Corporate & White Collar Crimes

• Corporate– Violation of statute by a corporate identity (those acting

on behalf of a corporation)– “crime in the suits” – Usually non-violent

• White Collar Crimes– Unlawful activity of members of highly organized group– Usually they supply illegal goods and services

Page 37: Welcome to Unit Two AP-362 Kaplan University

Gun Crime

• The 2nd Amendment provides the Constitutional right to bear arms

• Approximately 1 million serious crimes committed a year involve the use of handguns

• Public concern has lead to creation of new laws regarding firearms– The Brady Handgun Bill (1994)

Page 38: Welcome to Unit Two AP-362 Kaplan University

Drug Crime

• Drugs and Crime– Drug crimes not accounted for by UCR or NCVS– Over ½ of inmates admit to being under the

influence of drugs/alcohol when they committed their offense

– Using drugs/alcohol leads to other crimes

Page 39: Welcome to Unit Two AP-362 Kaplan University

High Technology and Computer Crime

• Computer Crime– Any crime perpetrated through the use of a computer

• Software piracy– Unauthorized duplication of software and other data

• Computer virus– A computer program designed to secretly invade other

systems and alter the information/how they operate

Page 40: Welcome to Unit Two AP-362 Kaplan University

Terrorism

• No single definition• In general, defined as:– a violent act or an act dangerous to human life

committed in violation of criminal laws to intimidate to coerce a government or civilian population

Page 41: Welcome to Unit Two AP-362 Kaplan University

The Cost of Crime

• Crime costs individuals about $17.6 billion dollars a year

• That doesn’t include time lost from work, medical expenses

• Commercial costs about $1.2 billion dollars a year• State, local and federal expenditures total over $147

billion (investigation-prosecution)

Page 42: Welcome to Unit Two AP-362 Kaplan University

Classifications of Crime

• Define Felony crimes…..

Page 43: Welcome to Unit Two AP-362 Kaplan University

Classifications of Crime

• Define Felony crimes…..

A felony crime is any crime that carries, upon conviction, a prison sentence of more than 1 year, and/or a fine that is equal to or exceeds $5,000.00

Page 44: Welcome to Unit Two AP-362 Kaplan University

Classifications of Crime

• Define Misdemeanor crimes…..

Page 45: Welcome to Unit Two AP-362 Kaplan University

Classifications of Crime

• Define Misdemeanor crimes…..

A Misdemeanor crime is any crime that carries, upon conviction, a jail sentence of less then 1 year, and/or a fine that is equal to or less than $1,000.00