Thursday, July 27, 2017

DeVry University: Rachel Sakhi - "CORRECTIONAL SOCIETY" | JADM DISCUSSION: Week 4 Midterm: Federal Prison, State, and Other Correctional Facilities, July 27, 2017

Rachel Sakhi


Hello Professor and Everyone, 
This is Rachel, and I'm posting on a new post due to budget concerns as I'm 
on a payment clock here trying to submit these assignments in Beverly Hills, CA
near Crenshaw @ Wilshire Boulevard, Los Angeles, California, United States. 
Respectfully I submit these posts, however as quickly as possible and without 
time to associate the responses to a particular class participant therefore I generally 
address the entire class. Thanks for reading if this is your choice and you are invited 
to respond as well with much appreciation. I put lots of effort into reading and 
comprehending the current topics. Have a wonderful week. The following topics are
covered: 

QUICK FACTS: 
  • Male offenders: convicted and sentenced are 93% of all prison inmates (Seiter, 20**).
  • 3 of the largest jurisdictions holding more than 1/3 of all the female prisoners are California, Texas, and the United States Federal system (Seiter, 20**).
  • Females are convicted of committing murder Vs. Males convicted of committing murder: A concern which aroused concern of equality in Criminal Justice System processing from pretrial to serving the sentence (Seiter, 200**).
[GP]: General Population
The general population within a prison is the population of inmates with the least amount, individually, possessing special needs or other healthcare, mental health, and/or high-risk concerns or conditions (i.e., suicidal, self-inflicting harmful behaviors, etc.)

[WB] & [RD]: (Pp. 221).:
We come to the popular topic of basic race-related wars on proving with valid evidence whether or not race-based prejudice is utilized as a tool of decision-making from prosecution, police, judges, prison officials, and parole board members. Seiter (20**) has authored a series of criminal justice textbooks, however in this textbook the major focus lies on the underground world of corrections activities including perspectives from a variety of characters and major players of the prison correctional system. 

The topic of "racial disparity" audits concerns of reality within prison populations to research the validity of discrimination allegations during CJS process from officials solely based on race:
"ironically, even as an African American man holds the highest office in the country" states Seiter (20**) with an excerpt borrowed from a study by the National Urban League.
The overall gesture for the emphasis is to bring light to a ghost-like suggestion that although there's a 'minority' male in the white house and on television frequently, the reality is that brutality still exists with only one cause seemingly as the reason. 

According to Seiter's (20**) excerpt the National Urban League states that as late as 2009 "African Americans remain twice as likely as White Americans" to sustain an unemployed, impoverished, and inferior state within the 'free' society, and "more than six (6) times as likely to get incarcerated" suggesting irregardless of presidential milestones, the African American society as an entirety is still socially, personally, and economically inferior to all other racial groups regardless of the other racial groups' failures and poverty (SEITER, 20**). Is this true, just gossip, or should a national 'gag' order get petitioned to the United States Congress to make the encouragement of spirit of libel (arrest-able immediately) a social and moral crime with respect to the African North American society? (Seiter, 20**).





Edited by Rachel Sakhi on Jul 27 at 8:44pm

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