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Super Predators Essay Research Paper What is (стр. 2 из 2)

(Hazlehurst & Hazlehurst, 1998, p. 150). Profiles In every community,

roughly 2 percent of the juvenile offender population is responsible for up to

60 percent of the violent juvenile crime. Only 25 to 35 juveniles in every

100,000 members of the population will engage in criminal activity that matches

the Serious Habitual Offender pattern. Based on criteria developed by the U. S.

Department of Justice, this means that 0.03 percent to 0.04 percent of all

juveniles between 14 and 17 years old will be Serious Habitual Offenders. A

profile of a Serious Habitual Offender was collected from data collected and

analyzed by the Reagan Administration team at the U.S. Department of Justice in

the 1980s presents a graphic portrait of the serious habitual offender: The

typical SHO is male, 15 years and six months old. He has been arrested 11 to 14

times, exclusive of status offences, and five times for felonies. He comes from

a dysfunctional family; and in 46 percent of cases, at least one of his parents

also has an arrest history. He has received long-term and continuing social

services from as many as six different community service agencies, including

family, youth, mental health, social services, school, juvenile, or police

authorities, and continues to drain these resources for years before he is

finally incarcerated as a career criminal. The typical SHO’s family history

follows a classic pattern of social pathologies: 53 percent of his siblings also

have a history of arrest; and in 59 percent of these cases, there is no father

figure in the home. The absence of a father is particularly destructive for

boys; only 2 percent of SHOs are female. Furthermore, 68 percent of these

offenders have committed crimes of violence, 15 percent have a history of

committing sex crimes, and 51 percent have a reported missing or runaway record.

If a broken family characterized by physical or sexual abuse is an early

indicator of criminal behaviour, then virtually all of these serious habitual

offenders fit this category. These findings are consistent with the Heritage

Foundation’s widely reported analysis of the true root causes of violent crime,

particularly the crimogenic conditions associated with broken or dysfunctional

families. · SHOs do not consider the crimes they have committed to be all

that bad. · Forty-five percent are gang members, 64 percent associate

with other serious habitual offenders, and 75 percent abuse drugs. Recent

studies show that illegal drug use among the young is on the rise and a

significant majority of all present day SHOs -"Super Predators"- use

or sell illegal drugs and often become addicted themselves. Illegal drug use and

alcohol abuse tends to be regular features of their criminal conduct. Drugs, in

particular, are part of the criminal scene of these juvenile offenders, and the

use and sale of drugs contributes significantly to a SHO’s other criminal

activity. The need to purchase illegal drugs, combined with the warped hedonism

of the addict, shapes and drives much of the criminal activity of this class of

criminals. Juvenile crime and violence is on the rise. Many criminologists are

calling it an epidemic, a ticking time bomb, the calm before the storm, and a

long descent into night, you choose the clichИ. The reasons for this rise

in teen crime seems to have its roots not so much in poverty as it does to

poverty of values. Experts like John DiIulio and James Q. Wilson believe that

the cure lies in a renaissance of personal responsibility and a reassertion of

responsibility over rights and community over egoism. There is definitely a need

for more study on the new breed of teen criminal -"the Super

Predator". We don’t need yet another library full of jargon riddled

criminology studies to tell us what the Roman sages knew: what society does to

children, children will do to society. Most in the education as well as the

psychological fields will blanch whenever the terms values, church,

responsibility, and family, are bandied about. But the inescapable reality is

that since the sixties, when these terms were castigated and relegated to

"being quaint", we have witnessed an incredibly fast and pernicious

rise in the types of pathologies that have accompanied the decline of the family

structure. While I am by no means a religious zealot, it seems to me that

government has been a poor substitute for the family and the church in teaching

basic core values. Government certainly has a role to play financially, but the

strictures and the applications of any type of largess need to come from

Community leaders or clergy members who have a real stake in the community.

While it is tragic that there seem to be a large number of "lost

youths" mired in a life of crime and violence, the safety of the community,

especially the children in the community, should be the primary concern. I will

side with John DiIulio and agree that we need more churches, but I also feel

that more correctional facilities need to be built to house young offenders. If

children as young as 7, 8, or 9 years of age need to be incarcerated like

adults, then do it. While this may seem harsh, I believe that it is the only way

to prevent further decay. With harsher enforcement of laws towards violent

minors enforced, attention can be paid to addressing the ills that create the

problem, family decay. More attention needs to be paid to the people who

actually live in the communities affected. We must deal with this problem of the

"super predator" teen thug swiftly and harshly, before it’s too late

to save the children in danger of falling in with or becoming victims of crime

themselves.

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York: Simon & Shuster Duin, J. (1996, November 17). Alarm over crime puts

focus on nation’s `moral crisis’., The Washington Times, p. 31. Dupalantier, F.R.

(1995). The importance of fathers. [Online]. Available Internet: http://www.heritage.org

Easton, N. J. (1995, May 02). The crime doctor is in, but not everyone likes

Prof. John DiIulio’s message: There is no big fix. Los Angeles Times, p.E-1.

Hazlehurst, C. & Hazlehurst, K. M. (1998) Gangs and youth subcultures:

International explorations. New Brunswick, NJ: Transaction Publishers Kaihla, P.

(1996, January 22). No conscience, no remorse. Maclean`s, p. 45-50 Paul, D.

(1996, June 17). Violence with a youthful face: Adolescent criminality explodes

in Canada. Alberta Report, 23, p.27. U.S. Department of Justice, Bureau of

Justice Statistics. [Online]. Available Internet: http://www.ojp.usdoj.gov/bjs/html

Wilson, J.Q. (1985) Crime and human nature. New York: Simon and Schuster Worsham,

F., James-Blakely, A., Stephen, J. (1997, February 01). Crime and drugs. Nation`s

Business, 85, p. 24 Zoglin, R. (1996, January 15). Now for the bad news: A

teenage time bomb. Time, 147, p. 52