Cep Crimsocnotes
Cep Crimsocnotes
Cep Crimsocnotes
CRIMINOLOGY
- the entire body of knowledge regarding crimes, criminals and the
efforts of society to prevent and repress them.
- the scientific study of the causes of crime in relation to man and
society who set and define rules and regulations for himself and
others to govern.
THE EVOLUTION OF CRIMINOLOGY
NATURE OF CRIMINOLOGY
1) It is an applied science. (INSTRUMENTATION)
2) It is a social science. Crime is a social creation and it exists in a
society being a social phenomenon.
3) It is dynamic.
Criminology changes as a social condition changes. It is concomitant
with the advancement of other sciences that have been applied to it.
4) It is nationalistic.
The study of crimes must be in relation with the existing criminal law
within a territory or country. The question as to whether an act is a crime is
dependent on the criminal law of a state. It follows therefore that the causes
of crime must be determined from its social needs and standards.
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Sociology of law = attempt at scientific analysis of the condition
which the penal/criminal laws has developed as a process of formal or social
control.
Sociology = It is the study of human society, its origin, structure,
functions and direction.
Criminological research = study of the crime correlated to with
antecedent variables, state of crime trend.
CRIME
- An act or omission in violation of a public law forbidding or
commanding it.
- A violation of societal rules of behavior as interpreted and
expressed by a criminal legal code by people holding social and
political power.
SUB-CLASSIFICATION OF CRIMES
1) FELONY
- an act or omission punishable by law which is committed by
means of dolo (deceit) or culpa (fault)and punishable under the
Revised Penal Code
2) OFFENSE
- an act or omission in violation of a special law
3) INFRACTION
- an act or omission in violation of a city or municipal ordinance
Classes of Crimes
1. Crime Mala in Se = Acts that are outlawed because they violate basic
moral values such as rape, murder, assault and robbery?
a. Intentional felony (IFI)
b. Non-intentional felony (IFN)
2. Crime Mala prohibita= acts that are outlawed because they clash
with current norms and public opinion , such as tax, traffic and drug
laws.
ELEMENTS OF A FELONY
a) INTENTIONAL FELONIES:
- felonies committed by means of dolo (deceit)
- the act or omission is performed with deliberate intent or malice
1) freedom or voluntariness
2) intelligence
3) intent
b) CULPABLE FELONIES:
- felonies committed by means of culpa (fault)
- the act or omission of the offender is not malicious and the injury
caused by the offender is unintentional, it being the simply the
incident of another act performed without malice
1) Freedom or voluntariness
2) Intelligence
3) Negligence or imprudence (lack of foresight or lack of skill)
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a) consummated crime – when all the elements necessary for
its execution and accomplishment are present
b) frustrated crime – when the offender has performed all the
acts of execution which will produce the felony as a consequence
but which nevertheless do not produce it, by reason of causes
independent of the will of the perpetrator
c) attempted crime - when the offender commences the
commission of a crime directly by overt acts and does not
perform all the acts of execution which should produce the felony
by reason of some cause or accident other than his own
spontaneous desistance
3) according to plurality:
a) simple crime – single act constituting only one offense
b) complex crime – single act constituting two or more grave felonies
or an is a necessary means for committing the other
4) according to gravity:
a) grave felonies – those to which the law attaches the
capital punishment or afflictive penalties
b) less grave felonies – those to which the law attaches
correccional penalties
c) light felonies – those to which the law attaches the penalty
of arresto menor or a fine not exceeding P200.00
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Cleared crimes = two ways by which crimes are cleared: (1) when at
least one person is arrested, charged, and turned over to the court for
prosecution, (2) by exception means, when some element beyond police
control precludes the physical arrest of an offender e.g. when he/she leaves
the country.
Corporate crimes = white collar crime involving a legal violation by
corporate entity, such as price fixing, restraint of trade, or hazardous waste
dumping.
Crime of reduction = crimes that are committed when the offended
party experiences a loss of some quality relative to his/her present standing
such as when they become victims of robbery or theft, but they may also be
victimized if their dignity is stripped from them when they are taunted by
racists.
Crimes of repression = crimes that are committed when members of
a group are prevented from achieving their fullest potential because of
racism, sexism, or some status bias.
Cyber crime = the commission of criminal acts using the
instruments of modern technology such as computers or the internet.
Economic crime = an act in violation of the criminal law that is
designed to bring financial gain to the offender.
Enterprise crime = the use of illegal tactics by a business to make
profit in the market place.
Expressive crime = a crime that has no purpose except to
accomplish the behavior t hand such as shooting someone.
Hate crimes = acts of violence or intimidation designed to terrorize or
frighten people considered undesirable because of their race, religion, ethnic
origin, or sexual orientation.
Inchoate crimes = Incomplete or contemplated crimes such as
criminal solicitation or criminal attempts.
Mission hate crimes = violent crimes committed by disturbed
individuals who see it as their duty to rid the world of evil.
Organizational crimes = crimes that involves large corporations and
their efforts to control the market place and earn huge profits through
unlawful bidding, unfair advertising, monopolistic practices, or other illegal
means.
Organized crimes = illegal activities of people and organizations
whose acknowledged purpose is profit through illegitimate business
enterprise.
Public Order crimes = acts that are considered illegal because they
threaten general well-being of society and challenge its accepted moral
principles. Prostitution, drug use, and the sale of pornography are considered
public order crimes.
Reactive hate crime = perpetrators believe they are taking a
defensive stand against outsiders who they believe threaten their community
or way of life.
Retaliatory hate crime = offense committed in response to a hate
crime, real or perceived.
Statutory crimes = crimes defined by legislative bodies in response
to changing social conditions, public opinion, and custom.
Trill-seeking hate crime = Hatemongers who join forces to have fun
by bashing minorities or destroying property; inflicting pain on others give a
sadistic thrill.
Victimless crimes = crimes that violate the moral order but in
which there is no actual victim or target. In these crimes which include
drug abuse and sex offenses, it is society as a whole and not an individual
who is considered the victim.
White-collar crimes = illegal acts that capitalize on a person’s
status in the market place. It may involve theft, embezzlement, fraud,
market manipulation, restraint of trade, and false advertising.
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Other terms referring to crimes
I. Crime of Rape
a. acquaintance rape = forcible sex in which offender and the
victim are acquainted with one another.
b. aggravated rape = rape involving multiple offenders,
weapons and victim injuries.
c. date rape = forcible sex during the courting
relationship.
d. gang rape = forcible sex involving multiple attacker.
e. marital rape = forcible sex between people who are
legally married to each other.
f. Serial rape =multiple rapes committed by one person over
time.
g. statutory rape = sexual relations between an underage
minor female and an adult male.
II. Crime of killing
a. Homicide = the killing of human being by another.
b. Parricide = the act of killing one’s own father, mother,
spouse or child.
c. Infanticide = killing of an infant less than 3 days old.
d. Sororicide = killing one’s own sister.
e. Fratricide = killing of one’s own brother
f. Matricide = killing of a mother by her own child.
g. Patricide = killing of a father by his own child.
h. Uxoricide = act of one who murders his wife.
i. Eldercide = the murder of a senior citizen.
j. Abortion (aborticide) = an act of destroying (killing) a
fetus in the womb.
k. Suicide = taking one’s own life voluntarily and intentionally.
l. Regicide =the killing or murder of a king.
m.Vaticide = the killing of a prophet.
n. Euthanasia = mercy killing or the act or practice of
painlessly putting to death a person’s suffering from incurable
and distressing disease.
o. Involuntary manslaughter = a homicide that occurs as a
result of acts that are negligent and without regard for the
harm they may cause to others, such as driving while under
the influence of liquor or drugs. (also known as negligent
manslaughter)
p. Voluntary manslaughter = a homicide committed in the
heat of passion or during a sudden quarrel; although intent
may be present, malice is not.
q. Mass murder = the killing of a large number of people in
a single incident by an offender who typically does not seek
concealment or escape.
r. Murder = the unlawful killing of a human being with
malicious intent.
s. Serial murder = the killing of a large number of people
over time by an offender who seeks to escape detection.
III. Crimes against Property
a. Acquaintance robbery = robbery who focus their thefts on
people they know.
b. Arson = the intentional or negligent burning of a home,
structure, or vehicle for criminal purposes such as profit,
revenge, fraud, or crime concealment.
c. Arson for profit = people looking to collect insurance
money, but who are afraid or unafraid to set the fire
themselves, hire professional arsonist.
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d. Arson fraud = a business owner burns his or her property, or
hires someone to do it, to escape financial problems.
e. Burglary = breaking into and entering a home or structure
for the purpose of committing a felony.
f. Carjacking = theft of a car by force or threat of force.
g. Churning = a white collar crime in which a stockbroker
makes repeated trades to fraudulently increase his/her
commission.
h. Commercial theft = business theft that is part of the
criminal law; without such laws the free enterprise system
could not exists.
i. Grand Larceny = theft of money or property of
substantial values, punished as a felony.
j. Larceny = taking for one’s own use the property of
another, by means other than force or threats on the victim
or forcibly breaking into a person’s home or workplace; theft.
k. Petit (petty) larceny = theft of a small amount of money
or property, punished as a misdemeanor.
l. Pilferage = theft by employees through stealth or deception.
m.Robbery = taking or attempting to take something of value
by force or threat of force and/or by putting the victim in fear.
n. Shoplifting = the taking of goods from retail store.
CRIMINAL
- in the legal sense, a criminal is any person who has been found to
have committed a wrongful act in the course of the standard judicial
process; there must be a final verdict of his guilt.
- in the criminological sense, a person is already considered a
criminal the moment he committed a crime.
5) It is uniform in application.
An act described as a crime is a crime no matter who committed it,
wherever committed in the Philippines and whenever committed. No
exceptions must be made as to the criminal liability. The definition of crimes
together with the corresponding punishment must be uniformly construed,
although there may be a difference in the enforcement of a given specific
provision of the penal law.
3) CODE OF DRAKON
- knows as the “ultimate in severity”
- codified by Drakon, the Athenian lawgiver of the seventh century BC
Highlights of the Code of Drakon:
- death was the punishment for almost every offense
- murderers might avoid execution by going into exile; if they return to
Athens, it was not a crime to kill them
- death penalty was administered with great brutality
4) LAWS OF SOLON
- Solon was appointed archon and was given legislative powers
- Solon repealed all the laws of the Code of Drakon, except the law on
homicide
- Solon was one of the first to see that a lawgiver had to make laws that
applied equally to all citizens and also saw that the law of punishment
had to maintain proportionality to the crimes committed
Highlights of the Laws of Solon:
- the thief was required to return stolen property and pay the victim a
sum equal to twice its value
- for the crime of temple robbery, the penalty was death
- for rape of a woman, the penalty was a fine of certain amount
CLASSICAL CRIMINOLOGY
The classical school of criminology grew out of a reaction against the
barbaric system of law, punishment and justice that existed. There was no
real system of criminal justice in Europe at that time. Some crimes were
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specified, some were not. Judges had discretionary power to convict a
person for an act not even legally defined as criminal.
This school of thought is based on the assumption that individuals
choose to commit crimes after weighing the consequences of their actions.
According to classical criminologists, individuals have free will. They
can choose legal or illegal means to get what they want, fear of punishment
can deter them from committing crime and society can control behavior by
making the pain of punishment greater than the pleasure of the criminal
gains.
This theory, however, does not give any distinction between an adult
and a minor or a mentally-handicapped in as far as free will is concerned.
JEREMY BENTHAM
- founded the concept of UTILITARIANISM – assumes that all our
actions are calculated in accordance with their likelihood of bringing
pleasure and pain
- devised the pseudo-mathematical formula called “felicific
calculus” which states that individuals are human calculators who
put all the factors into an equation in order to decide whether a
particular crime is worth committing or not
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- he reasoned that in order to deter individuals from committing
crimes, the punishment, or pain, must be greater than the
satisfaction, or pleasure, he would gain from committing the crime
NEOCLASSICAL CRIMINOLOGY
This theory modified the doctrine of free will by stating that free will of
men may be affected by other factors and crime is committed due to some
compelling reasons that prevail. These causes are pathology, incompetence,
insanity or any condition that will make it impossible for the individual to
exercise free will entirely. In the study of legal provisions, this is termed as
either mitigating or exempting circumstances.
POSITIVIST CRIMINOLOGY
During the late eighteenth century, significant advances in knowledge
of both the physical and social world influenced thinking about crime. Forces
of positivism and evolutionism moved the field of criminology from
philosophical to a scientific perspective. From there, a more diligent search
of criminal behavior began.
Positive theorists were the first to claim the importance of looking at
individual difference among criminals. These theorists who concentrated on
the individual structures of a person, stated that people are passive and
controlled, whose behaviors are imposed upon them by biological and
environmental factors.
CESARE LOMBROSO
- considered the FATHER OF MODERN CRIMINOLOGY due to his
application of modern scientific methods to trace criminal behavior,
however, most of his ideas are now discredited
- he claimed that criminals are distinguishable from non-criminals due
to the presence of atavistic stigmata (Atavistic anomalies)– the
physical features of creatures at an earlier stage of development
- he asserted that crimes are committed by those who are born with
certain recognizable hereditary traits
- according to his theory, criminals are usually in possession of
huge jaws and strong canine teeth, the arm span of
criminals is often greater than their height, just like that of
apes who use their forearms to push themselves along the ground
- other physical stigmata include deviation in head size and shape,
asymmetry of the face, excessive dimensions of the jaw and
cheekbones, eye defects and peculiarities, ears of unusual size,
nose twisted, upturned or flattened in thieves, or aqualine or
beaklike in murderers, fleshy lips, swollen and protruding, and
pouches in the cheek like those of animal’s toes
- Lombroso’s work supported the idea that the criminal was a
biologically and physically inferior person
- according to him, there are three (3) classes of criminals:
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1) born criminals – individuals with at least five (5) atavistic
stigmata
2) insane criminals – those who are not criminals by birth; they
become criminals as a result of some changes in their
brains which interfere with their ability to distinguish between
right and wrong
3) criminaloids - those with make up of an ambiguous group that
includes habitual criminals, criminals by passion and other
diverse types.
PHYSIOLOGY OR SOMATOTYPE
- this refers to the study of the body build of a person in relation to
his temperament and personality and the type of offense he is most
prone to commit.
- this study which searches the relationship of body build to behavior
became popular during the first half of the twentieth century.
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The following are the proponents of the somatotype school of
criminology:
1) ERNST KRETCHMER
- he correlated body build and constitution with characters or
temperamental reactions and mentality
- he distinguished three (3) principal types of physiques:
2) WILLIAM SHELDON
- formulated his own group of somatotype:
2) HENRY GODDARD
- he studied the lives of the KALLIKAK FAMILY and found that
among the descendants from MARTIN KALLIKAK’s relationship with a
feeble-minded lady, there were 143 feeble-minded and only 46 normal,
36 were illegitimate, 3 epileptics, 3 criminals, 8 kept brothels and 82
died of infancy; his marriage with a woman from a good family
produced almost all normal descendants, only 2 were alcoholics, 1 was
convicted of religious offense, 15 died at infancy and no one became
criminal or epileptic.
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INTELLIGENCE AS A FACTOR IN CRIMINALITY
The classic studies of the Juke and Kallikak families were among the
first to show that feeblemindedness or low-intelligence can be inherited and
transferred from one generation to the next. Numerous test were also
conducted that lead to the development of the use of IQ tests as a testing
procedure for offenders. The very first results seemed to confirm that
offenders had low mental abilities and they were found to be mentally
impaired.
B. PYSCHOLOGICAL DETERMINISM
This explains the psychological determinants which define
behavior of a person. This idea has long been hatched by thinkers who
were consumed by the belief that it is the psychological equivalents that
prod the person to act the way he does.
There are many ways to classify psychological theories of crime
causation. Some of the theories emphasize emotional problems, mental
disorders, sociopathy and thinking patterns. But the common assumption of
these theories is that there is something wrong with the mind of the offender
which caused him to commit crimes.
From among the many theories regarding the relationship of
psychology and crime, the psychoanalytic theory by Sigmund Freud is the
most notable:
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b) OBSESSIVE COMPULSIVE BEHAVIOR – people who suffer from
this have unwanted, intrusive and repetitive thoughts or
behaviors
2) PSYCHOSES
- a more serious type of mental disorder, which can be organic or
functional
- psychotic people lose contact with reality and have difficulty
distinguishing reality from fantasy
- the most common type of psychosis are the following:
a) SCHIZOPRENIA – also called dementia praecox; characterized
by distortions or withdrawal from reality, disturbances of
thoughts and language and withdrawal from social contact.
b) PARANOIA - gradual impairment of the intellect, characterized
by delusions or hallucination.
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(3) satisfying instinctive urges without considering right and wrong (they lack
guilt).
Isaac Ray = an acknowledged American psychiatrist who popularized the
concept of “moral insanity” in his book, “A treatise on the Medical
Jurisprudence of Insanity”.
C) SOCIOLOGICAL DETERMINISM
Sociological factors refers to things, places and people with whom we
come in contact with and which play a part in determining our actions and
conduct. These causes may bring about the development of criminal
behavior
1) EMILE DURKHEIM
- one of the founding scholars of sociology
- published a book, “Division of Social Labor”, which became a landmark
work on the organization of societies
- according to him:
a) Crime is as normal a part of society as birth and death
b) Crime is part of human nature because it has existed
during periods of both poverty and prosperity
c) As long as human differences exists, which is one of the
fundamental conditions of society, it is but natural and
expected that it will result to criminality
- One of his profound contributions to contemporary criminology is the
concept of anomie, the breakdown of social order as a result of loss
of standards and values
3) ADOLPHE QUETELET
- He repudiated the free will doctrine of the classicists
- He founded what is known as the CARTHOGRAPHIC SCHOOL OF
CRIMINOLOGY, together with ANDRE MICHAEL GUERRY
- This study used social statistical data and provided important
demographic information on the population, including density, gender,
religious affiliations and social economic status
- He found a strong influence of age, sex, climate condition, population
composition and economic status in criminality
4) ENRICO FERRI
- a member of the Italian parliament
- he believed that criminals could not be held morally responsible
because they did not choose to commit crimes but was driven to
commit them by conditions of their lives
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SOCIAL NORMS
- Also called rules of conduct
- shared standard of behavior which in turn require certain expectations
of behavior in a given situation
- Socially accepted and expected behavior or conduct in society
- set of rules that govern an individuals behavior and actions
SOCIALIZATION
- refers to the learning process by which a person learns and internalizes
the ways of society so that he can function and become an active part
of society.
CULTURE
- refers to the system of values and meanings shared by a group of
individuals including the embodiment of those values and meanings in
a material object
- refers to the way of life, modes of thinking, acting and feeling
- it is a design of living that is transmitted from one generation to the
next
2) STRAIN THEORY
- holds that crime is a function of the conflict between the goals people
have and the means they can use to legally obtain them
- argues that the ability to obtain these goals is class dependent:
members of the lower class are unable to achieve these goals which
come easily to those belonging to the upper class
- Consequently, they feel anger, frustration and resentment, referred to
as STRAIN
- The commission of crimes with the aim of achieving these goals results
from this conflict
Criminology 2
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PHILIPPINE CRIMINAL JUSTICE SYSTEM
LUPONG TAGAPAMAYAPA
It is a body of men created to settle disputes within the barangay level.
It is also referred to as the LUPON.
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Essentially, the Lupon must provide a forum for matters relevant
to the amicable settlement of disputes for the speedy resolution of
disputes.
PANGKAT TAGAPAGKASUNDO
It shall act as the conciliation panel. It is also referred to as the
PANGKAT.
It shall be composed of three (3) members chosen from the
members of the Lupon. They shall choose from among the three of them the
Pangkat Chairman and Pangkat Secretary.
The Pangkat shall be constituted whenever a dispute is
brought before the Lupon.
The members of the Pangkat shall be chosen by the parties of
the dispute from among the Lupon members. In case of
disagreement, the Barangay Chairman shall draw lots.
2. Upon receipt of the complaint the Chairman shall meet with the
respondent and complainant and mediate. If he fails in his
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mediation within fifteen (15) days, he shall set a date for the
constitution of the Pangkat.
3. The Pangkat shall meet not later than three (3) days after their
constitution, on the date set by the Chairman, to hear both parties.
Ancient Roots
The forerunner of the contemporary police system was the practice of
barangay chieftains to select able-bodied young men to protect their
barangay during the night and were not required to work in the fields during
daytime. Among the duties of those selected were to protect the properties
of the people in the barangay and protect their crops and livestock from wild
animals.
Spanish Period
Carabineros de Seguridad Publica – organized in 1712 for the purpose of
carrying the regulations of the Department of State; this was armed and
considered as the mounted police; years after, this kind of police
organization discharged the duties of a port, harbor and river police
Guardrilleros – this was a body of rural police organized in each town and
established by the Royal Decree of 18 January 1836; this decree provided
that 5% of the able-bodied male inhabitants of each province were to be
enlisted in this police organization for three years
Guardia Civil – this was created by a Royal Decree issued by the Crown on
12 February 1852 to partially relieve the Spanish Peninsular troops of their
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work in policing towns; it consisted of a body of Filipino policemen organized
originally in each of the provincial capitals of the central provinces of Luzon
under the Alcalde Mayor
American Period
The Americans established the United States Philippine Commission
headed by General Howard Taft as its first governor-general. On
January 9, 1901, the Metropolitan Police Force of Manila was
organized pursuant to Act No 70 of the Taft Commission. This has
become the basis for the celebration of the anniversary of the Manila’s Finest
every January 9th.
Act No 175 – entitled “An Act Providing for the Organization and
Government of an Insular Constabulary”, enacted on July 18, 1901
Act No 255 – the act that renamed the Insular Constabulary into Philippine
Constabulary, enacted on October 3, 1901
Post-American Period
PROSECUTOR/PUBLIC PROSECUTOR/FISCAL
- one who prosecutes another for a crime in the name of the
government; one who investigates the prosecution upon which an
accused is arrested; one who prepares an accusation against the
party whom he suspects to be guilty
- an officer of the government whose function is the prosecution of
criminal actions or suits partaking of the nature of criminal actions
DUTIES OF A PROSECUTOR
1) to conduct preliminary investigation;
2) to make proper recommendation during the inquest of the case
referred to them by the police after investigation of the suspect;
3) to represent the government or state during the prosecution of the
case against the accused
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- its primary task is to investigate and prosecute all criminal offenses
defined and penalized under the Revised Penal Code and other
special laws
- composed of the Office of the Chief State Prosecutor, the Regional
State Prosecution Offices and the Provincial and City Prosecution
Office
- under the general supervision and control of the Secretary of the
Department of Justice
- the Chief State Prosecutor is the head of the Prosecutorial Staff
PRELIMINARY INVESTIGATION
- an inquiry or proceeding to determine whether there is sufficient
ground to engender a well-founded belief that a crime has been
committed and the respondent is probably guilty thereof
- it is required to be conducted before the filing of the information for an
offense where the penalty prescribed by law is at least four years,
two months and one day
PROBABLE CAUSE
- the existence of such facts and circumstances as would excite a belief
in a reasonable mind, acting on the facts within the knowledge of
the prosecutor, that the person charged is guilty of the crime for
which he is prosecuted
- such facts and circumstances which would lead a reasonably discreet
and prudent man to believe that an offense has been committed by
the person sought to be arrested
COMPLAINT
- a sworn, written statement charging a person with an offense,
subscribed by the offended party, any peace officer or other public
officers charged with the enforcement of the law
- may be filed either before the prosecutor’s office or the court
INFORMATION
- an accusation in writing charging a person with an offense subscribed
by the fiscal and filed with the court
OFFENDED PARTY
- the person against whom or against whose property the crime was
committed
PEACE OFFICERS
- officers directly charged with the preservation of peace, law and order
- includes members of the Philippine National Police
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PROCEDURE OF PRELIMINARY INVESTIGATION
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- an organ of the government belonging to the judicial department
whose function is the application of the laws to controversies
brought before it and the public for the administration of justice.
JUDICIARY
- that branch of the government which is vested with judicial power
- that branch of the government which is empowered to interpret,
construe and apply the laws.
JUDICIAL POWER
- the power to apply the laws to contests or disputes concerning legally
recognized rights or duties of and between the state and the private
persons or between individual litigants in cases properly brought
before the judicial tribunals.
- vested in one Supreme Court and in such lower courts .
POWER OF JUDICIAL REVIEW
- the power of the Supreme Court to determine whether laws passed by
Congress and acts of the President are in accord with the
Constitution when the matter is raised
JUDGE
- a public officer so named in his commission and appointed to preside
over and to administer the law in a court of justice
JURISDICTION
- the power and authority of a court to hear, try and decide
cases
KINDS OF JURISDICTION:
1) General – when the court is empowered to decide all disputes which
may come before it except those assigned to other courts.
2) Limited – when the court has the authority to hear and determine only
a few specified cases.
3) Original – when the court can try and hear a case presented for the
first time.
4) Appellate – when the court can try a case already heard and decided
by a lower court, removed from the latter by appeal.
5) Exclusive – when the court can try and decide a case which cannot be
presented before any other court.
6) Concurrent – when any of two or more courts may take cognizance of
a case.
BP 129
- otherwise known as the Judiciary Reorganization Act of 1980
COURT OF APPEALS
-headed by a Presiding Justice
-has appellate jurisdiction over cases decided by the RTC
-has the power to order new trial
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-has jurisdiction over offenses punishable with imprisonment of six years and
one day and over
-has appellate jurisdiction over cases decided by the MTC, MTC and MCTC
SPECIAL COURTS
1) COURT OF TAX APPEALS
- created under RA 1125
- composed of three (3) judges
- has exclusive appellate jurisdiction to review on appeal decisions
of the Commissioner of the Bureau of Internal Revenue involving
internal revenue taxes and decisions of the Commissioner of the
Bureau of Customs involving customs duties
2) SANDIGANBAYAN
- created pursuant to PD 1606
- composed of fifteen (15) Justices
- tasked to handle criminal cases involving graft and corruption
and other offenses committed by high- ranking public officers
and employees in connection with the performance of their
functions
3) SHARIA COURTS
- created pursuant to PD 1083, otherwise known as the “Code
of Muslim Personal Laws of the Philippines”
- created as part of the judicial system
- courts of limited jurisdiction known as the Sharia District Court
are presided by District Judges
- Sharia circuit trial courts are presided by circuit judges
DECISION
- the judgment rendered by a court of justice or other competent
tribunals
JUDGMENT
- the adjudication by the court that the accused is guilty or not guilty of
the offense charged and the imposition of the proper penalty and
civil liability
- it must be written in the official language, personally and directly
prepared by the judge and subscribed by him
- shall contain clearly and distinctly a statement of the facts and the
laws upon which it is based
CONTENTS OF JUDGMENT
1) JUDGMENT OF CONVICTION
- When the judge finds the accused guilty of the charges against
him
- The legal qualification of the offense constituted by the acts
committed by the accused and the aggravating or mitigating
circumstances which attended its commission
- The participation of the accused in the offense, whether as
principal, accomplice or accessory after the fact
- The penalty imposed upon the accused
- The civil liability or damages caused by his wrongful act or
omission to be recovered from the accused by the offended party
unless the enforcement of the civil liability by a separate civil
action has been reserved or waived.
2) JUDGEMENT OF ACQUITTAL
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- When the judge finds the accused not guilty of the charges
against him.
- shall state whether the evidence of the prosecution absolutely
failed to prove the guilt of the accused or merely failed to prove
his guilt beyond reasonable doubt.
PROMULGATION OF JUDGMENT
- by reading in the presence of the accused and any judge of the court in
which it was rendered
- if the judge is absent, the judgment may be promulgated by the clerk
of court
FOURTH: CORRECTION
Definition: Is that branch of administration of criminal justice charged
with the responsibility for the custody, supervision and rehabilitation of
convicted offenders.
Penology = a branch of criminology which deals with the treatments,
management and administration of inmates.
Penalty = the suffering that is inflicted by the state for the
transgression of the law.
Theories Justifying Penalty
Prevention – the state punishes the criminal to prevent or suppress
the danger to the state and to the public arising from the criminal acts
of the offender.
Self-Defense – the State punishes the criminal as a measure of self-
defense to protect the society from the threat and wrong inflicted by
the criminal.
Reformation – the State punishes the criminal to help him reform or
be rehabilitated.
Exemplarity – the State punishes the criminal to serve as an example
to others and discourage others from committing crimes.
Justice – the State punishes the criminal as an act of retributive
justice, a vindication of absolute right and moral law violated by the
criminal.
Judicial Conditions of Penalty
Judicial and legal – penalty must be imposed by the proper authority
and by virtue of a judgment as prescribed by law.
Definite – penalty must be specific and exact.
Commensurate – penalty must be proportional to the gravity or
seriousness of the crime committed.
Personal – penalty must be imposed only to the person who actually
committed the crime with no substitutes.
Equal – penalty must be applied to all who committed the offense.
Prison law – basic law in the Philippines Prison System found in the Revised
Administrative Code.
Philippine Prison System – patterned after the US Federal Prison
System.
P.D. 29- the law that classified prisoners.
Classification of Prisoners
1. According to Sentence/place of confinement.
a. National or Insular Prisoner – one who is sentenced to serve a
prison term of three years and one day to death.
b. Provincial Prisoners – one who is sentenced to serve a prison
term of six months and one day to three years.
c. City Prisoners – one who is sentenced to serve a prison term of
one day to three years.
d. Municipal Prisoner – one who is sentenced to serve a prison
term of one day to six months.
2. According to fine:
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a. National or insular – one who is sentenced to serve a prison
term of three years and one day to death or whose fine is more than
6,000.00, or both.
b. City/Provincial prisoner – one who is sentenced to serve a
prison term of six months and one day to three years or whose fine is
less than P6,000.00 but more than P 200.00, or both.
c. Municipal prisoner – one who is sentenced to serve a prison
term of one day to six months or whose fine is not more than P200.00,
or both.
3. According to Status
a. detention prisoners – those held for security reasons,
investigation; those awaiting or undergoing trial and awaiting judgment.
b. Sentenced prisoners – those convicted by final judgment and
serving their sentence.
Kinds of Pardon:
a. absolute Pardon- the extinction of the criminal liability of the
individual to whom it is granted without any condition and restores to the
individual his civil rights.
b. Conditional Pardon - the extinction of the criminal liability of an
individual from the punishment which the law inflicts for the offense he has
committed, within certain limits or conditions.
2. Commutation of Sentence - reduction of the sentence, from a heavier
sentence to a less serious one, or from longer prison term to a shorter one.
- convicted offenders may only be granted commutation of sentence
after serving a portion of their sentence as provided by law.
3. Amnesty – an act of sovereign power granting oblivion or general pardon
for the past offense, usually granted in favor of certain classes of persons
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who have committed crimes of political character, such as treason or
rebellion.
4. Commutation of Sentence – reducing the period of imprisonment into
shorter period.
5. Repeive – temporary suspension of the execution of sentence.
CRIMINOLOGY 3
Human Behavior
Definition
Anything an organism does that involves self-initiated action and/or
reaction to a given stimulus. It is composed of adoptive adjustments people
make as they cope with one another, with problems, with opportunities, and
with working together-aspects, in a given situation.
It is the sum total of man’s reaction to his environment
Abnormal Behavior
= “A.B.” is a Latin initials which means “away from” ,
Abnormal behavior then can be defined as a behavior which is
away from or deviating from the normal behavior. Normal Behavior
on the other hand, is one that is within the concept of a person as
his own behavior which he or she sees normal, and that people who
behave as they do, are likewise normal and those that do not
behave similarly are abnormal. Abnormal behavior most of the time
referred to as “sick” behavior. It is associated to mental illness.
Behavior which are ineffective, self-defeating, self-destructive and
which separates the individuals from those who are important to
him, are regarded as abnormal.
. Developmental Tasks
Every stage of life has its accompanying developmental tasks. They
are tasks imposed on the individual by maturation and culture that prepare
him for the next stage of life.
. THEORIES OF LEARNING
. Connectionism Theory – by Thorndike states that practice
strengthens the association between stimuli an response by using the law of
exercise. That this connection between the stimulus and response can be
strengthens further by means of reward or satisfaction but can be weakened
by punishment or dissatisfaction, through the use of the3 law of effect. This
theory in learning assumed that if a thing is to be learned, there should be
frequent repetitions of stimulus and response.
. Classical or Respondent Conditioning – by Pavlov which states
that the association between a conditioned stimulus and response is
strengthened by repeated presentation with the unconditional stimulus.
. Instrumental or Operant Conditioning – wherein the learning or
stimulus- response relationship is strengthened by immediately making a
follow-up of the thing learned.
. MOTIVATION
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Motivation – is defined as behavior instigated by needs within the
individual and directed towards a goal that can satisfy the needs. Motivation
may also be regarded as explanation for action which influences behavior in
many ways. All definitions of motivation have certain things in common such
as; it comes from within; it is directed towards a goal; and it arouses interest
in the activity.
Motivation is important because it controls and directs
behavior. Behavior must be controlled for the good of the individual
and society. For human happiness, it is necessary to control
behavior. Motivation is also important in all aspects of man’s life.
. Classification of Motives:
1. Biological drives – includes physiological, basic and primarily
unlearned motives e.g. water, food and other survival motives.
2. Psychological or social drives – they are secondary, acquired,
learned, and derived. e.g. motives to be rich, popular, balanced and
other acquisition of achievements.
3. Unconscious motives – includes mostly general drives such as
curiosity, maternal instinct and just being nice as a natural drive.
PERSONALITY
Personality is defined as a pattern of habits, attitudes and trials that
defines an individual’s characteristics, behavior and qualities.
= A stable set of characteristics and tendencies that determine the
similarities and differences in the psychological behavior, such as thoughts,
feelings, and actions, of people. It can be introvert, extrovert or ambivert. An
introvert is one characterized by direction of interest toward oneself and
one’s inner world of experiences; the extrovert, characterized by interest
directed toward the external environment of people and things rather than
toward inner experiences and oneself; the ambivert is a mixture of between
an extrovert and introvert.
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This theory advocate that personality traits are the result of learning as
one interacts with people. Personality is mainly composed of habits and
learned responses to stimuli in the environment.
. Reactions to Frustration
People differ in the way they react to frustration. An individual’s
way of reacting to frustration is known as coping mechanism.
Generally, people faced with frustration is sometimes reacting to
one or two ways; by fighting the problem in a constructive way and
direct way by means of breaking down the obstacles that stops a
person from reaching his goal; or by getting angry and becoming
aggressive; or by running away from the problem or flight, by
sulking, retreating, becoming indifferent, and giving up without a
fight. These reactions to frustration are called fight-flight reactions.
. Frustration-tolerance
Individuals also differ in their capacity to tolerate unadjusted
states or tolerance to frustration. Some people are able to
withstand prolonged periods of tension without showing signs of
abnormality. Others become neurotic or psychotic, or convert their
frustration into anti-social acts or become alcoholics or drug
addicts. Most people react to frustration in the following ways;
1. direct approach
2. detour or change direction
3. substitution
4. withdrawal or retreat
5. developing feelings of inferiority
6. aggression, and
7. use of defense mechanism
. Defense Mechanism
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They are unconscious psychological processes that serve as
safety valves to provide relief from emotional conflict and anxiety.
Defense mechanism are forms of self-deception which a person my
not be aware of. They are resorted to whenever psychological
equilibrium is threatened by severe emotional injury arising from
frustration. Among the most common defense mechanism used are
the following;
1. Identification – a process whereby an individual without awareness, satisfies
frustrated desires by psychologically assuming the role of another person.
2. Substitution - is resorted to, when an unattainable or unacceptable goal,
emotion, or object is replaced by one that is attainable or acceptable.
3. Compensation - a process whereby one makes up for some real o imaginary
inadequacy by doing well in another activity.
4. Rationalization – it is a fallacious thinking intended to justify ideas and
behavior in a way that seems reasonable to oneself, although, they are intellectually
justified and often socially disapproved as well.
5. Displacement - this is where one transfer his emotion connected with one
person or thing to another unrelated person or object.
6. Fantasy or daydreaming – this is where an imagined sequence of
events or mental images that serves to express unconscious conflicts, to
gratify unconscious wishes or to prepare for an anticipated future event.
7. Projection - manifest feelings and ideas which are unacceptable to
oneself, but projected onto others so that they may seem to have these
feelings or ideas, that free the individual from the guilt and anxiety associated
with them.
8. Reaction formation - is defined as the development of a trait or
traits which are the opposite of tendencies that we do not want to recognize.
It is shown, when an individual is motivated to act in a certain way, but
behaves in the opposite way, and be able to keep his urges and impulses
under control.
9. Denial – when a person uses this mechanism, he refuses to recognize
and deal with reality because of strong inner needs.
10. Repression – is an unconscious process where unacceptable urges
or painful, traumatic experiences are completely prevented from entering
consciousness
11. Suppression – is a conscious activity by which an individual
attempts to forget emotionally disturbing thoughts and experiences
by pushing them out of one’s mind such as, when a person attempts to
forget emotional pain by losing himself in his work.
12. Regression – when a person employs this defense mechanism, he goes back
to a pattern of feeling, thinking, or behavior which was appropriate to an earlier
stage of development, such as when a person demands for something from others
and when denied, uses tantrums to get it, as what he or she has done in early
childhood when parents give to demands of children by the use of tantrums.
13. Sublimation – is the changing of unacceptable id impulses or needs into
socially and culturally acceptable channels or means. It is also a positive and
constructive mechanism for defending against otherwise unacceptable impulses
and needs. Such as when a homosexual works as a physical therapist and finds
sexual satisfaction in performing his job, in meeting his needs and impulses.
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4. voyeurism – sexual gratification is attained by witnessing a nude man
and woman in the actual sexual act. The sexually deviant person is also
known as Peeping Tom.
5. transvertism – gratification is taken from wearing clothes of the
opposite sex and acting their opposite roles.
6. Fetishism – sexual gratification is attained by substituting an inanimate
object of love.
7. Lesbianism – sexual relation between a woman to a woman.
8. Homosexuality – sexual gratification is attained by having a sexual
relationship with members of the same sex.
9. Incest – sexual relation between persons with blood relationship
10. Pedophilia - a child molester that victimizes young boys that could lead
to sodomy.
11. Bestiality – sexual relation with a living animal.
12. Necrophilia – sexual relation with a newly dead body.
CRISIS MANAGEMENT
. Crisis management – is simply good management under pressure.
. HOSTAGE NEGOTIATION
In hostage situation the general tendency of the hostage taker is to
hostage a prominent personality in order to gain needed leverage in the
negotiation. What is important in this situation is improved communication
and the efficiency of the police in responding to the call of emergency.
. Principles to be followed;
The hostage has no value to the hostage-taker. His only value is as a tool
to get what the hostage-taker wants, not from the hostage, but from the
authorities. Violence should be avoided for the sake of the hostage, if it cannot
be avoided, the authorities should be the victor.
To successfully negotiate, there must be a need to live, on the part of the
hostage-taker, because a hostage-taker who is bent in killing himself and has
no intention of releasing the hostage, is a case of non-negotiable, which the
police should ascertain.
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. Characteristics of hostage-takers;
1. mentally deranged - suffers from delusion and hallucination, and they;
(a) sets the rule;
(b) reacts on overwhelming stress, forcing them to take action to
relieve stress; may even
(c) take members of their family as hostage.
2. severe depression – suffers also some mental aberration which is an
answer to life stress that could lead to self-destruction as in suicide.
3. personality disorder – with an anti-social and maladaptive patterns of
behavior that brings him repeatedly in conflict with society. If he demand
for a member of his family, do not grant , family could be the cause of
being what he is.
4. paranoid – he feels threatened and persecuted, highly suspicious of
people and impulsive.
5. sociopathic personality – highly impulsive and unable to delay
gratification so that if hostage is a woman, raping her is a probability.
6. terrorist – with political purpose or agenda. They use threats and
harassment to create an atmosphere of fear, disregarding women and children
as victims. They are only loyal to themselves and other allied groups and
willing to give life as part of martyrdom.
. Disadvantage;
. Impersonal – hostage’s reaction cannot be observed.
. Hostage taker – negotiator relationship
. Trust and rapport should be established, but while trust is there, be aware of it;
. If deceit is to be used, tell lies but don’t get caught.
. Walkie talkies - set in single frequency are still considered to be one of the
best in telephone Negotiation and in giving orders.
. If attack has been decided upon, it should be carried within seven (7)
seconds upon the decision.
Criminology 4
(Juvenile Delinquency)
By: Prof. Nelly D. Callueng/ Prof. Ariel C. Manlusoc
JUVENILE DELINQUENCY
It refers to an anti-social act or behavior which deviates from the
normal pattern of rules and regulations, custom and culture which society
does not accept and which there justifies some kind of punishment or
corrective measures. Those persons adjudged to be delinquent under age
fixed by law are called juvenile delinquent. A delinquent is one whose
behavior has brought a minor or child in repeated conflict with the law.
Juvenile
Refers to a person of tender year.
A minor, a youth or those who are not emancipated by law.
Those who are below the age of majority
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Refers to a person below 18 years of age or those but are unable to
fully take care of themselves from abuse, neglect, cruelty, exploitation
or discrimination because of physical or mental disability or
conditions.
R.A. 6809 – an act lowering the age of majority from 21 to 18 and
amending for such purpose E.O. 209.
>> ENVIRONMENT
This is where the child gets most of his influence, especially in his first
formative years. Youth in the society turns to become delinquent due to
companions in a given environment. Our youth today accused those ahead
of them of failure to define how to live with the right values, with honor and
success in a world that is changing too fast for them to understand. Children
now becomes victims of their own environment, their attitudes, manner of
dressing, taste, ambition, and even behaviors are imitated or have been
influenced by those anti-social acts recognized in their environment. Some
of the results of a crime-inducing environment are the following;
1. association with criminal groups;
2. alcoholism and drug addiction;
3. impulse of fear;
4. crime-inducing situations that causes criminalistic
tendencies; and
5. imitated instinct like selfishness, violence and anti-social
wishes.
The environment of a child plays a big role in his development as an
individual since it reflects on the personality structure of the child. The
environment also covers the place where the child grows up, the people
around him, and the conditions both physical, emotional, spiritual plus the
mental sep-up of those close to him.
>>POVERTY
Jobless people are poor, thus become susceptible to crime commission
since low-income families usually take refuge among city relatives who lives
in a congested and depressed areas. The implication of this problem on
poverty reflects on the children of poor families whose physical and
health welfare are being set aside, giving more priority to foods.
>> POLICE
The police as the first line of defense against crime, must deal with the
serious problem of youth crime. And the importance of this juvenile-police
relation should not be taken for granted or ignore by our law enforcers
because they are the juvenile’s first contact with the justice system.
The police must become a close working partner of other components
of criminal justice system just as it should also be of the juvenile justice
system, if real progress is to be made in this problem. It must be noted that
broad field of police-juvenile work is becoming increasingly important in
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order to prevent delinquency. The relationship between the police and the
youth should be given tremendous importance and the quality of the
relationship should be such that the youth will be guided toward
constructive citizenship instead of causing them to intensify their anti-social
feeling towards the police.
>> RELIGION
A child’s development usually involves the inculcation of a set of moral
belief that lead in the direction of socially approved behavior. Religion
becomes a causative factor in juvenile delinquency when its traditional role
in the area of delinquency prevention fails, much more when its religious
leaders or spokesperson remain un forceful in delinquency problem. When
members of the religious community take an active part in the problem of
delinquency behavior among the youth, with its full blast of support and
mobilization, the juvenile problem will be minimized, if not totally
eradicated. Additionally, the religious community can facilitate the
participation of the private sector in the delinquency prevention programs.
>> SCHOOL
The school, unlike the family, is a public instrument for training young
people. Hence, the school is more directly accessible to change through the
development of new resources and policies. And, since it is the principal
institutions for the development of a basic commitment to the goals and
values of our society, it is expected that our educational institutions be
provided withy the resources to compete with illegitimate attraction for the
youth’s mind. These factors that create a gap between institution-child
relationships are the following:
1. failure of the school in the character development of the
youth;
2. use of methods that create the condition of failure on the
part of the students;
3. truancy
4. lack of facilities for curricular and extra-curricular activities
5. absence of proper motivation on the part of the school’s
mentors
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3. too much ego – whether right or wrong, safe or dangerous,
permitted or prohibited;
4. psychopath personality – characterize by lack of response,
lack of conscience, deficient feeling of affection towards others,
and aggression towards his environment and other people.
. DUTIES OF PARENTS:
1. to give him affection, companionship and understanding
2. to extend to him the benefits of moral guidance, self-disciplined and
religious instruction
3. to inculcate in him the value of industriousness, thrift and self-reliance
4. to supervise his activities including his recreation
5. to provide him with adequate support including;
a. food or sustenance
b. dwelling or shelter
c. clothing
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d. medical assistance
e. education and transportation
Parents shall take special care to prevent the child from becoming
addicted to intoxicating drinks, narcotics, smoking, gambling, and other
vices or harmful practices.
. Liabilities of Parents
Parents and guardians are responsible for the damage or torts (an injury
or wrong done to another) caused by the child under their parental authority
in accordance with the Civil Code.
. Barangay Councils
Barangay Councils shall have the authority to enact ordinances and
resolutions not inconsistent with the law or municipal ordinances, as may be
necessary to provide for the proper development and welfare of the children
in the community, in consultation with representatives of national agencies
concerned with child and youth welfare. Examples of ordinances or
resolutions the barangay can enact;
1. steps to prevent juvenile delinquency and assist parents of
children with behavioral problems;
2. adopt measures for the health of the children;
3. curfew hours, especially for children;
4. recreational or sport facilities to keep them busy.
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Art. 17 – Joint Parental Authority
The father and the mother shall exercise jointly just and reasonable
parental authority and responsibility over their legitimate or adopted
children. In case of disagreement, the father’s decision shall prevail unless
there is a judicial order to the contrary.
Mentally Retarded
• Custodial ( I.Q.25)
• Trainable (25 to 50) ¼ or ½ of average child
• Educable (50 to 75) ½ to ¾ (up to 5-6th G)
• Borderline or Low Normal (75 to about 89) requires some
extra help.
Mentally ill (behavioral disorder)(F or O)
Emotionally disturbed
Physically handicapped (crippled, deaf-mute, blind etc.)
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(b) any act b7 deeds or words which debases,
degrades or demeans the intrinsic worth and dignity of
the child as a human being;
(c) unreasonable deprivation of his basic needs for
survival, such as food and shelter; or
(d) failure to immediately give medical treatment to an
injured child resulting in serious impairment of his
growth and development or in his permanent incapacity
or death.
3. “circumstances” which gravely threaten or endanger the
survival and normal development of children include, but not
limited to, the following:
(a) being in a community where there is armed conflict
or being affected by armed
conflict-related activities.
(b) working under conditions hazardous to life, safety
and morals which unduly interfere
with their normal development;
(c) living in or finding for themselves in the streets or
rural areas without the care of parents, or guardian or
any adult supervision needed for their welfare;
(d) being a member of an indigenous cultural
community and/or living under conditions of extreme
poverty or in an area which is underdeveloped and/or
lacks or has inadequate access to basic services needed
for their welfare;
(e) being a victim of a man-made or natural disaster or
calamity.
2. “comprehensive program against child abuse, exploitation
and discrimination” refers to coordinated program of
services and facilities to protect children against:
(a) child prostitution and other sexual abuse;
(b) child trafficking;
(c) obscene publications and indecent shows;
(d) other acts of abuse; and
(e) circumstances which threaten or endanger the
survival and normal development of children.
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(e)When a person engages in the act of finding children
among low-income families,Hospitals, clinics, nurseries,
day-care centers, or other child-caring institutions who
can be offered for the purpose of child trafficking.
. WORKING CHILDREN
Exemption from criminal liability does not include exemption from civil
liability which shall be enforced in accordance with the provisions Art. 221 of
the Family Code.
II. Introduction:
The basic purpose of preserving the peace and protecting life and
property is accomplished by controlling the behavior of people. A person’s
conduct is determined either by what he wants to do, or by what he is
afraid to do. Compliance with law and regulation is obtained either by
developing or by compelling people to conform by threat of punishment.
Hence, the two processes, enforcement and the development of attitudes
favorable to law observance, cannot be completely separated, with the
police free to choose and reject the other, their use is a matter of judgment
varying in degree or emphasis.
The primary concern of the PNP is to earn and maintain the
greatest possible public confidence. Police effectiveness depends
largely upon public support based on the faith of the people in their
police. To insure maximum efficiency, the PNP shall endeavor to
gain public support by conducting massive and sustained activities
in the field of good community relations.
Consequently, the active interest and participation of the
citizens is a source so vital to an effective, efficient, economic and
harmonious law enforcement and public safety, that deliberate
efforts should be made to arouse, promote and maintain public
concern in the objective and affairs of the PNP.
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Consistent with the facilities at its disposal, all PNP units shall
conduct civic action program.
The Civic Action Program is one which makes policemen a
friend, and partner of the people for progress as well as their
defender. It can range upward from basic individual acts of courtesy
to disaster relief, to local assistance programs in the concept of self-
help, up to major engineering projects.
It shall encourage and actively participate in athletic
competition to promote youth development, by wisely coordinating
with the social elements of the populace.
It may initiate if necessary, fund-raising campaign for juvenile
delinquents who are being reformed. In a state of calamity, every
member of the PNP shall be alert to safeguard the community
against loss and damages of properties and possible deaths.
He shall encourage residents in his jurisdiction to help in
activities designed to enhance economic self-sufficiency by actively
participating in the Green Revolution and Food Production campaign
of the government.
He shall discourage residents from loitering in the streets or
engaging in uneconomic activities such as illegal, gambling,
alcoholism, drugs and others.
He shall promote and actively participate in the establishment
on small cottage industries with special attention to the out-of-
school youth.
In summation, the principle involve in the PNP Civic Action
Program is that the police is part of, and not apart from society.
They are considered as servants of the community who depend for
the effectiveness of their functions upon the express wishes of the
people.
Suggested Activities for Students: Role Playing
Objectives of MassCom:
1. Develop a full media information dissemination style in
order to strengthen the bonds of friendship with the
citizenry and broaden public understanding of the PNP.
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2. Keep the public well-informed that the government and the
PNP/AFP and keep them aware of the need for the PNP/AFP
and the vital role it played in the security and development
of the country.
3. Generate public support for the activities and programs of
the PNP/AFP and keep then aware for the need for the
PNP/AFP and the vital role it plated in the security and
development of the country.
4. Established rapport and good working relationship with the
media.
5. Develop a psychological environment whereby the people
will readily respond and support government program which
aimed to establish a democratically independent, unified,
self-reliant and progressive society.
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7. Judicial Relations –Consist of the Peace officers duties
toward the courts when appearing as a witness and the
honesty in testimony.
8. Government Relations –Includes all his dealings with other
non-police agencies or officers of the government, both
national and local, in connection with official duties such as
request for verifications, coordination and whatever help
are needed.
COURSE OUTLINE
3.1 The PNP Code of Professional Conduct and Ethical Standards
3.1.1 Basic Police Values
3.1.2 The Policemen as Professionals
3.1.3 Police Officers’ Creed and Stand on Basic Issues
3.1.4 Professional Conduct and Ethical Standards
3.1.5 Customs and Traditions
3.1.6 Police Officer’s Pledge
3.2 Concept of Police-Community Relations (PCR)
3.2.1 Scope of Police-Community Relations
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3.2.2 Foundations of Public Relations
3.2.3 Principles and Objectives of PCR
3.2.4 Duties of PCR Officers
3.2.5 Obstacles to PCR p[-
PART I
GENERAL ETHICS
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Chapter I
ETHICS
I. Definition
The word Ethics was derived from the Late Latin “ethnicus”, from Greek
“Ethnikos” which means “national”, “gentile”, “customary”, from “ethnos” which
means nations, people; akin to Greek “ethos” custom (Webster’s New Explorer
Encyclopedic Dictionary, 2006).
Ethics based on its etymological meaning is taken to mean as a philosophical
science that deals with the morality of human conduct or human acts (Babor, Ethics,
2008).
Ethics is the practical science of the morality of human conduct (Glenn,
Ethics).
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and this what makes man a moral being or a moral agent. Thus, those acts which are
committed or omitted by man without the use of their will or free and intellectual choice is
not construed as human acts rather they are called acts of man. Further, that those acts which
are considered acts of man in themselves can be a human act only when there is intervention
of the used of free-will. Therefore, human acts are acts of man as a rational being, but not all
acts of man are considered human act.
HUMAN ACTS
* actions that are done knowingly, deliberately and freely
BASES OF MORALITY
1) SOCIAL NORMS – unwritten standard of acceptable behavior in society
a) customs
b) tradition –the handling down from generation to generation of opinions and
practices.
C) culture -
4)CONSCIENCE – the practical judgment of reason telling us what should be done and
what should be avoided; reflection is one’s character
CHARACTER
- refers to the traits of a person shown through his thoughts, actions, values and
virtues
2) FORTITUDE
- firmness of mind; the courage to endure without yielding; the virtue that gives a
person strength of the will; the virtue that incites courage
Examples of Fortitude:
a) PATIENCE
- the ability to be calm in enduring situations
b) PERSEVERANCE
- the ability to go on despite obstacles
c) ENDURANCE
- the ability to last
3) TEMPERANCE
- the ability to moderate one’s instincts and emotions; the virtue that regulates a
person’s wants; also means self-control
4) JUSTICE
- the virtue that inclines the will to give to each what is due to him; the virtue that
inclines the will to respect the rights of others
MEANING OF JUSTICE
1) “To render to each his due”
2) “Treat equals equally and unequal unequally in proportion to their inequality”
THREE (3) DIVISIONS OF JUSTICE
1) COMMUTATIVE JUSTICE
- regulates those actions that involve the rights that exist between individuals
- calls for fundamental fairness in all agreements and exchanges between individuals
or private social groups
- demands respect for the equal human dignity of all persons in economic
transactions, contracts or promises
Example:
Workers owe their employers diligent work in exchange for their wages.
Likewise, employers owe their workers payment for work done.
2) DISTRIBUTIVE JUSTICE
- regulates those actions that involve the rights that an individual may claim from
society
- concerned with the fair allocation of resources among diverse members of a
community
- implies that society has a duty to the individual in serious need and all individuals
have duties to others in need
- basis for the sayings:
Exceptions:
self-defense
death under exceptional circumstances
death penalty
2) RIGHT TO LIBERTY
Exceptions:
for reasons of public health and public safety
penalty for commission of a crime
circumstances of warrantless arrests
3) RIGHT TO PROPERTY
Exceptions:
circumstances of warrantless search
SPECIAL ETHICS
- the study of the application of the general principles of morality
PROFESSIONAL ETHICS
- a sub-branch of special ethics
- a set of moral code to which every profession must subscribe
- aims to guide the actuations of the professional in the practice of his profession
Examples of professional ethics
1) medical ethics
2) business ethics
3) legal ethics
4) code of ethics of
teachers
5) code of ethics of
public officials
6) POLICE ETHICS
POLICE ETHICS
- a practical science that treats the principles of human morality and duty as
applied to law enforcement
PART III
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PUBLIC OFFICER
- includes elective and appointive officials and employees, permanent or temporary,
whether in the classified or unclassified or exempt service receiving compensation, from the
government .
GRAFT
- the acquisition of gain or advantage by dishonest, unfair or sordid means,
especially through the abuse of one’s position or influence in politics or government
CORRUPTION
- an act done with an intent to give some advantage inconsistent with official duty
and the rights of others.
- the state of making something or someone other than what is ideal .
BRIBERY
- the act of receiving gifts or presents or accepting offers and or promises in
exchange for committing a crime that relates to the exercise of the office which the
public officer discharges
DISHONESTY
- concealment or distortion of truth in a matter of fact relevant to one’s office or
connected with the performance of his duties
COMMAND
- the authority a person lawfully exercises over subordinates by virtue of rank or
assignment or position
RESPONSIBILITY
- the obligation to perform one’s duties and functions and his accountability for his
actions
COMMAND RESPONSIBILITY
- the doctrine that imposes commensurate accountability to one who is vested with
authority to exercise management and/or leadership functions
LAW ENFORCEMENT CODE OF ETHICS
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- the police must secure the respect and trust of the community in order to gain their
support
Unreasonable Force Reduces Community Cooperation
- police officers must not abuse their authority because it affects the attitude and
opinions of the community towards them, which in turn affects their desire to cooperate
Use of Reasonable Force when Persuasion is not Sufficient
- police officers are allowed to use force when dialogue is no longer effective, but the
kind or degree of force must be REASONABLE
Impartial Enforcement of Laws
- police officers must enforce the law equally to all persons, without regard to social
status
Delicadeza
-sense of pride and self-worth
- police officers must be able to sacrifice self-interest in the name of duty
- police officers must not do anything that would bring dishonor to himself and to the PNP
organization itself
Police Lifestyle
- police officers must live a simple, yet credible and dignified life, free from greed,
corruption and exploitation
- police officers must set a good example
Political Patronage
- police officers must NEVER ASK for recommendations from public officials in
matters pertaining to promotion, assignment, awards and others
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Commitment to Democracy
- police officers must never forget that they are public servants and they must at all
times uphold the Constitution and be loyal to the country, the people and the PNP
organization
Commitment to Public Interest
public interest =
for the good of the people or community
- police officers must always uphold public interest over and above personal interests
- police officers must respect the fact that their resources are funded by taxpayers’ money
and should therefore be used wisely and economically to avoid wastage of public funds
Non-Partisanship
- police officers must not be identified with any particular political party or figure
-they must extend their assistance to all regardless of party affiliation
Secrecy Discipline
- police officers must guard the confidentiality of all official information and all matters
relating to the official function of the police organization
- disclosure must always be authorized
Devotion to Duty
- police officers must perform their duties with dedication, thoroughness, efficiency,
enthusiasm, determination and manifest concern for public welfare
Discipline
- police officers must act and behave according to the rules and regulations of the
organization at all times
Loyalty
- police officers must be loyal to the Constitution and to the police service, as
manifested by their loyalty to their superiors, peers and subordinates
Obedience to Superiors
- police officers must obey lawful orders of their superiors
- police officers must always be courteous to superiors and other appropriate authorities
within the chain of command
POLICE
ETHICAL STANDARDS
ETHICAL STANDARDS
- refer to established and generally accepted moral values and ethical acts
1) Morality
2) Judicious Use of
Authority
3) Justice
4) Humility
5) Orderliness
6) Perseverance
7) Integrity
Morality
- police officers must adhere to high standard of morality and decency and shall set good
examples for others to follow
- they must not be involved with illegal activities
- they shall be loyal to their spouses
Judicious Use of Authority
judicious = wise; proper
- police officers must exercise proper and legitimate use of authority in the performance of
duty
Integrity
- police officers must not allow themselves to be victims of corruption and dishonest
practices in accordance with applicable laws
Humility
- police officers must never forget that they are public servants and not masters of the
people
- they should perform their duties without arrogance
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Orderliness
- police officers must follow logical procedures in accomplishing tasks to minimize
waste of time, money, effort and other resources
Perseverance
- police officers must exert all efforts to achieve their goal or mission even in the face
of difficulties and obstacles
POLICE CUSTOMS AND TRADITIONS
CUSTOMS
- rules of conduct formed by repetition of acts, uniformly practiced as social rules
- established usages or social practices carried on by tradition that have
obtained the force of law
POLICE CUSTOMS ON COURTESY
COURTESY
- a manifestation or expression of consideration and respect
SALUTE
- the usual greeting rendered by uniformed members in recognizing persons entitled
to a salute
SALUTE TO NATIONAL COLOR AND STANDARD
- refers to the Philippine Flag
ADDRESS OR TITLE
- PNP members who are junior in rank must address senior members with
SIR/MA’AM
COURTESY CALL
- when a police officer appears before a superior officer as a sign of respect and in
acknowledgment of the latter’s authority or position
COURTESY CALLS
1) Courtesy call of newly-assigned or newly-appointed members
2) Christmas Call
3) New Year’s Call
4) Promotion Call
5) Exit Call
6) Courtesy of the Post
Police customs on ceremonies
CEREMONY
- a formal act or set of formal acts established by customs or authority as proper for
special occasions
1) Flag Raising
Ceremony
2) Flag Retreat
Ceremony
3) Half-Mast
4) Funeral Service
and Honors
5) Ceremony Tendered
to Retiree
6) Honor Ceremony
7) Turn-Over Ceremony
8) Wedding Ceremony
9) Anniversary
POLICE CUSTOMS ON SOCIAL DECORUM
SOCIAL DECORUM
- a set of norms and standards practiced by police officers during social and other
functions
1) Proper Attire
- wearing of
prescribed uniform
- wearing, as part of uniform, awards and decorations earned in accordance with the
prescribed rules and regulations
- adherence to haircut prescribed by rules and regulations
- manner of walking:
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police officers are expected to walk with pride and dignity
Other police customs
1) Visiting the Sick
2) Survivor Assistance to Heirs of Deceased Members
3) Visiting Religious Leaders
4) Athletics
5) Happy Hours
- informal get-together at the PNP Club
- usually on Friday, or any other day suitable for the occasion
RANK-HAS-ITS-OWN-PRIVILEGE
- the practice where different ranks carry with them corresponding privileges
POLICE TRADITIONS
TRADITIONS
- bodies of beliefs, stories, customs and usages handed down from generation to
generation with the effect of an unwritten law
POLICE TRADITIONS
1) Spiritual beliefs
PNP members are traditionally religious and God-loving person
2) Valor
= courage or bravery
3) Patriotism
= love of one’s country
4) Discipline
= instinctive obedience to lawful orders and spontaneous actions guided by ethical and
legal norms
5) Gentlemanliness
= being upright in character, gentle in manners, dignified in appearance and sincere
in their concern for others
6) Word of Honor
=commitment to one’s pledge or promise
7) Duty
PNP members have exemplified themselves as dedicated public servants
8) Loyalty
= commitment to PNP organization, to the country and to the people
9) Camaraderie
= the binding spirit that enhances teamwork; sense of brotherhood
POLICE OFFICER’S PLEDGE
1) I will love and serve God, my country and people;
2) I will uphold the Constitution and obey legal orders of the duly-constituted
authorities
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