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Search Results for failure to pay
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Journal Article
Costs and Consequences of Traffic Fines and Fees in Nevada
Available to Purchase
Federal Sentencing Reporter (2022) 34 (2-3): 196–197.
Published: 01 February 2022
... – vehicle registration and maintenance, no or expired license, plates, or insurance – as opposed to only 24.7% for behavioral violations such as speeding, reckless driving, and DUI. Those issued warrants for failure to pay monetary sanctions are disproportionately people who are Black and from the poorest...
Journal Article
Spiraling Criminal Debt
Available to Purchase
Federal Sentencing Reporter (2022) 34 (2-3): 92–97.
Published: 01 February 2022
.... If a person cannot or does not pay, a failure to comply (FTC) is entered in the case. The courts can issue an order for arrest due to a failure to pay. Further costs may result from the failure to pay. For example, an additional $50 fee is imposed for failure to pay fees within forty days.6 Thus, [court...
Journal Article
The Unintended Sentence of Criminal Justice Debt
Available to Purchase
Federal Sentencing Reporter (2011) 24 (1): 62–65.
Published: 01 October 2011
... consequences of failure to pay. Debt places a heavy burden on those involved in the criminal justice system. Although individual criminal penalties may be small, they can quickly add up to hundreds or even thousands of dollars.8 Although these fines and fees help fund many aspects of the criminal justice...
Journal Article
Monetary Sanctions Assessed for Sexual Offense Convictions: Avenues for Policy Reform
Available to Purchase
Federal Sentencing Reporter (2022) 34 (2-3): 147–154.
Published: 01 February 2022
... in registration fees by the time they reached sixty- ve. Failure to pay these fees may result in additional penalties, including nes. Individuals who fail to pay the fees may be charged with failure to register, which some states consider a new sexual offense. In these instances, the penalties for failure...
Journal Article
Understanding the Burden of Legal Financial Obligations on Indigent Washingtonians: Research in Brief
Available to Purchase
Federal Sentencing Reporter (2022) 34 (2-3): 173–174.
Published: 01 February 2022
... a variety of nes, fees, and other types of legal nancial obligations (LFOs) that many defendants struggle to pay and risk never paying, at a devastating cost. Failure to pay LFOs can result in punishment by way of additional nancial sanctions, the loss of driving privileges, arrest, and even...
Journal Article
Punishment Through Restitution
Available to Purchase
Federal Sentencing Reporter (2022) 34 (2-3): 98–106.
Published: 01 February 2022
... as punishment. A failure to pay restitution can lead to numerous consequences, from the suspension of one s driver s license to incarceration.2 Those with outstanding restitution orders cannot vote, serve on a jury, or run for of ce.3 Federal restitution statutes mandate the imposition of the full amount...
Journal Article
Probation and Mass Incarceration: The Ironies of Correctional Practice
Available to Purchase
Federal Sentencing Reporter (2016) 28 (4): 278–282.
Published: 01 April 2016
... admissions were accounted for by probation revocations, the majority of which involved what are called technical violations which are those transgressions not involving a new crime but rather a failure to abide by one or more of the requirements of probation, such as paying a fee, observing a curfew...
Journal Article
Fines, Fees, and Fundamental Rights: How the Fifty States Measure Up, Seven Years After Ferguson
Available to Purchase
Federal Sentencing Reporter (2022) 34 (2-3): 107–112.
Published: 01 February 2022
... with regard to the highest-performing states. Generally speaking, these do well in some areas but have glaring failures in others. For example, Washington is ahead of most states in requiring ability-to-pay determinations in nes and fees cases19 and providing courts with substantive guidance on making those...
Journal Article
Rehabilitating Rehabilitation as a Basis for a Downward Departure
Available to Purchase
Federal Sentencing Reporter (2004) 16 (4): 264–268.
Published: 01 April 2004
... of the Federal Public Defender s Office. I. Introduction Although the legislative history of the 1984 Sentencing Reform Act (SRA) reflects concern about the failure of rehabilitation as the central goal of sentencing, the SRA did not renounce rehabilitation. The SRA preserved the broad goals of sentencing...
Journal Article
Revenue Generation Through Financial Sanctions in the Prison Industrial Complex: Reflections from My Experiences in New Jersey
Available to Purchase
Federal Sentencing Reporter (2022) 34 (2-3): 200–202.
Published: 01 February 2022
... on parole and/or probation have to pay a $40 monthly fee. In other words, I had to pay for my freedom, and failure to do so could result in being placed back in jail, restarting the cycle of exploitation. My family and I have been taken advantage of by our country s criminal justice system through predatory...
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Journal Article
The Cost of Testing: Upside-Down World
Available to Purchase
Federal Sentencing Reporter (2024) 36 (4): 181–182.
Published: 01 April 2024
... to register as a gun offender with the MPD. Despite adhering to all other release requirements, my failure to update my address led to a judge authorizing an arrest warrant. Fortunately, the officer granted me an opportunity to rectify the oversight, which I promptly addressed. This experience highlighted...
Journal Article
Is There a Link Between Criminal Debt and Recidivism in Reentry?
Available to Purchase
Federal Sentencing Reporter (2022) 34 (2-3): 188–192.
Published: 01 February 2022
..., 17% reported resorting to criminal activities to raise the revenue to pay off nancial sanctions; in one county, the rate was as high as 42%.10 The majority of these crimes were drug selling and theft. Second, Harris and colleagues suggested that debt can create incentives that potentially encourage...
Journal Article
Reducing the Federal Prison Population: The Role of Pretrial Community Supervision
Available to Purchase
Federal Sentencing Reporter (2022) 34 (5): 327–333.
Published: 01 June 2022
... defendants could be released pending trial without compromising these success rates. For example, during the 2000s, the Eastern District of Michigan maintained high release rates while also keeping failures low. At this time, more than 70% of defendants in the district were released, and the number who...
Journal Article
The Insidious Injustice of the Trial Penalty: “ It is not the intensity but the duration of pain that breaks the will to resist. ”
Available to Purchase
Federal Sentencing Reporter (2019) 31 (4-5): 222–225.
Published: 01 April 2019
... into a ction for the vast majority of people accused of crimes. Trial has become a seldom seen and seldom utilized part of the criminal legal system, and justice has suffered as a result.2 We pay a high price for this decline. The very concept of justice is perverted when prosecutors punish people for making...
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Journal Article
The Special Perils of Being Old and Sick in Prison
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Federal Sentencing Reporter (2020) 32 (5): 276–284.
Published: 01 June 2020
... and depending on the medical system to pay acute attention to his heightened medical needs, to a far greater extent than does a young inmate who most often falls victim to such failures. I was lucky and blessed not to lose my life because of these prison system failures. I lived and escaped serious, lasting...
Journal Article
Sentenced to a Life of Debt: It Is Time for a Reassessment of How Bankruptcy Law Intersects with Fines and Fees to Keep People in Debt
Available to Purchase
Federal Sentencing Reporter (2022) 34 (2-3): 128–138.
Published: 01 February 2022
... after serving their sentence, face signi cant consequences for nonpayment of fees and nes. Failure to pay criminal legal system debt can result in the issuance of arrest warrants, criminal court 132 FEDERAL SENTENCING REPORTER VOL. 34, NO. 2 3 DECEMBER FEBRUARY 2022 hearings, additional nes...
View articletitled, Sentenced to a Life of Debt: It Is Time for a Reassessment of How Bankruptcy Law Intersects with Fines and Fees to Keep People in Debt
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Journal Article
The Cost of Testing: “My Failures Don’t Equal Your Success”
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Federal Sentencing Reporter (2024) 36 (4): 195–196.
Published: 01 April 2024
... and incarceration in Philadelphia and to advocating for systemic change. The Cost of Testing: My Failures Don t Equal Your Success Good morning, everybody. My name is LaTonya Myers, formerly known as PP number 991650 I was state number OV-1961. But today I stand here and say that I m a beacon of hope for my...
Journal Article
White Collar Sentencing Data Fiscal Year 2005—Fiscal Year 2009 White Collar Sentencing
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Federal Sentencing Reporter (2009) 22 (2): 127–131.
Published: 01 December 2009
... of Stolen Mail; Theft of Mail by Postal Employee; Delay or Destruction of Mail or Newspapers; Misappropriation of Postal Funds by Postal Employees; Failure to Pay Child Support. Federal Sentencing Reporter, Vol. 22, No. 2, pp. 127 131, ISSN 1053-9867 electronic ISSN 1533-8363. This material is in the public...
Journal Article
An Honest Chance: Perspectives on Drug Courts Findings From Drug Court Participant Focus Groups in Brooklyn, Las Vegas, Miami, Portland, San Bernardino, and Seattle April 2002
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Federal Sentencing Reporter (2002) 14 (6): 369–372.
Published: 01 May 2002
... was that a mix of participants served to better educate all parties. There was a great deal to learn from the failure of older, more experienced offenders. There was a feeling that criminal justice distinctions were often arbitrary when used to classify substance abusers. Many freely admitted to participation...
View articletitled, An Honest Chance: Perspectives on Drug Courts Findings From Drug Court Participant Focus Groups in Brooklyn, Las Vegas, Miami, Portland, San Bernardino, and Seattle April 2002
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Journal Article
Death to These Guidelines, and a Clean Sheet of Paper
Available to Purchase
Federal Sentencing Reporter (2008) 21 (1): 7–13.
Published: 01 October 2008
... the swamp of conflicts created by the very fact that at least thirty-two policy goals fight for attention in the realm of federal sentencing. The biggest problem with this is simple: The failure to articulate a reasonable set of goals robs the Guideline system of any hope of moral authority. By its nature...
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