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Restitution - A Sanction for All Seasons

NCJ Number
73010
Author(s)
T L Armstrong
Date Published
1980
Length
26 pages
Annotation
This paper examines the argument to restrict the use of restitution to property offenders and explores factors which suggest that restitution may be well suited for use with certain juvenile offenders adjudicated for crimes against persons.
Abstract
Arguments to restrict restitution to property offenders usually assume two forms: namely, that all offenders who have committed crimes against persons are too dangerous for inclusion in restitution programs and that too much uncertainty and confusion surround any attempts to affix a monetary value to crimes entailing pain and suffering. In response to the former argument, it is suggested that only after reviewing the youth's entire offense histories, the circumstances surrounding their involvement with the justice system, and their level of resistance to rehabilitation, should the final decision be made about appropriateness for referral to a restitution program. Moreover, it has been found that the vast majority of juveniles who have committed crimes against persons are never again charged with a violent crime. The dilemma of affixing a monetary value to crimes entailing pain and suffering can be dealt with in several ways. Some solutions include unliquidated damages and an index for obtaining gravity measures of physical injury. A rationale for implementing restitution can be found in Western European history. Medieval systems of compositions in which parts of the human body were assigned compensable values, served as remedies for acts of physical violence against persons. Following the decline of feudalism, a single, centralized authority came to monopolize punishment, and criminal transgressions came to be viewed largely as offenses against this power. In the crosscultural context of non-western society, reparational schemes were vital in preventing the outbreak of blood vengeance. An OJJDP discretionary grant program (February, 1978) has chosen a target population of youth who have been adjudicated for felonies or are chronic recidivists and developed a seriousness scale for both property and personal crimes. Serious personal crimes include all adjudications for unarmed robberies and nonaggravated assaults with losses of $250 or less. Very serious personal crimes cause losses exceeding $250 and include personal crimes such as nonnegligent homicide, rape, armed robbery, and aggravated assault. An offense seriousness scale and 39 footnotes are appended. (Author abstract modified).