U.S. flag

An official website of the United States government, Department of Justice.

NCJRS Virtual Library

The Virtual Library houses over 235,000 criminal justice resources, including all known OJP works.
Click here to search the NCJRS Virtual Library

Prosecutors, Courts, and Police - Some Constraints on the Police Chief Executive (From Police Leadership in America, P 203-215, 1985, William A Geller, ed. - See NCJ-98325)

NCJ Number
99248
Author(s)
W F McDonald
Date Published
1985
Length
13 pages
Annotation
Conflict between the police and court (judges and prosecutors) components of the criminal justice system is inherent in the checks and balances provided, but unecessary conflict can be reduced by improved police-court cooperation and improved police case building.
Abstract
Police antagonism toward courts and prosecutors due to perceived sentence leniency and frequent plea bargaining results more from misperception and professional insecurities than from real differences in desired outcomes for specific cases. The conflict between police and prosecutors is often derived from a police misunderstanding of the legal parameters within which the prosecutor must work. What the prosecutor is capable of achieving in a given case is largely based on the information supplied by the police in the investigative report. When the prosecutor decides the police evidence is insufficent to support the charge, then the case will usually be dismissed or plea bargained. The police chief can help remedy this situation by ascertaining the evidential screening standards used by the prosecutor and ensuring that those standards are met before a case is passed to the prosecutor. The police should appreciate, however, that the court's standard for guilt (beyond a reasonable doubt) is more rigid than the police standard for arrest (probable cause). Twenty-one notes are provided.