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| Teenage crime: How hard should the punishment be
Teenage crime: How hard should the punishment be
Teenage crime: How hard should the
punishment be?
Youth crime in the U. S. continues to rise. And
so many Americans are calling for tougher punishments for those who break the
law.
- What do you think, is
the right way to keep the young offenders away from crime?
- Their parents could
care better for them. They should not be left alone at home.
- The should not watch
criminal films very often.
- It is not good for
them, if they live in a ghetto.
- If they are already
young offenders, they should not be punished like adults. Specialists should
talk with them.
Nowadays more
and more young people are sent to a boot camp for six months or
more.
- Do you know what a
boot camp is?
- The teenagers must
work hard sixteen hours a day.
- They learn rigid
discipline.
- The boot camp should
give them a shock to keep them away from crime in the
future.
The youngsters can
choose between six months at the boot camp and probation or a longer sentence in
a conventional jail.
The life in the boot
camp:
First they are taken several miles through the
swamp to an isolated camping hut by one of the ranch’s staff. On their
walk the teenagers are shown a rattle snake, alligator and a wild boar. So they
won’t try to escape.
After 3 days alone together in the bush the
youngsters are allowed to mix with the others.
In the camp they must earn their privileges, for
example when they work very hard they are allowed to watch TV. A very hard
punishment is digging up roots in the Florida sun.
If they fail the camp’s programme they
could get a sentence of 15 years in an adult prison.
Boot camps are fashionable because people like
the discipline, the uniforms, the haircuts, the marching and the yelling and the
hollering.
But it’s not the right way to keep the
teenagers away from crime because you have got to change the insides and not the
outsides.
At the end they go skiing for a week and then
they are asked by their trainers:“ Which was more fun? Stealing cars,
doing drugs and robbing people or the last few days?“ Most like
skiing better.
Some offences (Straftaten) for which children
aged 10-13 found guilty or cautioned:
- Violence against a
person Sexual offences
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- • Burglary
(Einbruch) Robbery (Raub)
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- • Theft &
handling (Diebstahl & dealen) Fraud & forgery (Betrug &
fälschen)
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- • Fraud &
forgery (Betrug & Fälschen)
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- • Criminal
damage Drug offences
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- • Summary
offences (Übertretungen)
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