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FSC100 Midterm Study Guide – Well Detailed Guide

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FSC100 Midterm Study Guide – Well Detailed Guide

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  • October 7, 2024
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  • FSC100
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FSC100 Midterm Study Guide – Well Detailed Guide

Week 1

Police - describes the body enforcing the law and maintaining order

constituted body of persons empowered by the state to enforce the law,
protect property, and limit civil disorder

legitimized use of force often with a defined legal or territorial area of
responsibility

act on behalf of the government for the people

Modern Police Forces - 1st created by government of King Louis XIV in 1667
in Paris through the Royal Edict

City of Glasglow Police (1800)
Surete Police (1810)
Metropolitan in London (1829)
Royal Irish Constabulary (1822)
- 1st time forces were charged with a preventative role in policing

Metropolitan Police in London were a - template for North American Police
Forces

Sir Robert Peel - great contribution to modern policing

introduced the constabulary act in 1822: led to the Constabulary of Ireland
being formed

Metropolitan Police Act 1829: structured organizations and created first
disciplined police force for greater london

created position of police constables

"The police are the public and the public are the police"

,Policing in North America - began as volunteers and then need for
permanent force was recognized later on

1st police force established in TORONTO in 1834:
- 9000 people
- developed into a paid "policeman" position with formal training
- constables (originally hired as needed)
- 1st job was to keep the streets clean

Northwest Mounted Police - established in 1873

after the 1867 confederation that declared police forces were established for
rural areas in eastern canada

act as a local police service for remote areas without designated police service

- prairie, BC, atlantic

Who uses provincial police services? - Newfoundland, Quebec, Ontario

In 2015 - 176 Municipal Police services serving 64% of population

provincial police serving 14%

RCMP serving 22%

OPP - rural and urban policing

6200 officers

3100 Civilians

800 axillary officers

Standards of Policing - in ontario we have a police service act and
regulations as the adequacy and effectiveness of police services

Make recommendations for local policies, procedures, and programs

,promotes professional policing

Responsibilities:
- prevent crime
- enforce our laws
- help victims
- keep public order

municipalities must also provide the police services with the support systems,
buildings, equipment

two contradictory philosophies about the criminal mind - 1. Atavism:
criminals were born to commit crimes due to biological deviance

2. Positivism: crime was the product of social causes

Recidivism - repeating crimes

Cesare Lombroso (1839-1909) - atavist and psychiatrist

father of modern criminology

measured heads, arms, legs of prisoners - wrote criminal man

determined/believed identification between physical characteristics and
crime

Alexandre Lacassagne (1843-1942) - Positivist and professor of legal
medicine

Father of forensic medicine

linked biographies of criminals and geography of crime rates with charts and
maps of crime stats

believed social environment influenced behaviour of criminals

created area of study known as "legal medicine"

, researched and observed high profile case of one of the most notorious serial
killers in France, Joseph Vacher

Edmond Locard (1877-1966) - Father of Forensic Science

"Dust Guy"

assistant to Lacassagne in France and physician

interested in dust aka trace evidence

"every contact leaves a trace"

developed methodology for examining cause of death and any associated
physical evidence

created first crime laboratory in empty attic rooms above law court

Locard's Exchange Principal - when any two objects come into contact there
is always a transference of material from one object to the other

Hans Gross (1847-1915) - "Science in Service of the Law"

Austrian professor of criminal law

detailed the need for legal investiagators, lawyers, and jurists to understand
the scientific study of crime

- "Criminalistics": involved with or conducting scientific studies to help solve
crime

integrating criminalsitics into the justice system was the only way of ridding
the legal system of bias and misunderstanding

Criminology - the scientific study and evaluation of physical evidence in the
commission of crimes

the science dealing with the detention of crime and the apprehension of
criminals

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