THE IMPACT OF PRESENTENCE INVESTIGATIONS ON PLEA BARGAINED DISPOSITIONS IN KINGS COUNTY SUPREME COURT (NEW YORK).

Item

Title
THE IMPACT OF PRESENTENCE INVESTIGATIONS ON PLEA BARGAINED DISPOSITIONS IN KINGS COUNTY SUPREME COURT (NEW YORK).
Identifier
AAI8713757
identifier
8713757
Creator
ENRIGHT, JOSEPH GERARD.
Contributor
Harriet Polack
Date
1987
Language
English
Publisher
City University of New York.
Subject
Sociology, Criminology and Penology
Abstract
This study examines the presentence function of probation from an historical and empirical perspective which argues that the purported diminution of the role of the presentence report (PSR) in the sentencing process--as a result of setence bargaining--is more reflective of a prevailing disenchantment with the rehabilitative ideal than any thoroughly considered, reliable validation of the PSR's dispensibility. It is demonstrated, through a review of the literature, that poorly conceived, polemically biased empirical research has helped to perpetuate the notion that these reports have little value. A survey of studies and inquiries conducted in New York over the past twenty years highlights this argument.;PSRs, formerly considered an "enlightened" fulcrum for the ameliorating correctional and sentencing reforms of the Progressive era, eventually were linked to the potential and/or actual abuses of indeterminate sentencing schemes by civil libertarians (concerned with sentencing disparity) and anti-positivist criminologists (critical of rehabilitation-directed correctional theory and practice). Such arguments, absent any sustained or substantive rebuttal from the probation community, bolstered executive branch efforts to scapegoat the judiciary and gain more control over an instrument potentially regulative of jail/prison intake during an era of chronic overcrowding and attendant federal court intervention.;The author's own study of a random sample of PSRs from Kings County Supreme Court in New York City finds considerable evidence for the proposition that PSRs account for a significant proportion of the observed variance between sentence promised and sentence imposed. Path analysis finds that the custodial status has the most effect on the plea bargain and the recommendation of the probation officer, but the latter is the single most important predictor of the eventual disposition. Further analysis suggests that PSRs containing the most relevant information are more likely to result in amendments of the sentence bargain, while perfunctory reports are most likely merely to endorse the sentence already promised.;An examination of reaction to a recent attempt to eviscerate the PSR's content in New York lends further support to this study's hypothesis that presentence reports have much more utility in the criminal justice system than the revisionist literature suggests.
Type
dissertation
Source
PQT Legacy CUNY.xlsx
degree
Ph.D.
Program
Criminal Justice
Item sets
CUNY Legacy ETDs