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-   -   Study: Nearly 1 in 3 will be arrested by age 23 (https://gfy.com/showthread.php?t=1050520)

SuckOnThis 12-19-2011 02:18 PM

Study: Nearly 1 in 3 will be arrested by age 23
 
Step by step we slowly creep towards a police state..........


Nearly one in three people will be arrested by the time they are 23, a study published Monday in Pediatrics found.

"Arrest is a pretty common experience," says Robert Brame, a criminologist at the University of North Carolina-Charlotte and principal author of the study.

The new data show a sharp increase from a previous study that stunned the American public when it was published 44 years ago by criminologist Ron Christensen. That study found 22% of youth would be arrested by age 23. The latest study finds 30.2% of young people will be arrested by age 23.

Criminologist Alfred Blumstein says the increase in arrests for young people in the latest study is unsurprising given several decades of tough crime policies.

"I was astonished 44 years ago. Most people were," says Blumstein, a professor of operations research at the Heinz College at Carnegie Mellon University who served with Christensen on President Lyndon Johnson's crime task force.

Now, Blumstein says, youth may be arrested for drugs and domestic violence, which were unlikely offenses to attract police attention in the 1960s. "There's a lot more arresting going on now," he says.

The new study is an analysis of data collected between 1997 and 2008 by the Bureau of Labor Statistics. The annual surveys conducted over 11 years asked children, teens and young adults between the ages of 8 and 23 whether they had ever been arrested by police or taken into custody for illegal or delinquent offenses.

The question excluded only minor traffic offenses, so youth could have included arrests for a wide variety of offenses such as truancy, vandalism, underage drinking, shoplifting, robbery, assault and murder ? any encounter with police perceived as an arrest, Brame says. Some of the incidents perceived and reported by the young people as arrests may not have resulted in criminal charges, he says.

Localities handled many minor offenses more informally 40 years ago than they do now, criminologist Megan Kurlychek says. "Society is a lot less tolerant of these teenage behaviors," she says.

The high rate of arrest among youth is troubling because the records will follow them as adults and make it harder for them to get student loans, jobs and housing, says Kurlychek, an associate professor at University at Albany-SUNY who studies juvenile delinquency. "Arrests have worse consequences than ever for these juveniles," she says. Arrest records "follow you forever. The average teenager who steals an iPod or is arrested for possession of marijuana ? why do we make that define their lives?"

http://www.usatoday.com/news/nation/...ase/52055700/1

Rochard 12-19-2011 02:39 PM

That's amazing really - I'm stunned. I've been "detained in the back of a police car" once (for a traffic violation), but never arrested.

But does this mean we are becoming a police state, that people are more desperate, or paying a lot less attention to the rules? Or a combination of the three?

Scott McD 12-19-2011 02:39 PM

I thought this was a DVTimes thread...

PR_Glen 12-19-2011 02:49 PM

arrested for what though? if crimes are being committed than shouldn't they be?

who is being detained for no reason?

baddog 12-19-2011 02:51 PM

What were the stats 20 years ago?

Re-read, that article is extremely biased. The writer is an idiot. $.02

Barry-xlovecam 12-19-2011 03:02 PM

This begs the question of; Too many crimes or too many criminals?

raymor 12-19-2011 03:03 PM

The article compares a study of 1960s data
to 1997-2008 data.

I found it interesting that crime rates were similar in both periods,
being significantly lower than the intervening period. Crimes rates were higher from the late seventies to the early nineties. I wonder if those were more permissive periods, when more people. thought tney could get away with crimes.

SuckOnThis 12-19-2011 03:04 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Barry-xlovecam (Post 18640344)
This begs the question of; Too many crimes or too many criminals?


To many cops.

alias 12-19-2011 03:46 PM

In b4 school to prison pipeline: http://www.aclu.org/racial-justice/s...rison-pipeline

Paul Markham 12-19-2011 03:57 PM

I was arrested in Germany for public indecency, or similar, when I was 18. Will tell the full story tomorrow. It's going into my book on my life story.

$5 submissions 12-19-2011 04:01 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by baddog (Post 18640327)
What were the stats 20 years ago?

Re-read, that article is extremely biased. The writer is an idiot. $.02

:1orglaugh:thumbsup

Pipecrew 12-19-2011 04:32 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by PR_Glen (Post 18640324)
arrested for what though? if crimes are being committed than shouldn't they be?

who is being detained for no reason?

A lot of people are put in cuffs or back of car for "officer safety"

raymor 12-19-2011 04:40 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Barry-xlovecam (Post 18640344)
This begs the question of; Too many crimes or too many criminals?

The author mentions "stealing an iphone" as the type of crime which might not have resulted in arrest in the 1960s. Perhaps we've stopped letting young people get away with theft, nipping it in the bud, so to speak, to address issues early rather than waiting until after they become hardened criminals.

BFT3K 12-19-2011 04:56 PM

I guess that means I'm officially part of the 33 percenters :1orglaugh

DudeRick 12-19-2011 05:23 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by SuckOnThis (Post 18640348)
To many cops.

Wrong again douchebag...
Too many single parent homes! :disgust

Rochard 12-19-2011 05:41 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Pipecrew (Post 18640521)
A lot of people are put in cuffs or back of car for "officer safety"

That's what happened to me. They thought I saw a cop and took off speeding at 130mph. Truth is I never saw the cop. Full felony stop. None of this "can we see your insurance sir" routine - It was "come out of the car with your hands up". Turns out I was just speeding and half an hour later I was on my way.

Rochard 12-19-2011 05:48 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by DudeRick (Post 18640618)
Wrong again douchebag...
Too many single parent homes! :disgust

You might be right. I have a kid, and most of my kid's friends come from a broken household. It's rather sad really - too many single parents trying to make ends meet on their own and kids without supervison.

Ron Bennett 12-19-2011 06:30 PM

Underage drinking and cannabis possession presumably make up a large portion of the youth arrests.

Also, a lot of activities, such as curfew violations, bringing a knife / weapon to school, etc can result in arrest while years ago those things often were "handled" off the record - ie. the parents being called / kid being brought home without any "official" action.

Ron

baddog 12-19-2011 06:34 PM

And you can thank OJ for the mandatory domestic violence arrest increase.

AllAboutCams 12-19-2011 06:35 PM

ive come close

SuckOnThis 12-19-2011 06:46 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by DudeRick (Post 18640618)
Wrong again douchebag...
Too many single parent homes! :disgust



Speaking of douche and single parents, how's your mom?


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