Baumes law

Baumes law

The Baumes law was a statute passed by New York State in 1926.

Description

Written by and named after Senator Caleb H. Baumes, the chairman of the New York State Crime Commission, the law called for the automatic life imprisonment of any criminal convicted of more than three separate felonies, without regard to the nature of the offense or any attendant circumstances. It also permitted longer sentences for first-time offenders, denied parole to inmates who had used firearms in the commission of their crimes, and mandated that prisoners could not begin receiving credit for good behavior for parole purposes until they had served the minimum sentence for their offense.Rouse, John Jay (2000). " [http://books.google.com/books?vid=ISBN0738826650&id=GIjUGRB1ER4C&pg=PA22&lpg=PA22&dq=%22Baumes+law%22&sig=V7nITn6-Np-1K-JSJPJOO8Ks_ms Firm But Fair: The Life of Sing Sing Warden Lewis Lawes] ". Xlibris Corporation, p. 22. ISBN 0-7388-2665-0] By 1930, twenty-three states had adopted similar standards, all of which were commonly referred to as "Baumes laws".Cole, Simon A. (2002). " [http://books.google.com/books?vid=ISBN0674010027&id=3CYqtVk6oI8C&pg=PA217&lpg=PA217&printsec=8&dq=%22Baumes+law%22&sig=uZppiISrNtJnlQ0zay_OjRu89FI Suspect Identities: A History of Fingerprinting and Criminal Identification] ". Harvard University Press, pp. 217-18. ISBN 0-674-01002-7]

The law was made possible by the growing adoption and acceptance of fingerprinting as a method of identification by police departments, which began to replace anthropometry as the technique of choice in the 1920s. Law enforcement officials felt that the new methods enabled them to more efficiently and reliably distinguish recalcitrant criminals from reformed ones. By 1931, two hundred four-time offenders in New York had been given life sentences under the Baumes law.

Legal challenges

A serious challenge to tbe Baumes law concerned the case of a shoplifter named Ruth St. Clair, who was arrested for the fourth time after stealing items from a department store in December 1929. St. Clair had three prior convictions of a similar nature in 1920, 1924, and 1926, for stealing items such as coats and dresses from stores. When she was convicted of the 1929 offense, the Baumes law imposed a life sentence, the first given to a woman since its enactment. St. Clair's case attracted much media attention, but the United States Supreme Court upheld her sentence in 1930. St. Clair eventually spent eight years in prison, before her sentence was commuted to time served. [Segrave, Kerry (2001). " [http://books.google.com/books?vid=ISBN0786409088&id=RO97AeivuQwC&pg=PA35&lpg=PA35&printsec=8&dq=%22Baumes+law%22&sig=GDAripmfQShc3jVTWt5C-VtpY6s Shoplifting: A Social History] ". McFarland and Company, p. 35. ISBN 0-7864-0908-8]

Effects of the Baumes law

While the Baumes law seemed to remove authority from judges and parole boards by mandating sentences, they gradually began to work around it through the increased use of plea bargains. In cases where a life sentence would have been unjust, prosecutors became more amenable to accused parties' guilty pleas to misdemeanor charges, which would not trigger portions of the statute. [Remington, Frank J. (1993). The Decision to Charge, the Decision to Convict on a Plea of Guilty, and the Impact of Sentence Structure on Prosecution Practices. In Lloyd E. Ohlin and Frank J. Remington (Eds.) " [http://books.google.com/books?vid=ISBN0791415635&id=-XNQlazUqhYC&pg=PA84&lpg=PA84&dq=%22Baumes+law%22&sig=n9uGJbBmNu4wPQS_tFRptbLkWR8 Discretion in Criminal Justice] ". SUNY Press, p. 84. ISBN 0-7914-1563-5.]

The Baumes law increased prison populations as persons who would formerly have been paroled remained incarcerated, placing a strain on infrastructure. In addition to a negative effect on prison conditions, the Baumes law also decreased prisoner morale, since it greatly decreased inmates' ability to achieve parole. Commenting on the Baumes law in his autobiography, Clarence Darrow wrote,

"The unfortunates in prisons felt that there was no chance for regaining liberty once the prison doors closed upon them. This hopelessness kindled prison revolts, which led to fearful slaughter, to the destruction of all that the years of earnest work had done to modify conditions by building up humane prisons, caring for juvenile offenders, and giving the condemned hope or opportunity once more to be free." [Darrow, Clarence S. (1996)." [http://books.google.com/books?vid=ISBN0306807386&id=NeS3rqFCjIAC&pg=PA336&lpg=PA336&dq=%22Baumes+law%22&sig=khS5RT2cFV61WXKN5rscHaZdwoQ The Story of My Life] ". Da Capo Press, p. 336. ISBN 0-306-80738-6]
The Baumes law led to 1929 riots at Auburn and Dannemora, with nine prisoners and a guard losing their lives during the former.

Lewisohn Commission

In response to the riots, New York appointed a committee to investigate the state's prison system. Led by Sam Lewisohn, who would ultimately become the president of the American Prison Association, the Lewisohn Commission issued a number of recommended changes, the majority of which became policy. Among these was a shift from the mandatory sentences of the Baumes law to a more open-ended sentencing and parole system, focused on rehabilitation and vocational training. [Rollins, Jr., Alfred B. (2001). " [http://books.google.com/books?vid=ISBN0765808560&id=va8nHlKr84IC&pg=PA306&lpg=PA306&q=Lewisohn&vq=Lewisohn&dq=%22Baumes+law%22&sig=rVhxOO1woYXI1MkrNrBdqaAqKeA Roosevelt and Howe] ". Transaction Publishers, p. 306. ISBN 0-7658-0856-0]

"Bum's rush"

Some people mistakenly believe that a corrupted version of "Baumes law" was the origin for the idiom "". However, this phrase was in common use before the passage of the Baumes law [Ammer, Christine (1997). " [http://books.google.com/books?vid=ISBN039572774X&id=9re1vfFh04sC&pg=PA88&lpg=PA88&dq=%22Bum's+rush%22&sig=SSUAs3si00yThlKdx4zK0v739Q0 The American Heritage Dictionary of Idioms] . Houghton Mifflin Reference Books, p. 88. ISBN 0-395-72774-X] , and it is derived from the practice of evicting tramps or vagrants from bars and other public places. [Kirkpatrick, Jane and C.M. Schwartz (Eds.) (1995). " [http://books.google.com/books?vid=ISBN1853263095&id=8C7k7ZW3dIEC&pg=PA43&lpg=PA43&dq=%22Bum's+rush%22+dictionary&sig=zaD0ZFJMQE6hMJJXlOwkS4FmWJ4 The Wordsworth Dictionary of Idioms] ". Wordsworth Editions, p. 43. ISBN 1-85326-309-5] In Dashiell Hammett's classic "The Maltese Falcon", detective Sam Spade makes reference to "Baumes rush," a pun on "bum's rush" and Baumes laws.

ee also

*Three strikes law

References


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Нужна курсовая?

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Baumes — may refer to:* Baumes Law (passed 1926) * Caleb Howard Baumes (1863 1937), writer of the above law …   Wikipedia

  • Baumes Laws — ▪ New York, United States [1926]       several statutes of the criminal code of New York state, U.S., enacted on July 1, 1926 most notably, one requiring mandatory life imprisonment for persons convicted of a fourth felony. A “three time loser”… …   Universalium

  • Caleb H. Baumes — Caleb Howard Baumes (March 31, 1863, Bethlehem, New York ndash;September 25, 1937, near Hudson, New York) was a member of the New York state senate 27th District. Lawyer Baumes was at one time a member of New York state assembly from Orange… …   Wikipedia

  • Früchte des vergifteten Baumes — Nardone gegen USA Entschieden 11. Dezember 1939 Rubrum: Frank C. Nardo …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Früchte des giftigen Baumes — Nardone gegen USA Entschieden 11. Dezember 1939 Rubrum: Frank C. Nardone et al …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Früchte des verbotenen Baumes — Nardone gegen USA Entschieden 11. Dezember 1939 Rubrum: Frank C. Nardone et al …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Clean path — Nardone gegen USA Entschieden 11. Dezember 1939 Rubrum: Frank C. Nardone et al …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Clean path doctrine — Nardone gegen USA Entschieden 11. Dezember 1939 Rubrum: Frank C. Nardone et al …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Clean path rule — Nardone gegen USA Entschieden 11. Dezember 1939 Rubrum: Frank C. Nardone et al …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Erweitertes Beweisverwertungsverbot — Nardone gegen USA Entschieden 11. Dezember 1939 Rubrum: Frank C. Nardone et al …   Deutsch Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”