Enterprise of law pdf free download

Enterprise of law pdf free download

enterprise of law pdf free download

61//QH14 on investment (amended LOI) and Law no. 59//QH14 [​GUIDANCE] On COVID and Business Continuity Plans · Build a Morning News Brief: Easy, No Clutter, Free! Browse All Amended investment and enterprise laws: Pros and cons for foreign investors Download PDF [KB]. Book Review. A Review of Dana Brakman Reiser and Steven A. Dean. Social Enterprise Law: Trust, Public Benefit, and Capital Markets. A catalog record for this book is available from the Library of Congress. Appendix A The Growth of Free Industry and Enterprise. Appendix B The Growth of economic laws more complex and less advanced than those of the phys-.

Enterprise of law pdf free download - suggest you

The Enterprise of Law: Justice Without the State

CONTENTS ( '1II'yJ'ight ('J IlJ9{)by Pacific Research Institute for Public Policy. All "ghl." It:served. No part of th

Author: Bruce L. Benson


downloads Views 23MB Size Report

This content was uploaded by our users and we assume good faith they have the permission to share this book. If you own the copyright to this book and it is wrongfully on our website, we offer a simple DMCA procedure to remove your content from our site. Start by pressing the button below!

Report copyright / DMCA form

CONTENTS

( '1II'yJ'ight ('J IlJ9{)by Pacific Research Institute for Public Policy. All "ghl." It:served. No part of this publication may be reproducrAl, "IIII"d ill u 't:(rievlll system, or transmitted in any form or by any '"1'IIIS, c1ectmnic, mechanical, photocopy, recording, or otherwise, Wllhollt the prior written consent of the publisher.

PART I

ISBN O'U

2 Customary Legal Systems with Voluntary Enforcement

I'llt'irk I{esearch Institute for Public Policy I~~ SlInsome Street Sun J'rllncisco, CA (·11~) ')KlJ-() diseinuak4web.net'llry or Congress Cataloging-in-Publication

FROM VOLUNTARY TO AUTHORITARIAN

Data

Benson, Bruce, The enterprise of law : justice without the state / by Bruce L. B"llson. p. em. Includes bibliographical references and index. ISBN : $ - ISBN (pbk.) : $ I. Rules of law-United States. 2. Law enforcement-United States. .\. Justice Administration of-United States.. 4. Privatization-Law und legislation-United States. I. Title. KJi .\40'1I-dc20

PART II

A PUBLIC CHOICE APPROACH TO AUTHORITARIAN LAW

4 Law and Justice as a Political Market CIP

5 The Demand Side of the Political Market

LAW

PART III

REEMERGENCE

OF PRIVATE ALTERNATIVES

8



Benefits of Privatization Appendix to Chapter 10 PART IV

RATIONALIZING

AUTHORITARIAN

LAW

11

12

The Legal Monopoly on Coercion Appendix to Chapter 12 PART V

13

FROM AUTHORITARIAN

TO PRIVATE LAW

This project has taken several years to complete, and a large number of people have either been significantly affected by it or had significant effects on it. I would like to acknowledge as many of them as I can recall. First, I must thank my wife Terrie and daughter Lacey for their ongoing support. They put up with me as I tried to juggle an over-committed research agenda that ate up many of the weekends and evenings I should have spent with them. The secretaries at Montana State University and Florida State University typed several very different drafts of the book, transferred various drafts from one word processing system to another twice, and fmally, one of them taught me to do my own word processing. But some of the secretaries also got interested in what I was writing and began to comment on it and ask questions about it. Three deserve special thanks in this regard: Anne Phillips, Vickie Garland, and Carol Bullock. Over the course of its evolution, this manuscript benefited greatly from a number of reviews. In particular, Randy Barnett reviewed the first draft of the book, and from the perspective of a legal scholar, he recommended much of the literature on legal theory and history that I have since drawn on extensively. Furthermore, from the perspective of a former prosecuting attorney, Professor Barnett corrected numerous misperceptions I had about the criminal justice process. Finally his extensive comments and organizational suggestions were invaluable.

Several other revil'wl'rs Wl'n' also WI V IlI'lpllll III p,lIldlill',tills IHlok's development, including Terry Alltit'rsoll, (,onloll 1',. M:lIshall I,'ril/" Harold Berman, and C. S. Cockburn. 'Ilorry AlldCI.'iIIII, III ItIScapacity as the Pacific Research Institute's economic advisor, was partll'ularly instrumental in determining the book's final form and content. With his help and advice, and with Marianne Keddington's editing of the final draft, the book was made considerably more readable (and much shorter). Other people affiliated with the Pacific Research Institute provided me with useful comments and reference material, including Chip Mellor, Charles Baird, David Theroux, and Greg Christainsen. In addition, correspondence and conversations with Leonard Liggio (and several other people affiliated with the Institute for Humane Studies), Murray Rothbard, Lawrence Sherman, and Chuck Logan led me to explore useful references that I probably would have missed. Encouraging comments by P. 1. Hill and others (again including Gordon Tullock and Charles Baird) on a chapter I wrote for a Pacific Research Institute book ("Guns for Protection and Other Private Sector Responses to the Fear of Violent Crime," in Firearms and Violence: Issues of Regulation, Don Kates, Jr., ed. [Cambridge, Mass.: Ballinger Press, ]) actually led to my further investigation of the issues examined in this book. Many discussions with colleagues at Montana State and Florida State, such as Ron Johnson, Merle Faminow, Terry Anderson, Rick Stroup, Dick Wagner, Larry Wollen, Tom McCaleb, Randy Holcombe, Dave Rasmussen, and others I apologize for forgetting to mention, also helped me formulate and sharpen my arguments. Parts of the book were presented at the Legal Studies Workshop and the Political Economy Seminar Series at Florida State University, as well as the Public Choice Seminar Series at George Mason University, the Austrian Economics Colloquium at New York University, the Public Choice Society meetings, and the Southern Economic Association meetings. Discussion following those presentations was very beneficial. The Liberty Fund also sponsored a conference organized by the Pacific Research Institute on "Law, Liberty, and Responsible Individuals" in June of That conference provided me with an opportunity to subject part of my work to critical evaluation by a gathering of eminent legal and economic scholars. Indeed, much of the book has undergone considerable indirect peer review. Certain sections draw on earlier publications of mine in the Journal of Libertarian Studies, the Antitrust Bulletin, the Southern Economic Journal, the Journal of Legal Studies (written with John Baden), the Pacific

Re.,nrch Inlltltute IIponllored book FlfYlarm.~and Violence: Issues qt'Regulalion, edited by Don Kates, Jr.• and in a chapter (written with M. L. Onlcnhut) fbr Amitrust and Regulation, edited by Ronald Grieson (Lexington BookH, ). In addition, materials developed and written for this book have already been published in the Madison Papers Series, the Harvard Journal of Law and Public Policy, the Journal of Libertarian Studies, the International Review of Law and Economics, the Cato Journal, the Journal of Institutional and Theoretical Economics, and the Southern Economic Journal. I thank all of these book publishers and journals, their editors and referees, and my coauthors for their contributions. The Southern Economic Journal's choice of my paper drawn from this book ("The Spontaneous Evolution of Commercial Law") to receive the GeorgescuRoegen Prize as the best article published in the journal during is a particularly pleasing recognition by my peers that my work on this subject might be worthy of attention. Several institutions must also be acknowledged. My departments and department chairmen at both Montana State and Florida State were always very supportive. The Institute for Humane Studies provided financial support in the form of an F. Leroy Hill Summer Fellowship, that allowed me to explore a number of related issues much more deeply than I might have, and much of the work they supported ultimately found its way into the book. The Political Economy Research Center also supported the development of several papers that I have drawn upon for the book. Finally, and most significantly, I wish to explicitly acknowledge the vital contributions made by people affiliated with the Pacific Research Institute. I have already mentioned the valuable reviews and comments on the book from Institute associates, but their contributions go far beyond that. To start with, the Institute's willingness to fund the book was what convinced me that it was a project worth pursuing. The Institute's continued support of the project over what turned out to be a much longer period than anyone anticipated has involved many people. In particular: Chip Mellor's behind the scenes efforts to keep the project on track, and to provide the kind of technical and intellectual inputs I needed, were clearly essential (he also proposed, organized, and ran the Liberty Fund Conference mentioned above); Terry Anderson saw to it that the book was written and packaged in a fashion that would maximize its chances of being marketable (subject to the constraints arising from the limited abilities of the author); Pam Riley prepared the market to receive the book; and Linda Clumeck prepared the book for

the market. 1 alll sure that I alll unawUl'C(If Ihe lull C!lltCIII IlIld illlporlulIl..'C of the efforts made by these individuals llnd olher" III Ille Inslitllle. Thank you all for your invaluable contributions. Bruce L. Benson Department of Economics Florida State University

INTRODUCTION

Anyone who would even question the "fact" that law and order are necessary functions of government is likely to be considered a ridiculous, uninformed radical by most observers. Bernard Herber, in a typical public finance textbook, for example, wrote The function of providing domestic stability in the form of law and order and the protection of property could be logically opposed only by an avowedanarchist. Since [law and order is] not [a] controversial function of government, [it does] not require a lengthy analysis in the effort to construct an economic case for the existence of a public sector for resource allocation purposes'! But even though most academics do not question the logic of government domination of law and the maintenance of order, large segments of the population do. Surveys and polls indicate growing dissatisfaction with all aspects of government law enforcement in the United States, particularly with the courts and the corrections system. More importantly, citizens are turning to the private sector in ever increasing numbers for services which presumably are "not controversial functions of government." Privately produced crime detection and prevention, arbitration, and mediation are growth industries in the United States. This study will use economic theory to compare institutions and incentives that influence public and private performance in the provision of law

and its enforcement. Some critics Illuy contend th"l low III nol un uppmpriute subject for "economic analysis," becaulic it III nol prmlucrd und allocated in exchange markets. To be certain, economics hUlla g,'t'ut deul to say abollt market institutions, but its relevance and scope are not so narrowly limited. Economic theory requires only that scarce resources be allocated among competing uses. Clearly, the enterprise of law-the use of police services, court time, and all other inputs in the process of making law and establishing order-requires scarce resources that must be allocated. Beyond that, economic theory explains human behavior by considering how individuals react to incentives and constraints. U sing economic theory, then, it can be convincingly demonstrated that private-sector (i.e., market or voluntary) institutions are capable of establishing strong incentives that lead to effective law making and law enforcement. The resulting legal constraints facilitate interaction and support social order by inducing cooperation and reducing violent confrontation. It can also be shown that public-sector institutions create incentives that can lead to substantial inefficiencies in the provision of these same functions. In fact, our modern reliance on government to make law and establish order is not the historical norm. Public police forces were not imposed on the populace until the middle of the nineteenth century in the United States and Great Britian, for instance, and then only in the face of considerable citizen resistance? Crime victims played the prosecutors' role in England until almost the turn of the century, and they did not yield to public prosecution without a struggle.3 The foundation of commercial law was developed by the European merchant community and enforced through merchant courts.4 To this day, international trade is "governed" to a large extent by merchants, as they make, arbitrate, and enforce their own law; and in the United States, at least 75 percent of commercial disputes are settled through private arbitration or mediation with decisions based on business custom and practice (customary commercial law).5 Arbitration services, particularly for commercial disputes, have been increasingly used for some time, but the last few years have witnessed the development of a new industry-private for-profit courts competing with public courts for a wide spectrum of civil disputes.6 Furthermore, there are now over twice as many private police as public police in the United States, as citizens hire more and more watchmen, guards, and highly trained security experts? Between and , employment by private firms offering protective and detective services increased by percent, and the number of firms offering such services grew by percent over the same period (see Table ).

IndlvldulllN are IlINoIncreallingly Ilupplementing government protection with cftbrtll of their own." More and more citizens are buying firearms for penonal protection; burglar alarms are being installed and guard dogs purchalled. Citizens are barring their windows, learning self-defense, oarrylng whistles and other noisemakers, and buying self-protection devices. There is a growing business in providing bullet-proof cars and security .)lltems for the powerful and wealthy who fear assassination or kidnapping. There are also less costly activities, such as neighborhood or tenant watches and patrols, and escort groups. A Gallup poll found that during the early s, 17 percent of those surveyed reported at least one of these voluntary crime prevention efforts in their neighborhood.9 People turn to the private sector when public police and courts are presumably available because there is a growing dissatisfaction with publicsector efforts to maintain social order. Citizens' dissatisfaction arises in part because of a growing belief that the "government is not adequately controlling crime. In , the Figgie Report on Fear of Crime found that "most people perceive crime rates as continually increasing and look at any decline as an aberration, a temporary ebb in the inexorably rising tide of petty theft, armed robbery, murder, and international terror." The report also pointed out that crime statistics understate the true level of crime. According to the report, an estimated 60 percent of all personal larceny cases where there is no contact between the thief and his victim go unreported; and less than 50 percent of all assaults, less than 60 percent of all household burglaries, less than 30 percent of household larcenies, and only a little more than half of all robberies and rapes are diseinuak4web.net Thus, the Figgie Report concluded: "These striking statistics are either a measure of the lack of public confidence in the ability of the police to solve crimes or a more realistic appraisal of what is possible. . .. " II After all, in less than 20 percent of reported crimes were cleared by arrest (down from 26 percent in ), and in at least one California county only 12 percent of those arrested as felons in were actually convicted,12 The U.S. Department of Justice report on crime victimization in found that approximately 10 percent of unreported crimes were not reported because people believed that the police "do not want to be bothered."13 Dissatisfaction with the public criminal law apparatus extends to the courts as well. Since more and more people have come to believe that the courts have not been harsh enough in criminal cases, rising from percent in to in (see Table );14from to , this percentage held fairly steady in the 82 to 86 percent range A study found that

P'N',fllall' diseinuak4web.net Goum Ar, Not Harsh Enough Gallup Gallup Gallup Gallup GSS Gallup GSS GSS GSS GSS GSS GSS

3/ 9/ 1/ 1 / 3/ 12/ 3/ 3/ 3/ 3/ 3/ 3/

SOURCE: A. L. Stinchcombe et al., Crime and Punishment-Changing Francisco: Jossey-Bass Publishers, ), p.

Attitudes in America (San

82 percent of its survey respondents agreed "somewhat" or "a great deal" that "recent Supreme Court decisions have made it more difficult to punish criminals." 16 The Figgie Report also found that 80 percent of the study's sample believed that the courts and prison system were ineffective in rehabilitating criminals. More than half of those surveyed (52 percent) thought that the prison sentences currently given do not discourage crime and that the "revolving door policy in the justice system makes a prison term a mere inconvenience for the experienced criminal."17 Plea bargaining now leads to approximately 90 percent of criminal convictions, implying to many that criminals are getting off with light sentences; beyond that, criminals serve, on average, less than half their sentences in jail (down from 61 percent in )Many also believe that prisons do not fulfill their functions of deterrence and rehabilitation, but instead serve as "schools" for the study of crime. Indeed, a nationwide follow-up study of 78, offenders who were released from prison in found that 74 percent were rearrested The courts receive low marks from citizens in the area of civil law as well. A survey found that only 23 percent of those interviewed had a high degree of confidence in state and local courts, while over a third of the sample expressed little or no confidence. Moreover, 57 percent believed that "efficiency in the courts" was a serious national problem After all, court backlogs can delay a civil trial for more than five years in some stateS

Why I, delay In the

public courtl luch a problem when most criminal , •••••••• Itttled by plea bargaining and most commercial disputes are settled private arbitration? Why, for that matter, does the system rely so heavily • pl•• bal'llalnlng and private arbitration? Why do citizens think they must ~.,tJendbillions of dollars to hire private police officers and establish private Alurtty systems when the government is already spending billions on a public force? Why are local, state, and federal authorities spending taxpayers' an to contract with private firms to build, staff, and maintain prisons i_n the public prison system already costs billions of dollars? Why do :iviodm. of crimes choose not to report a significant portion of all crimes ~itommitted? These questions and others like them can only be answered by IOIIlparing the institutions associated with public-sector law creation and .sbrcement with private-sector counterparts. Neither system is perfect, but fie arowing dissatisfuction with the public sector's performance and increasing flUance on private-sector alternatives indicates that it is time to question the presumption that law and order 'must be governmentally provided. In the analysis that follows, I consider such topics as the characteristics of primitive legal systems and the evolution of common law and other legal I)'.tems. I explore modem law enforcement; the behavior of public police, prosecutors and judges; and political corruption. I also examine current trends in aovernment "contracting" with private firms for police and prison services, and trends in private-sector provision of arbitration, mediation, and crime prevention. Issues in legal theory are discussed, such as the role of custom In law and the question of how "law" should be defined. Throughout the analysis, I liberally use others' thoughts and research findings, demonstrating that many of the relatively broad conclusions reached using an economic perspective have been reached by others in their complementary, yet relatively more narrow, approaches. But more importantly, drawing from a large and .eemingly dispersed literature can lead to a more complete understanding of the potential for private-sector maintenance of social order. In this way we can achieve a more accurate comparison of the effectiveness of the public and private sector in this vital public policy area.

r"

1. 2.

Bernard P. Herber, Modern Public Finance: The Study of Public Sector Economics (Homewood, Ill.: Richard D. Irwin, Inc., ),p. Truett A. Ricks, Bill G. Tillett and Clifford W. Van Meter, Principles of Security (Cincinnati: Criminal Justice Studies, Anderson Publishing Co.,

N"",'

3. 4.

5. 6.

7.

8.

9.







19M!), p, 5; and Frunk Morn, 'I11t'1~:vC'thtlt .\'/""I',¥ (Iilllllllllnilloll, 11l1l,: University Press, 19M2), p. K Juan Cardenas, "The Crime Victim in th~ ProlltlcUlllI'lul I'ruCCIIN,"lIl/rwlnl Journal of Law and Public Polity 9 (Spring 19Mb): :',

~ ~

I

l:l

c

'8

~

oS

a

re

I -l

bit

d V"l N

'"'"I::

'5

~

'" Q

·i

:j"' .,

-t--O V"l

~ I:: C

>

""

""'

- :r

54f

""-

Percent time served sentence length

average \



"'• /' ~

(l

./

/

~

'" "'..

""

' " 1~ --

.~"-

""

f- __

1"'--

••••••••••

Average time served months)

I

"

M

average of only 26,8 months; juvenile. wore Institutionalized tor an average of about nine months Any hope that cooperating with police and prosecutors will protect the victim or others from the same criminal is a false one, Over 70 percent of the offenders released from prison are rearrested for committing another crime The major reason for victim cooperation appears to be the potential satisfaction of knowing that the oriminal who violated the victim's person or property is being punished . Wilson explained, there are few offsetting benefits for the cost of operating in prosecution except a desire for revenge, since stolen property I often not recovered, money loss is not restored, and there is generally compensation for injury Suppose victim cooperation is successful and a criminal is arrested and onvicted. Here, too, the criminal justice system shows little regard for e victim. The victim's views on sentencing are not represented to the Udge, even though "defense counsel will be allowed to appeal to the judge, beg for mercy, to try to sway the judges' emotions, and to recount in pathetic details his client's tragic childhood." Yet, recent political demands . have victim representation at sentencing have been met with the argument at it would be "improper, because the victim would play on the emotions the judge."69 \. It should be clear that the typical crime victim has little to gain from articipating in the criminal justice system. "If anything, the victim is ploited by criminal justice officials and defense attorneys to serve their ersonal and organizational self-interest."7o But victims have not simply nored such abuse. Many have simply chosen not to participate in the secution process, and others have begun to organize politically and apply ressures for changes in the criminal justice system .

~



Fiscal Years



SOURCE: U.S. Department of Justice, Sourcebook ojCriminalJustice Statistics.





o

Statistics, Bureau of Justicl'

property crime estimated that the probability that an adult burglar will be sent to prison for a single offense is ; the risk for a juvenile was , Furthermore, if an adult was actually sent to prison, he or she spent an

ctims Opting Out. It is estimated that about one-half the FBI Index crimes e not reported to police?! The Figgie Report estimated that 60 percent personal larceny cases where there is no contact between the thief and is victim go unreported and that less than half of all assaults, less than percent of all household burglaries, less than 30 percent of household arcenies, and only a little more than half of all robberies and rapes are ported Non-reporting is a natural reaction to the high cost of victim volvement with the criminal justice system, a reaction that has been ommon since the inception of criminal law. The avoidance of additional osts that exceed the personal satisfaction of seeing the criminal punished s not the only reason for not reporting crimes. The U.S. Department of

i

Justice report on crime victimization in found thut In approximately 10 percent of unreported crimes victims believed that the police did "not want to be bothered."73 This belief is probably justified given that many crime reports receive little or no attention by police departments facing common pool problems. Fear of reprisal is another factor, but this also reflects victims' perceptions that the criminal justice system is failing74 The role of the victim in the publicly provided crime control process and his subsequent treatment within that process provide significant disincentives for him to report crimes or cooperate in the prosecution of criminals. Many victims respond to those incentives by opting out, which clearly reduces the effectiveness of the public sector in achieving criminal justice. After all, "to the extent that there is less victim involvement than there would be if other sorts of remedies were available-such as restitutionthen fewer crimes will be reported, fewer criminals will be successfully prosecuted, and more rights violating conduct will result."75 Political Actions by Organized Victims. The second response by victims has been to organize. A number of victim-oriented pressure groups have been formed over the last few years, such as Parents of Murdered Children (POMC) and Mothers Against Drunk Drivers (MADD). These groups "are expressing their anger and frustration at judges who hand down lenient sentences, at parole boards who free violent offenders to commit new mayhem, at prosecutors who plea bargain serious offenses down to minor charges, and at laws that allow the guilty to go free on legal quirks or small police errors."76 They demand tougher sentencing laws, victim compensation, the right of victims to testify prior to sentencing about the effect of crime on their lives, and numerous other reforms. For instance, the Stephanie Roper committee (named after a Maryland College student who was raped, beaten, shot, set afire, and partially dismembered by two men who were sentenced to life in prison but who would be eligible for parole after less than 12 years), with some 11, members and 92, signatures on petitions, persuaded the Maryland legislature to require a minimum of 20 years in prison before parole can be considered in a capital crime, to eliminate drugs and alcohol as mitigating circumstances in violent acts, and to mandate that a written victim-impact statement be provided to judges before sentencing They have also lobbied for judges to be given the option of imposing life sentences with no parole and for in-person testimony by victims prior to sentencing, as well as notification of victims and their families before a criminal is paroled.

SocietY'N LCllilUI:lAllldnlit Mulelltatlun (S.L.A.M.) was organized in Cnlifhrnill t()lluwing the liexul1lturture and murder of a two-year-old child by u pedophile with u year history of violent sexual abuse. S.L.A.M.'S Initial efforts in Sacramento were ineffective, but they returned the next year with people and 60, signatures on a petition A number of new laws were the result, including mandatory prison terms for repeat molesters or violent first offenders, elimination of the hospital treatment program th~t freed the murderer whose crime led to the group's formation, and access by organizations to criminal records of anyone seeking ajob that brings them into close contact with children. In , S.L.A.M. had 75 chapters in 43 states, which lobby for legislative change, actively ,monitor court cases, and provide counseling for victims and information for parents. California established a victim-assistance program in and by thirty-seven states and the District of Columbia had followed suit (most since )79 The National Organization for Victim Assistance now coordinates the lobbying efforts of about 25 groups in Washington, nc It is important to remember that this reform legislation often reflects a compromise between potential conflicting interests and is often designed .to achieve the self-interest goals of a group that does not obviously benefit ,from the statute. Consider public compensation for crime victims, an integral art of several states' victim relief programs. The American Bar Association as actively pursued such a program, even at the federal level. Why? Most deral bills, as proposed, include a payment of the victim's lawyer by the ompensation board whether the victim's claim is successful or not imilarly, several state victim compensation programs mandate a 15 percent egal fee from a victim's award, which produced enough revenues to support bout 1, full-time lawyers in Lawyers are not the only non-victim advocates of victim compensation. he International Association of Chiefs of Police have supported such legislation since In attempting to produce the political compromise necessary to pass federal compensation legislation, such bills have been joined with proposals for federal payments to policemen and firemen killed in the line .ofdUtyOf course, police may support victim compensation out of concern for victims or out of recognition that victims would then have greater ncentives to cooperate in generating arrests and convictions, but the linkage .ofthe two pieces of legislation together suggests strong self-interest motives as well. Other bureaucrats have also consistently advocated victim compensation programs. The Department of Justice would administer the federal

I

I

compensation commission and the program fundM,which "would account for the LEAA study, which pushed for adoption of the program, claiming that the cost would be trivial."84 The LEA A study estimated annual compensation of about $25 million, allowing roughly $1, payment to perhaps 2 percent of the victims of reported crime with injury at that time. Roger Meiners suspected that the federal government would be forced to cover the true costs of the program, because congressmen would find it difficult to vote for reduced benefits to innocent crime victims Therefore, by underestimating costs, the bureaucracy might achieve its ends and then be able to maintain its new position and power. Victim compensation is like so many other programs that characterize the criminal justice system. It appears to be a desirable program, but "in reality, victim compensation threatens to emerge as another tentacle of leviathan, encompassing far more in territory and dollars than ever envisioned."86 It is just another example of a policy chosen because it benefits bureaucrats, lawyers, and other political interests and expands the role of existing institutions. It is becoming apparent that the political approach to the problems of victim alienation is no better than simply opting out. There is one more important response that victims and potential victims are making to the political criminal justice process. The private sector offers numerous alternatives to the use of public police and courts for crime prevention and protection of property rights. These are not considerations that are likely to get much attention in the political arena, but are being increasingly adopted by private citizens.

1.

2.

James S. Kakalik and Sorrel Wildhorn, Private Police in the United States: Findings and Recommendations (Santa Monica, Calif.: The Rand Corporation, ), pp. 1, Richard Neely, Why Courts Don't Ubrk (New York: McGraw-Hill, ),

p 3. 4. 5. 6. 7.

Ibid., p. Alan Bent, The Politics of Law Enforcement: Conflict and Power in Urban Communities (Lexington, Mass.: Lexington Books, ), pp. Neely, Why Courts Don't Ubrk, p. Ibid., p. Lawrence W. Sherman, "Patrol Strategies for Police," in Crime and Public Policy, James Q. Wilson, ed. (San Francisco: Institute for Contemporary Studies Press, ), p.

8, 9,

Ibid., p, "t>, 'nlllY Pute. el III., PrJlic"

RISPOIISI Time. Its Determinants (Washington. D,C.: Police Poundation, ).

and Effects

Sherman, "Patrol Strategies for Police," p. Ibid., p. Ibid., p. John E. Boydstun, Michael E. Sherry, and Nicholas P. Moeher, Patrol Staffing in San Diego: One- or Two-Officer Units (Washington, D.c.: Police Foundation, ). Robert W. Poole, Jr., Cutting Back City Hall (New York: Universe Books, ), pp. Abraham Blumberg, Criminal Justice (Chicago: Quadrangle Books, ), pp. Michael Milakovich and Kurt Weis, "Politics and Measures of Success in the War on Crime," Crime and Delinquency 21 (January ): E. S. Savas, "Municipal Monopolies Versus Competition in Delivering Urban Services," in Improving the Quality of Urban Management, ed. Willis D. Hawley and David Rogers, vol. 8 of Urban Affairs Annual Review (Beverly Hills, Calif.: Sage Publications, ), p. David Jones, Crime Without Punishment (Lexington, Mass.: Lexington Books, ), p. James Q. Wilson, The Politics of Regulation (New York: Basic Books, Inc., ), p. William Chambliss also found that criminal justice is a selective process in which the types of cases that most easily yield convictions are most likely to arise. See Chambliss, Crime and the Legal Process (New York: McGrawHill, ), p. Also see James Eisenstein, Politics and the Legal Process (New York: Harper and Row, ); Abraham Blumberg, "The Practice of Law as a Confidence Game," Law and Society Review 1 (): ; Brian Grosman, The Prosecutor: An Inquiry into the Exercise of Discretion (Toronto: University of Toronto Press, ). Randy Barnett pointed this out in his review of an earlier draft of this book. Randy E. Barnett, "Public Decisions and Private Rights," Criminal Justice Ethics 3 (Summer/Fall ): Eisenstein, Politics and the Legal Process, pp. Also see John Kaplan, "The Prosecutorial Discretion: A Comment," Northwestern Law Review 6 (): Eisenstein, Politics and the Legal Process, p. Neely, Why Courts Don't Ubrk, p. Ibid. William M. Landis, "Legality and Reality: Some Evidence of Criminal Procedure," Journal of Legal Studies (June ):











Neely, Why Courts Don't JJf)rk. p. Jones, Crime Without Punishment, pp. 81, , Ibid., p. H. H. A. Cooper, "Plea Bargaining: A Comparative Analysis," International Law and Policy 5 (): , See for example, Thomas Church, Jr., et aI., Justice Delayed: The Pace of Litigation in Urban Trial Courts (Williamsburg, Va.: National Center for State Courts, ); W. M. Rhoades, "The Economics of Criminal Courts: A Theoretical and Empirical Investigation," Journal of Legal Studies 5 (): ; W. 1. Campbell, "Delays in Criminal Cases: Before the Conference of Metropolitan Chief Judges of the Federal Judicial Center," Federal Rules Decisions 55 (): ; R. W. Gillespie, Judicial Productivity and Court Delay: An Exploratory Analysis of the Federal Courts (Washington, D.c.: Government Printing Office, ); 1. 0. Williams and R Richardson, Delay in Superior Courts of North Carolina and an Assessment of Its Causes (Raleigh, N.C.: Administrative Office of the Courts, ). Church, et al.,Justice Delayed: The Pace of Litigation in Urban Trial Courts, pp. 28, Neely, Why Courts Don't Work, p. 7. Ibid., p. Ibid., p. Ibid. Randy Barnett provided this example in his review of an early draft of this book. Barnett suggested that "the average case load of a felony court judge now is boring compared to ten years ago." Neely, Why Courts Don't Work, p. Carl Person, "Justice Inc.," Juris Doctor 8 (March ), p. See for example, William M. Landes and Richard Posner, "Adjudication as a Private Good," Journal of Legal Studies 8 (March ): ; Rodney H. Mabry, Holly H. Ulbrich, Hugh H. Macauley, Jr., and Michael T. Maloney, An Economic Investigation of State and Local Judiciary Services (Washington, D.c.: National Institute of Law Enforcement and Criminal Justice, Law Enforcement Assistance Administration, Department of Justice, ), p. Neely, Why Courts Don't Work, p. Ibid., p. James Q. Wilson, "Thinking Practically About Crime," in Assessing the Criminal: Restitution, Retribution, and the Legal Process, ed. Randy E. Barnett and John Hagel ill (Cambridge, Mass.: Ballinger Press, ), p. xxi. Ibid., p. xxi. James Eisenstein and Herbert Jacob, Felony Justice (Boston: Little, Brown and Co., ), p.

Charle. H. Lo,ln and Ihlrl. P. Rausch, "Punishment and Profit: EmergcnccII uf Private Bnterprlle Prl11ons,"Justice Quarterly 2 (September ): Neely, Why Courts Don't Wor~, p. Ibid., p. Bruce L. Benson, "The Economic Theory of Regulation as an Explanation of Policies Towards Bank Mergers and Holding Company Acquisitions," Antitrust Bulletin 28 (Winter ): Bent, The Politics of Law Enforcement, pp. Eisenstein, Politics and the Legal Process, p. This point was raised by Randy Barnett in his review of an early draft of this book. He noted that "[t]he main group that is deliberately excluded from access to the inner workings of the courts are academics seeking to 'study' the system-who then go on to write about the hidden workings of the system." Blumberg, Criminal Justice, p. Research and Forecasts, Inc., America Afraid: How Fear of Crime Changes the Uily ~ Live, Based on the Widely Publicized Figgie Report (New York: New America Library, ), p. Frederick Kaiser, "Federal Law Enforcement: Structure and Reorganization," Criminal Justice Review 5 (Fall ): Bruce Smith, Police Systems in the United States, 2nd ed. (New York: Harper and Row, ), pp. William F. McDonald, "The Role of the Victim in America," in Assessing the Criminal: Restitution and the Legal Process, ed. Randy. E. Barnett and John Hagel ill (Cambridge, Mass.: Ballinger Publishing Co., lCJ77), p. Ibid., pp. Ibid., p. Ibid., p. Ibid., p. Ibid., p. These statistics are reported in Poole, Cutting Back City Hall, pp. Brian Forst, Judith Lucianvic, and Sarah 1. Cox, What Happens After Arrest? (Washington, D.c.: Institute of Law and Social Research, ICJ77). G. Krohm, "The Pecuniary Incentives of Property Crime," in The Economics of Crime and Punishment, ed. S. Rottenberg (Washington, D.c.: American Enterprise Institute, lCJ73), p. 1. L. Barkas, Protecting Yourself Against Crime, Public Affairs Pamphlet No. (New York: Public Affairs Committee, lCJ78), p. Wilson, "Thinking Practically About Crime," p. xv. McDonald, "The Role of the Victim in America," pp. Ibid., p. 3m. Wilson, "Thinking Practically About Crime," p. xv.

/

I~I







A PUILIC CMOtC. APPRCW:lM '"' AU'I'MO.U'I'AIUAN

lAW

Research and Forecasts, Americll Afmid, Pi 10~, Ibid. Wilson, "Thinking Practically About Crime," pp. xv-xvi. Randy E. Barnett, "Pursuing Justice in a Free Society, Part One: Power vs. Liberty," Criminal Justice Ethics 4 (Summer/Fall ): Michael Satchell, "Victims Have Rights Too," Parade, March 17, , p. Ibid. Ibid., p. Juan Cardenas, "The Crime Victim in the Prosecutorial Process," Harvard Journal of Law & Public Policy 9 (Spring ): p. Satchell, "Victims Have Rights Too," p. Roger E. Meiners, "Public Compensation of the Victims of Crime: How Much Would It Cost?" in Assessing the Criminal: Restitution, Retribution, and the Legal Process, ed. Randy E. Barnett and John Hagel ill (Cambridge, Mass.: Ballinger Publishing Co., ), p. Ibid. Ibid., pp. Ibid., pp. Ibid., p. Ibid., pp.

lC:ORRUPTION OF LAW NFORCEMENT OFFICIALS

IlChicago Cop Goes Undercover to Crack a Police Dope Ring," "This Judge Defendant," ''A Federal Judge Goes on Trial in Nevada on Bribery ,Charges," "More Miami Cops Are Arrested," ''A Prosecutor on Trial," Wailed U.S. Judge Resists Resigning."} This sample of headlines from news ,magazine and newspaper articles only touches the surface of the corrup'tion problem among law enforcement officials. Political corruption has been .a fact of life since government got into the business of law enforcement. .Corruption is actually just a black market for the property rights over which politicians and bureaucrats have allocative power.2 Rather than assigning rights according to political power, rights are sold to the highest bidder. If bureaucrats are not monitored closely, then self-interest motives may really take over and corruption is likely. To get some idea of the level of corruption in law enforcement, we must examine the opportunities for corruption and the institutionalized incentives to carry out corrupt acts that face public sector law enforcement officials.

Is the

Corruption is a direct consequence of discretionary authority by government officials. When common pool congestion arises, public law enforcement bureaucrats have tremendous discretion in allocating limited bureau resources among competing demands. For example, overcriminalization enhances the

eo

possibility for corruption. as police arc in*, pUMI""n ohoo •• which IUWH to enforce and which to ignore. This power Invltell corruption. Commons problems also generate considerable discretion for judie" and prosecutors. Court time is to a large extent rationed by waiting time. but prosecutors can also ration court time by deciding which cases to prosecute, which to plea bargain, and which to drop; judges similarly decide which cases deserve consideration and which do not. The discretionary power to allocate many rights because of the commons problem of overcriminalization combines with bureaucratic secrecy to enhance opportunities for corruption. For example, where government has modified a rights structure to prevent a competitive market and has, consequently, created incentives for an illegal market to arise, the potential illegal transaction can often be easily detected? As a result, successful underground markets require illegal transactions to have the appearance of legality or have agreements with officials that the law will not be enforced. Perhaps the property is durable and immobile (e.g., land subject to zoning), or the property is subject to close scrutiny by government officials (e.g., liquor license requirements). Under .such circumstances. an illegal property rights modification must be accomplIshed through the actions of a government official. As a consequence, land use and building regulations appear to generate considerable opportunities for political corruption.4 Corruption need not go as far as outright changes in statutes or regulations. Public officials may simply ignore violations or make it easy for individuals to find their way through the red tape quickly. In , the Knapp Commission to Investigate Alleged Police diseinuak4web.net in New York City discovered that the second largest source of polIce

• vllluubic lIel of' pruporty diseinuak4web.net that may be Hold. They can allow certain lndlviduWHor gruup. tu operate lIIegally while preventing other potential partici~ants from entering the market. That is, they can sell monopoly rights to . • prIvate ~ector underground market and then enforce that rights allocation. Schelh~g argued that organized crime is really monopolized crime, and both Rubm and Anderson contended that criminal firms possess market power because there are economies of scale in buying corruption from police d ot~er governmental officials.6 Demsetz, however, explained that 'lConOimes of sc~e. are not s~fficient for such monopoly pricing? Exploiting monopoly pos~tIon reqUires entry restrictions, typically arising from aove~ental diseinuak4web.net the case of underground markets, all entry is illegal; t If enforcement is easy, corrupt public officials can sell the right to 'produce to selected illegal firms. In this instance, an underground market "for governmentally controlled property rights may be required for a private .ector .underground market to operate. Not surprisingly, the Knapp Commisndiscovered that "organized crime is the single biggest source of police 'Oorruption" in New York City.s Similarly, Charles Ashman reported that Ilorganized crime cannot function without organized justice."9 The potential for government corruption arises for precisely the same ason that underground private markets can exist. Legal rights modifications revent a competitive allocation of resources, creating opportunities for ark~ts that are designed to avoid the laws. Under many circumstances, ese illegal markets must involve corrupt law enforcement officials in order to e~ist, particularly when the market requires rights over which public ficlals have allocative discretion. But corruption requires more than pportunities; it requires a desire to take advantage of them.

corruption was legitimate business seeking to ease its way through the maze of City ordinances and regulations. Major offenders are construction contractors and sUbcontr~ctors, liquor licensees, and managers of businesses like trucking firms and parking lots, which are likely to park large numbers of vehicles illegally. If the police were completely honest, it is likely that members of these groups would seek to corrupt them, since most seem to feel that paying off the police is easier and cheaper than obeying the laws or paying fines and answering summonses when they do violate the laws.5

There is a closely related opportunity for corruption that has clear and direct applications to criminal law enforcement. In instances where illegal activities could be prevented or severely limited through relatively inexpensive enforcement efforts (e.g., gambling, prostitution), public officials have

eci~ions are made on the basis of information and incentives, and public ficlal~ reac~ to incentives just as private individuals do. Thus, relatively trong mcentIves to become corrupt are likely to result in relatively more orruption. The relevant incentives are those that Becker delineated in his ,con?mic theory of crime: the size of expected payoffs relative to a public ficial's ~lternatives, the likelihood of being detected and punished, and e seventy of the potential diseinuak4web.net e Payoffs to Corruption. The attractiveness to a public official of the pected payoff from corruption depends on a number of factors. The

potential returns to corruption will be weighed .,&llnllt return. to. l~ther activities that may have to be foregone if the ofl1chtl ChtleN to partIcIpate in an illegal market. Of course, law enforcement ot't1cialHcannot capt~re profits when they abstain from corruption and concentrate on enhancmg efficiency in the production oflaw enforcement services. They may be able to move to a better-paying public sector job, but few public officials receive large salaries. Officials may also gain satisfaction from the prestige and power they acquire, but "some experts note that judicial virtue has been tested more than usual of late by failure of salaries to keep pace with the earnings of private attorneys."ll Furthermore, many public officials are severely constrained as to how and how much they can legally obtain beyond their public salaries. Thus, assuming that public sector employment was chosen because it was an official's best alternative, any reasonably large expected payoff from corrupt activity may be tempting. The magnitude of the potential payoff from corruption is determined by several factors. The expected value of the rights that the official is able to allocate is a prime determinant. Thus, the greater the market distortion created by the laws being enforced, the greater the potential payoff to officials doing the enforcing. Strict building codes or rigorous and geographically expansive zoning laws, for instance, generate the potential for large payoffsP In addition, when a market is entirely outlawed (e.g., drugs and prostitution), the potential payments to public officials for protecting a black market's monopoly are enormous. The Knapp Commission found evidence of payoffs to a plainclothes police officer from gambling interests in New York to range from $ to $1, per monthP But this is small-time compared to narcotics-related payoffs, which run into the hundreds of thousands of dollars. In , for example, ten Chicago police officers were convicted of taking $, in protection money from narcotics dealers,14 In , a federal prosecutor was charged with receiving payments of $, and a boat in exchange for tipping off a drug smuggler to the evidence-gathering activities of U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration officers,15 Similarly, if an official has allocative power over a number of different rights, the payoff could be large even though no single right has tremendou~ value. The Knapp Commission found that "while individual payments to umformed men were small, mostly under $20, they were often so numerous as to add substantially to a patrolman's income."16 When the discretionary power to allocate rights in a common pool is concentrated in the hands of a few officials, the corruption payoff to those individuals can be extremely large. Judges, for example, have near-monopoly

control over the dlNpCnll<lonof caHes that corne before them. One of the tbur judges found guilty aN of January 20, , as a consequence of "Operation Greylord" (a federal undercover operation to detect corruption in the Cook County court system) was convicted of, among other things, accepting bribes totaling $, in cash and eight automobilesP A New Jersey Judge was convicted in of taking $22, to release one convict from prison and put another on probation.1s Investigating officers have similar monopoly powers. If an investigator puts together a case against a particular criminal, then he is in position to extort money or accept a bribe from that criminal. The Knapp Commission found that investigating detectives' "shakedowns of individual targets of opportunity" frequently "come to leveral thousand dollars."19 If the power to influence a rights assignment is widely dispersed and diseinuak4web.netult to coordinate, however, the payoff to anyone official is likely to be relatively small. Organized crime may have to pribe several police officers, for instance, to assure the relatively unmolested operation of their underground markets in drugs and prostitution, but this means that the payoff to anyone police officer will be relatively small and less acceptable. Similarly, if a buyer of illegally allocated rights has several alternative lources (competitive corruption, if you will), then the return to anyone corrupt seller is likely to be small. A pimp, for example, may be indifferent as to whether his prostitutes work in one or another of several geographically contiguous political jurisdictions. An obvious determinant of the payoff to corruption is the private buyer's Willingness to pay for an illegal governmental rights allocation. Naturally, buyers in the underground market for governmentally controlled property rights react to the same kind of incentives that participants in any illegal activity do. Is the potential return relatively large or small? Is the action likely to be detected? How severe might the punishment be if the activity .is detected? Given the evidence of police and judicial corruption, a substantial number of private sector individuals find the potential returns from illegal dealings with officials to be high enough to be worth the risk .The Probability of Detection. If there is a high probability that an illegal rights allocation will be detected and that a corrupt official will be identified and prosecuted, then an official is less likely to become corrupt. There are several ways to monitor law enforcement activities. Individual citizens in general and taxpayers and voters in particular might make efforts to monitor individual officials. But this is far from a major threat because

of rational ignorance and the free-rider problem. A "IURn'l 'hare of the benefits derived by eliminating one corrupt official I" 10 Imall relative to his costs that he has virtually no economic incentive to act as a monitor. Monitoring costs are quite high and simply learning enough about the inner workings of a single bureaucracy to be able to identify a corrupt official can take a tremendous investment in time and effort. Furthermore, a citizen has little incentive to join in a collective effort to monitor government, because he can share whatever benefits such a collective action may generate without bearing any of the costs. There are several fairly active government watch organizations, of course, and they may pose some threat to potentially corrupt officials, but it is likely that these efforts will be relatively unsuccessful because they simply will not be able to attract sufficient resources to be effective. The common pool characteristics of law enforcement cast a slightly different light on the typical explanation of free-rider incentives. There are incentives to overuse common pool resources, but there are also strong incentives to underinvest in maintaining the common pool. Those who harvest whales have few incentives to replenish the stock so that others will be free to harvest those new animals. In much the same way, individuals have little incentive to invest in maintaining the integrity of public officials so that others will be free to share the benefits of the investment. In fact, the probability of any direct benefit of such an investment will be very small. What is frequently characterized as a free-rider problem, then, may be a common pool underinvestment problem. The news media is another potential source of monitoring. News does have some public good (or, more accurately, externality) characteristics, so there is a potential free-rider problem. But because consumers of news pay indirectly through advertising, the undersupply of news services is not likely to be a significant problem. Nonetheless, there are reasons to expect that the news media will not be a major threat to most corrupt officials. Few members of the media devote much time to trying to detect corruption of criminal justice officials. Corruption exposed by others is certainly reported, but there are relatively few instances in which news personnel have actively sought out illegal activity. This is partly because newspapers and other media require daily output, and most reporters must concentrate on news that can be obtained easily and quickly. Detecting corrupt officials and proving their guilt are generally difficult and time consuming, and such efforts are likely to take place only when the potential payoff is substantial. A reporter might be willing to spend considerable time trying to demonstrate

that un important public offlclal ill corrupt because the potential payoffs are large (e.g., front page headlines, recognition by peers and citizens, and .reater income opportunities), but he is unlikely to invest much time and 'effort in detecting corruption by a police patrol officer. Peers can be a source of monitoring. Most governmental institutions have established self-monitoring systems and have actually discouraged (and in lome cases even prevented) monitoring from external sources. Police departments have their internal affairs divisions, for example, and court systems have judicial review boards. But such monitoring is not likely to be very 'effective. No matter what the goal of a government official might be, he ,has strong incentives not to expose corruption or inefficiencies within his diseinuak4web.netental unit. Suppose that a police official derives his satisfaction 'by working for what he believes is the "public interest" and is convinced that what his bureau is doing is vital. If he reveals that his colleagues are 'corrupt, the unit's effectiveness may be jeopardized. This public-spirited individual may try to suppress corruption internally, but it seems likely that he would prefer not to know about the corruption at all. The Knapp Commission attributed police officers' extreme reluctance to bring evidence against or to effectively investigate fellow officers to "intense group loyalty." This in turn supposedly manifested itself in a "public spirited" concern for the effectiveness and morale of the department which produced suspicion and hostility directed at any outside interference with the department. This mixture of hostility and pride created the most serious roadblock to a rational attack on police corruption: a stubborn refusal at all levels of the department to acknowledge that a serious problem exists . Police are not the only bureaucrats with strong tendencies to protect their own. Most states have judicial review boards that involve judges monitoring other judges. "Some critics complain, however, that judges cannot be , counted upon to act against their own colleagues the idea of firmly rooting out judicial corruption remains an especially sensitive one [with] worries about the manifest danger of losing public respect."22 It is interesting to note the similarity between the justification for not revealing police corruption and the justification for not revealing judicial corruption. It must be emphasized that the kind of incentives and behavior discovered by the Knapp Commission (and many other investigative commissions) can easily be attributed to self-interested motives rather than public-spiritedness. For the public official for whom power and prestige are major sources of satisfaction, for example, corruption within his organization may lead to reductions in budget, discretionary power, and prestige. Finally, an official

who may be corrupt or who wishes to kccp tho oorruptlon option open obviously does not want to attract attention to the corruption potential his position. This explanation is particularly compelling in the Knapp Commission case because "police corruption was found to be an extensive, department-wide phenomenon, indulged in to some degree by a sizable majority of those on the force."23 It is not surprising, therefore, to find that in the few instances in which an official has reported corruption he has generally been ostracized by colleagues and superiors, denied promotions, and ultimately forced to resign. When honest officials face such potential costs, it is evident that corrupt officials probably have little to fear from their peers Thus, "with extremely rare exceptions, even those who themselves engage in no corrupt activities are involved in corruption in the sense that they take no steps to prevent what they know or suspect to be going on about them."25 Another source of potential detection comes from other governmental units. One function of elected representatives is to monitor bureaucracies to see that they are doing what his constituents want them to do. This monitoring could conceivably be very effective (assuming that the representatives themselves are not corrupt) if there are relatively few officials to monitor and relatively few rights over which those officials have allocative powers. But as more time and resources are spent in monitoring, less are available for determining the nature and strength of constituencies' demands, meeting those demands through legislative enactment, and taking advantage of outside income sources and benefits associated with legislative service So, even if there were relatively few officials and rights modifications to be monitored, it would not necessarily follow that legislative oversight would substantially reduce corruption. A legislature may choose to delegate the monitoring function to some other governmental unit. Results of the Federal Bureau of Investigation's corruption detection efforts, for example, have been evident. Similar efforts by state and local criminal justice agencies are also possible. Operation Greylord, for instance, produced initial expectations of indictments of 30 court officials, including ten circuit judges, on charges of fixing cases, bribery, extortion, mail fraud, and racketeering in the Cook County court systemP But this was the culmination of a three-and-one-half year undercover investigation. Law enforcement officers are expected to enforce a wide range of laws with limited budgets. Expensive police efforts appear to involve a few, possibly spectacular arrests (e.g., Operation Greylord), perhaps in the hopes that the visibility of these actions will lead potentially

or

IOrrupt officials to overestimate the risk of detection (but also because they often follow a highly publicized scandal that results in a temporary political ctommitment to provision of investigative resources). This may have the Ired impact over the short term, but it may not work for long. Thus, \relources devoted to corruption detection should not pose a great threat to the overwhelming majority of corrupt officials. , In many cases, the officials' incentives for monitoring their counterparts separate government bureaus are quite weak. Prosecutors' offices, for i stance, might appear to be in a good position to investigate police cor,ruption, but "in the case of the district attorneys, there is the additional ,roblem that they work so closely with policemen that the public tends '''' look upon them-and indeed they seem to look upon themselves-as allies of the police."28 The Knapp Commission found citizens had a general mistrust of the district attorneys primarily because of those close ties. One implication of this distrust, of course, is that many prosecutors were also involved in the corruption This brings up a relevant point. When a government official has the responsibility of preventing corruption by other officials, he also has a potentially valuable right to sell: the right to be corrupt. He faces the same kinds of incentives as officials who are supposed to prevent private sector underground activities. Thus, it should not be surprising that public officials payoff police officers in order to practice corruption Another reason for corrupt officials to be relatively unconcerned with potential detection is that investigations are costly. Operation Greylord required over three years of undercover work, and the cost ran into the millions of dollars New York State had a staff of 45 monitoring judges in at a cost of $ million a year,32but most states, counties and cities cannot commit such resources to the monitoring of public officials. They rely on existing law enforcement bureaucrats to monitor themselves and each other, at least until a major scandal erupts. But common pool problems provide those bureaucrats with a ready excuse for not actively searching out corruption. In a situation where bureaucrats face excess demand and have substantial discretion to choose how to allocate their resources, they can frequently justify ignoring corruption, particularly if it is not brought to the public's attention. Whether the public is better served by use of those scarce resources in pursuit of corruption or in the provision of other services does not appear to be a question that is raised There have been numerous instances where a major corruption scandal has been exposed and a special commission or task force has been appointed

!,••

to investigate the problem. But there are prohlcm. with tho ".candal reaction" approach to corruption control. Any alternative rea1me that does not address the fundamental institutional issues-the infurmation and incentives generated-is unlikely to be successful over the long run. First, those who are corrupt can appeal to a concentrated constituency for campaign funds. Second, and more important, without changes in the fundamental institutions the replacements for those who are convicted, forced to resign, or defeated in an election are likely to degenerate into corruption themselves In New York City, the Knapp Commission reported that their "findings were hardly new. As long ago as , when the State legislature created the New York police department as the first in the country, historians record an immediate problem with extortion and other corrupt activities engaged in by police."35 The city has since been hit periodically by major corruption scandals followed by special investigations, revelation of large-scale corruption, official expressions of outrage, and finally "reforms"; but in each case "the basic pattern of corrupt behavior was never substantially affected and after the heat was off, it was largely back to business as usual."36 A major investigation of police corruption seems to take place about every 20 years in the city.3? New York is certainly not unique in this regard. A major investigation of police corruption took place in Chicago between and ,38but the corruption did not end. Over twenty Chicago officers were at some stage of investigation (arraignment, indictment, or conviction) for drugrelated charges in July of Charles Ashman has concluded that "scandalous corruption seems to be contagious among judges in certain states."40 Corruption does not end when the "rascals" have been thrown out. They are probably no more "rotten" by nature than any other typical resident of the same city or state. The institutional setting creates the opportunity and incentives for corruption, and discretion occurs because of the excess demands on common pool resources (e.g., over-criminalization). As Ashman noted, "the argument that there are just as many crooked television repairmen or auto mechanics and the like doesn't hold up. No repairman or mechanic or anyone but a judge has unlimited control over the freedom and property of each member of his community."41 The Severity of Punishment. One other potential source of disincentives for corruption is the severity of the punishment that arises when that corruption is detected. The impact of punishment is difficult to assess, however, since severity is a subjective concept. An official who obtains satisfaction from a prestigious position may view the embarrassment of

public exposure thr corruption and the loss of a job as severe punishment; another with attractive outside alternatives might view exposure as an inconvenience. The same can be said of punishment as a deterrent to private sector illegal activity, so at least some inferences can be drawn from a comparison of the types of punishment that corrupt officials face relative . to punishment given criminals in the private sector. If it is correct that officials who detect corruption in their own organizations are likely to suppress information and downplay its significance, then any internally generated punishment is likely to be relatively mild. Mild punishment should make the corruption appear to be relatively less significant to those outside the organization (e. g., legislators and private sector government-watch groups), thus minimizing the attention that exposure might attract. Judicial disciplinary boards hear more than 3, complaints of misconduct each year, many on such charges as favoritism, abusive language, and other forms of overt misbehavior While some complaints are unfounded, coming from persons disgruntled over losing a case, many are valid. Through the s, however, review boards dismissed virtually every complaint, taking some action against only about a dozen judges per year The number of cases found for complaintants increased during the early s, but even so, of the judges found quilty in ,only 16were forcibly removed from office and 11 were suspended. Another 55 were officially reprimanded, but 70 simply resigned while under investigation and received no official punishment. Of 89 grievances fl1ed against federal judges, 11 resulted in unspecified "corrective action" and one ended with a judge's retirement Retirement or resignation are the routes frequently taken when a corrupt . official is identified A May 14, , letter from the Law Department of the City of New York to the mayor recommending formation of the independent investigative committee (the Knapp Commission) pointed out, for instance, that under present law a city employee is required to give 30 days' notice before his retirement becomes effective. The Police Department has found that in many instances this time period does not permit a proper investigation and disposition of charges of corruption against members of the police force, particularly if criminal charges are under investigation. Other city departments have encountered similar problems with regard to allegedly dishonest employees seeking to retire and obtain their pension benefits

Punishment of a corrupt official could be relatively severe when the conviction is as a consequence of detection by another organization or a

A'UILre CHorea

Источник: [diseinuak4web.net]
enterprise of law pdf free download

Enterprise of law pdf free download

2 thoughts to “Enterprise of law pdf free download”

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *