Match the word with its definition blackmail terrorism

Crime and Punishment.

Crime and Punishment.

Answer the questions. 1) How many different kinds of crime can you name? 2) Have you or anyone you know ever been the victim of crime? 3) What do you think would be the worst thing about being in prison? 4) What makes people commit crimes? 5) Can the crimes be prevented? If yes, how? 6) Can private detectives help us? In what cases? 7) Are you for or against the death penalty (capital punishment)? 8) Do you think that life-term imprisoning is a fair measure for cruel criminals?

Answer the questions.

  • 1) How many different kinds of crime can you name?
  • 2) Have you or anyone you know ever been the victim of crime?
  • 3) What do you think would be the worst thing about being in prison?
  • 4) What makes people commit crimes?
  • 5) Can the crimes be prevented? If yes, how?
  • 6) Can private detectives help us? In what cases?
  • 7) Are you for or against the death penalty (capital punishment)?
  • 8) Do you think that life-term imprisoning is a fair measure for cruel criminals?

What kinds of crime do you know? blackmail hijacking terrorism mugging murder pick- pocketing crime shoplifting forgery burglary drug- trafficking smuggling kidnapping

What kinds of crime do you know?

blackmail

hijacking

terrorism

mugging

murder

pick-

pocketing

crime

shoplifting

forgery

burglary

drug-

trafficking

smuggling

kidnapping

Match the word with its definition. 1) blackmail stealing something from someone’s home 2) terrorism b) taking a person hostage in exchange for money or other favors 3) mugging c) killing someone 4) pickpocketing d) buying and selling drugs 5) forgery e) taking something illegally into another country 6) drug-trafficking f) threatening to make a dark secret public in order to get money 7) kidnapping g) stealing something from a shop 8) smuggling h) the robbing of a plane for political or other reasons 9) burglary i) using violence for political ends 10) shoplifting j) to try to pass off a copy as the real thing 11) murder k) attacking someone in the street to get money 12) hijacking l) stealing from someone’s pocket or handbag

Match the word with its definition.

1) blackmail

  • stealing something from someone’s home

2) terrorism

b) taking a person hostage in exchange for money or other favors

3) mugging

c) killing someone

4) pickpocketing

d) buying and selling drugs

5) forgery

e) taking something illegally into another country

6) drug-trafficking

f) threatening to make a dark secret public in order to get money

7) kidnapping

g) stealing something from a shop

8) smuggling

h) the robbing of a plane for political or other reasons

9) burglary

i) using violence for political ends

10) shoplifting

j) to try to pass off a copy as the real thing

11) murder

k) attacking someone in the street to get money

12) hijacking

l) stealing from someone’s pocket or handbag

Right answers. blackmail   a) threatening to make a dark secret public in order to  get money 2) terrorism   b) using violence for political ends 3) mugging   c) attacking someone in the street to get money 4) pickpocketing   d) stealing from someone’s pocket or handbag 5) forgery   e) to try to pass off a copy as the real thing 6) drug-trafficking f) buying and selling drugs 7) kidnapping   g) taking a person hostage in exchange for money or  other favors. 8) smuggling   h) taking something illegally into another country 9) burglary   i) stealing something from someone’s home 10) shoplifting   j) stealing something from a shop 11) murder   k) killing someone 12) hijacking   l) the robbing of a plane for political or other reasons

Right answers.

  • blackmail a) threatening to make a dark secret public in order to

get money

2) terrorism b) using violence for political ends

3) mugging c) attacking someone in the street to get money

4) pickpocketing d) stealing from someone’s pocket or handbag

5) forgery e) to try to pass off a copy as the real thing

6) drug-trafficking f) buying and selling drugs

7) kidnapping g) taking a person hostage in exchange for money or

other favors.

8) smuggling h) taking something illegally into another country

9) burglary i) stealing something from someone’s home

10) shoplifting j) stealing something from a shop

11) murder k) killing someone

12) hijacking l) the robbing of a plane for political or other reasons

What participants of a law-court trial do you know?  Translate the words.  the judge  the magistrate  the jury  the juror  the counsel  the people's assessor  the public prosecutor  the plaintiff  the defendant  the accused  the accomplice  the suspect  the witness  the victim

What participants of a law-court trial do you know? Translate the words.

  • the judge
  • the magistrate
  • the jury
  • the juror
  • the counsel
  • the people’s assessor
  • the public prosecutor
  • the plaintiff
  • the defendant
  • the accused
  • the accomplice
  • the suspect
  • the witness
  • the victim

Right answers. the judge судья the magistrate мировой судья the jury суд присяжных the juror присяжный заседатель the counsel адвокат, юрисконсульт the people's assessor эксперт-консультант, юридический советник the public prosecutor обвинитель, прокурор the plaintiff истец the defendant адвокат, защитник the accused обвиняемый the accomplice сообщник, соучастник the suspect подозреваемый the witness свидетель the victim жертва

Right answers.

the judge

судья

the magistrate

мировой судья

the jury

суд присяжных

the juror

присяжный заседатель

the counsel

адвокат, юрисконсульт

the people’s assessor

эксперт-консультант, юридический советник

the public prosecutor

обвинитель, прокурор

the plaintiff

истец

the defendant

адвокат, защитник

the accused

обвиняемый

the accomplice

сообщник, соучастник

the suspect

подозреваемый

the witness

свидетель

the victim

жертва

Look at the picture of Sheila Dixon and answer the questions. Where is she? What’s she doing? Who do you think the man is? Why is he watching her?

Look at the picture of Sheila Dixon and answer the questions.

  • Where is she? What’s she doing? Who do you think the man is? Why is he watching her?

Sheila is a shoplifter. She steals things from shops. What has she stolen? Look  at the picture for one minute. Make a list of things you remember.

Sheila is a shoplifter. She steals things from shops. What has she stolen? Look at the picture for one minute. Make a list of things you remember.

Check your list up. an apple some bananas a chicken some bubble bath some biscuits a magazine some champagne a melon some chocolates some cheese some flowers an orange some coffee some grapes some milk some shampoo some spaghetti some washing powder some whisky She has  stolen

Check your list up.

an apple

some bananas

a chicken

some bubble bath

some biscuits

a magazine

some champagne

a melon

some chocolates

some cheese

some flowers

an orange

some coffee

some grapes

some milk

some shampoo

some spaghetti

some washing powder

some whisky

  • She has

stolen

Translate the English proverbs and quotations about the crimes and criminals. Explain them.
All criminals turn preachers under the gallows.

Crime and bad lives are the measure of a State’s failure, all crime in the end is the crime of the community.

William Shakespeare (1564-1616) British poet and playwright.
Every community gets the kind of criminal it deserves. What is also true is that every community gets the kind of law enforcement it insists on.

John F. Kennedy (1917-1963) Thirty-fifth President of the USA
In times of trouble leniency becomes crime.

The infectiousness of crime is like that of the plague.

Napoleon I (1769-1821) Napoleon Bonaparte. French general.
Crime and punishment grow out of one stem. Punishment is a fruit that, unsuspected, ripens with the flower of the pleasure that concealed it.

Ralph Waldo Emerson (1803-1882) U.S. poet, essayist and lecturer.
He reminds me of the man who murdered both his parents, and then when the sentence was about to be pronounced, pleaded for mercy on the grounds that he was orphan.
Abraham Lincoln (1809-1865) Politician. President of the United States.
Not failure, but low aim, is crime.

James Russell Lowell (1819-1891) American poet, critic and editor.
The common argument that crime is caused by poverty is a kind of slander on the poor.

Presentation on theme: «Match the word with its definition»— Presentation transcript:

1

Match the word with its definition
1) blackmail a) stealing something from someone’s home 2) terrorism b) taking a person hostage in exchange for money or other favours 3) mugging c) killing someone 4) pick-pocketing d) buying and selling drugs 5) forgery e) taking something illegally into another country 6) drug-dealing f) threatening to make a dark secret public in order to get money 7) kidnapping g) stealing something from a shop 8) smuggling h) robbing of a plane for political or other reasons 9) burglary i) using violence for political purpose 10) shoplifting j) to try to pass off a copy as the real thing 11) murder k) attacking someone in the street to get money 12) hijacking l) stealing from someone’s pocket or handbag

2

Complete the sentences with the words given below
bank robbers, burglars, muggers, pickpockets, steal (*4), rob (*3) 1) __________usually “work” in crowded, busy places. They ______things from people when they’re not looking. 2) _______often “work” at night or when people are away on holiday. They ______houses, shops and offices and ________ things. 3) _________usually “work” in quiet streets or places where there aren’t any witnesses. They_________ people and _______anything valuable that the person has on them. They are sometimes violent. 4) _________often carry guns. They _________banks. Sometimes they _________a lot of money.

3

THEME: Crime and Punishment

4

Aim: TO DEVELOP STUDENTS’ OUTLOOK ABOUT CRIME AND WAYS OF ITS PUNISHMENT
TASKS: teach students to use lexical units with the theme «Crime and Punishment» in spoken and written speech . to form skills and auditory skills of observation text reading vocabulary on the topic «Crime and Punishment». promote horizons of students. to develop language and speech guess reaction , the ability to express their opinion logically, long-term memory, attention, thinking. to train independence, integrity, tolerance ; to form a critical attitude to the actions of people.

5

Answer the questions 1) How many different kinds of crime can you name? 2) Have you or anyone you know ever been the victim of crime? 3) What do you think would be the worst thing about being in prison? 4) What makes people commit crimes? 5) Can the crimes be prevented? If yes, how? 6) Can private detectives help us? In what cases? 7) Are you for or against the death penalty (capital punishment)? 8) Do you think that life-term imprisoning is a fair measure for cruel criminals?

6

What kinds of crime do you know?
blackmail terrorism mugging pick- pocketing forgery drug- dealing kidnapping smuggling burglary shoplifting murder hijacking

7

New vocabulary to accuse smb. of smth.
визнавати винним когось в чомусь to charge smb. with smth. звинувачувати когось в чомусь to prosecute виступати в якості прокурора to commit a crime скоїти злочин to win (to lose) a case виграти (програти справу) to find smb. guilty (not guilty) визнати когось винним to sentence smb. винести вирок комусь judge cуддя to acquit виправдати to release випустити to defend захищати to arrest (to detain) on a charge (of) заарештувати (затримати) згідно звинувачення в чомусь to plead guilty (not guilty) признавати винним (невинним) a verdict get time off рішення присяжних (вердикт) скороти термін

8

Complete the text with the words from the box
to defend, got time off, committed a crime, were tired, guilty, was released from, witnessed, to pay a fine, innocent, prosecuting, served, charged with, acquitted of, accused of, sentenced to, passed verdict on them, pleaded not guilty. Bill (1)____________ when he robbed a bank. Someone (2)__________the crime and told the police. The police (3)____________ him _____bank robbery. They also(4)___________his twin brother, Ben, ____being his accomplice. The case came to the court and they (5)_____________________. The trial did not last very long. Bill and Ben both (6)_____________in court. Their lawyer did her best to (7)_________them but the (8)______________lawyer produced a very strong case against them. After brief deliberations, the jury (9)________________them. They decided that Bill was (10)_________but Ben was (11)________. The judge (12)_________Ben ____any involvement in the robbery but (13)_____________ Bill ___three years in prison. He also had to (14)_________a large______. Bill (15)_____2 years in prison but (16)____________prison a year early. He (17)___________for good behaviour.

9

Types of Punishment Capital punishment – смертельне покарання
Corporal punishment – тілесне покарання Eviction – виселення, позбавлення майна (нерухомості) A heavy fine – значний штраф Internment – інтернування Penal servitude – виправні роботи A prison sentence – тюремний вирок Probation – виправний термін Solitary confinement – одиночне ув’язнення Suspended sentence — умовний термін покарання

10

1. Capital punishment A period of time in jail 2. Corporal punishment b) Being made to do specially hard work while in prison 3. Eviction с) Death 4. A heavy fine d) A punishment imposed only if you commit a further crime 5. Internment e) A large sum of money to pay 6. Penal servitude f) Whipping or beating 7. A prison sentence g) Regular meetings with a social worker 8. Probation h) Removing a person from a house or land by law 9. Solitary confinement i) Limiting the freedom of movement especially for political reasons 10. A suspended sentence j) Being imprisoned completely alone

11

Representing of vocabulary

12

Reading Crime and Punishment
If we look into history we shall find that laws are conventions between men in a state of freedom. By justice we understand nothing more than the bond which is necessary to keep the interest of individuals united, without which men would return to their original state of barbarity. All punishments which exceed the necessity of preserving this bond are unjust in their nature. The result of any punishment should be no other than prevention a criminal from doing further injury to society, and prevention others from committing the like offence. Therefore there ought to be chosen such punishments and such modes of inflicting them that make the strongest and most lasting impressions on the minds of others, with the least torment to the body of the criminal. The torture of a criminal during the course of his trial is a cruelty consecrated by custom in most nations. It is used with an intent either to make him confess in his crime, or to explain some contradiction into which he had been led during his examination, or discover his accomplices, or for some kind of metaphysical and incomprehensible purgation of infamy, or, finally, in order to discover other crimes of which he is not accused of, but of which he may be guilty. No man can be judged a criminal until he is found guilty; society can’t take from him the public protection until it has been proved that he has violated the conditions on which it was granted. In the eye of the law, every man is innocent until his crime has been proved. Crimes are more effectually prevented by the certainty than the severity of punishment. The more cruel the punishments become, the more hardened and insensible people turn to be. All severity is superfluous, and therefore tyrannical. The death penalty is pernicious to society, it is the example of barbarity. If the passions, or the necessity of war, have taught men to shed blood of their fellow creatures, the laws, which are intended to moderate the ferocity of mankind, should not increase it by examples of barbarity. It is even more horrible that this punishment is usually attended with formal pageantry. Isn’t it absurd, that the laws, which detest and punish homicide, should, in order to prevent murder, publicly commit murder themselves? It is better to prevent crimes than to punish them. This should be the fundamental principle of any good legislation.

13

Answer the following questions
What is the meaning of the laws? What for is the bond by justice for people? What result should be of any punishment? What is the purpose of tortures against criminals? What is the consequence of more cruel punishments? What is the fundamental principle of any good legislation?

14

Define the statements — true (T) or false (F):
By justice we understand nothing more than the measure which is necessary to keep the interest of individuals united. Punishments which exceed the necessity of preserving this bond are unjust in their nature. The result of any punishment should be no other than prevention a victim from doing further injury to society. The torture of a criminal during the course of his trial is a cruelty consecrated by custom in most nations. Everyone can be judged a criminal until he is found guilty. Crimes are more effectually prevented by the certainty than the severity of punishment. The more cruel the punishments become, the more hardened and sensible people turn to be.  The death penalty is pernicious to society. It is better to punish criminals than to prevent crimes. Every man is innocent until his crime has been proved.

15

Match the words with its definitions:

16

17

Post-listening Questions
Who are the main heroes? How did Alice feel about Henry at the beginning of the play? What is the special day for them? What did her husband tell her? What happened to him? In what way do you think she murdered him? Where did she call? What have been reported by her to the police? Who came to Ms. Jackson? Where was the husband’s body? What did the detective propose her to do? What did the police think about the case?

18

Alice was waiting for her husband because she wanted to kill him.
Are these sentences are true or false? Correct the false sentences Alice was waiting for her husband because she wanted to kill him. She was happy because it was her anniversary. She didn’t know what she was going to tell her. Henry said that he was in love with someone else. She thought for al long time about how to murder Henry. She turned up the central heating because the room was cold. After she murdered him, Alice was clever in her behavior. Alice hid the murder weapon.

19

REPORTED SPEECH Rewrite the sentences in reported speech. 1 ‘I’ve been to the bank,’ said Frank. 2 ‘I really want to be a doctor,’ said Alex. 3 ‘I don’t like violent films, Chris,’ said my friend. 4 ‘The young boy took my bag,’ said the old woman. 5 ‘We’re watching the people in that house,’ said the police officers. 6 ‘I didn’t see the robbery,’ said the girl. 7 ‘Danny hasn’t asked me about my holiday,’ said Pete. 8’She is a thief’, said policeman. 9.‘Thieves have been stealing jewellery for a long time’, they said. 10.‘I am a witness of committed crime’, she said.

20

Look at the picture of Sheila Dixon and answer the questions
Where is she? What’s she doing? Who do you think the man is? Why is he watching her?

21

Sheila is a shoplifter. She steals things from shops
Sheila is a shoplifter. She steals things from shops. What has she stolen? Look at the picture for two minutes. Make a list of things you remember.

22

Check your list up. She has stolen an apple some bananas
some bubble bath a chicken some biscuits some champagne a magazine some chocolates some cheese a melon some flowers some coffee an orange some grapes some milk some shampoo some spaghetti some washing powder some whisky She has stolen

23

HoME work Express уоur орiniоns аnd agree/disagree with each other.
Be ready to discuss the punishments in situations 1-4 bеlоw. Express уоur орiniоns аnd agree/disagree with each other. 1 А 15-year-old bоу bullied other children and stole their mоnеу and valuables. Не insulted teachers and tried to burn down the school. Не was suspended fоr three weeks. 2 Аn 18-year-old student created а virus which infected millions of computers around the world. Не received а tеn-уеаr prison sentence. 3 А US citizen blew up а government building and killed 168 people. Не received the death penalty. 4 А mаn drove the get-away car in а bank robbery in which а security guard was killed. His sentence was life imprisonment.

24

Thank you for your attention!

8.2. CRIME

8.2.1

Reading

Read the text and answer the questions below.

The next twenty-four hours will see in Britain record two murders, ten rapes, 50 sexual assaults, 50 assaults causing grievous bodily harm, 113 muggings and other robberies, 2,800 burglaries, and 1,200 car thefts. Yet these figures – part of an annual total of about five million recorded crimes – represent only the tip of an iceberg. And that is not all. Each of the three quarters of this year for which figures have already been published showed a rise of about 14 per cent on the same period 12 months before. This is a big disappointment for policymakers, because in the last two years the recorded crime rate actually fell.

The public’s understanding of crime is not impressive, however. A recent survey found two-thirds of the population believe that 50 per cent of crimes and violent offences are against the person. The true figure is 6 per cent. Small wonder, perhaps, that a government committee claimed fear of crime to be as great a problem as crime itself.

The elderly, for example, fear crime the most, especially violent crime, although they are least likely to become victims (the most dangerous age of all is under one year old with 28 homicide victims per million babies. People of 70 are far less likely to be murder victims than any adult group, with only eight victims per million. Only children aged 5-15 are safer).

According to an international survey published last year, Britain’s crime rate is lower than the European average and lower than that of Holland, Germany, Canada and Australia. About 18 per cent of Britons were victims of crime last year. In Canada 28 per cent had experienced a crime, in Holland 26 per cent and in Germany 22 per cent. At the other end of the scale Switzerland (15.6 per cent) and Finland (15.9 per cent) had low overall victim rates. But safest of all was Northern Ireland: there only 15 per cent of the population experienced a crime.

The US appeared to live up to its reputation for lawlessness overall, with 28.8 per cent of the population having been a victim of a crime. America’s murder rate makes ours seem infinitesimal. Nearly twice as many murders (1,051) were committed in the city of New York in the first six months of last year as in England and Wales.

But nobody in England is complacent. A computer study of every person born in a certain month in 1953 revealed that by the age of 30, one in three men had been convicted of crime. One in sixteen had been in prison. One in eight born in 1953 who had been convicted of an offence had committed a crime of violence by the age of 20. For those born in 1963, this proportion has risen to one in five.

  1. What are the causes of criminal behaviour?

  2. What should be done about these causes?

  3. Does crime influence your everyday life?

  4. In what way are people in our city / republic affected by the criminal situation?

8.2.2

Word Form

A  

Complete the table.                           

       crime

                           definition

      criminal

    verb

murder

murderer

shoplifting

stealing something from a shop

burglary

burgle

smuggling

taking something illegally into another country

arson

set fire to

kidnapping

kidnapper

terrorism

blackmail

blackmail

drug-trafficking

drug-trafficker

forgery

forge

assault

physical attack on another person

pickpocketing

mugging

mug

Word Choice 

B     

What is the difference between the verbs 

steal and robPut the right form of either

of them in the sentences below.

  1. Last night an armed gang … the post office. They … £2,000.

  2. My handbag … at the theatre yesterday.

  3. Every year large numbers of banks … .

  4. Jane … of the opportunity to stand for president.

  5. Some drug users … from their families to finance their habit.

  6. The company director … pensioners of millions.

  7. Sean has a long history of … cars.

  8. Someone … his passport while he was asleep. 

Collocation      

C   

Complete the chart by ticking the objects

that go with the verbs:

    bank

  house

warehouse

 watch

old lady

car

bank manager

steal

rob

break into

burgle

mug

    Match the adjectives in column A with the nouns

in column B.

A B

1. vicious

2. brutal

3. cold-blooded

4. common

5. habitual

6. petty

a. murder

b. criminal

c. offender

d. crime                     

8.2.3

Definition     

A    

Here are some more crimes and offences.

Explain, define and give examples of

the offences listed below.

B     Which of the above would or could involve the following?            

1. counterfeit money

2. pornography

3. hostages

4. a ransom

5. heroin

6. a traitor

7. state secrets

8. contraband

9. a store detective            

Metaphor / Idiom 

C    

Put the words  murder, robbery and steal

in the blanks. Explain the meaning of

the fixed phrases.

  1. I could __________ a steak.

  2. He screamed blue _________ when I told him.

  3. Honestly, because he’s so charming he can get away with ________.

  4. It was absolute ________ trying to push the car.

  5. You must be joking! I’m not going to pay that much for it. It’s daylight _______.

  6. She _______ the show. The rest of us were virtually ignored.

8.2.4

Meaning    

Read the extracts and find words and

phrases that mean:

  1. people who saw something / the crime

  2. seized with the power of the law

  3. nasty and cruel

  4. search

  5. tested for the amount of alcohol

  6. less important and serious

  7. someone who is thought to have done it

  8. information that may help the police discover something

  9. arrested for going too fast

  10. someone who breaks the law frequently

  11. signs, indications

  12. officials in the police force (list them in order of seniority)

BICYCLE COP SPEAKS OUT

man held in pub robbery

The woman in charge of investigating  bicycle thefts in the city has become impatient with the criminals who make her life difficult. ’This kind of petty  crime is really annoying,’ says Constable Merrington. ‘It inconveniences a lot of people …’

The police have arrested a man in connection with the ‘Three Horseshoes’ pub robbery. ‘There were a number of clues which led us to the suspect,’ said Chief Inspector Locke, in charge of the operation. ‘The man we have arrested is a habitual offender and we are confident that he is the man we were looking for.’

doc stopped by city police

Mary Edwards, a surgeon at the City’s biggest hospital, was booked for speeding and then breathalysed, a police spokesman said last night.

POLICE BAFFLED IN HILLSIDE KILLING

The police still have no leads in their hunt for the killer of the young hitchhiker whose body was found three days ago at the foot of Sunbury Hill. ‘We are appealing for witnesses to come forward,’ said Superintendent Jones, ‘this was a particularly brutal murder and …’

8.2.5

Comprehension    

Read the following headlines from a selection

of newspapers. Match each one to the most 

appropriate extract.

LITTLE CAESARS BLAMED FOR TERRORIZING NORTHUMBRIA

Houdini Kid Does It Again

It’s time to Crack down on Crime Babies

A. A government report on the increase in crime amongst juveniles has made recommendations to schools and parents to supervise children more carefully, especially during holidays and after school. The report suggests that many children are left to their own devices at these times and some find themselves involved in illegal or dangerous activities. It recently came to light that a group of children from a primary school had tied up a seven-year-old boy in his bedroom and proceeded to ransack the house. The report also recommends that it is time the police got tough with the parents of youngsters who break the law.

B. For the third time this year, a ten-year-old child in the care of the local authority has absconded from a secure unit by wriggling under an electrified fence. The child, who cannot be named for legal reasons, was placed in a secure unit in Northumbria after running away from children’s home on six occasions over the last two years. A spokesperson for the authority told a news conference that there was no satisfactory way of detaining children against their will other than sending them to adult prisons.

C. A gang of children aged between six and eleven have been accused of making the lives of old-age pensioners a misery. Residents in housing estates on the outskirts of Newcastle and Sunderland have complained that gangs of young children have been tormenting the old folk by throwing rubbish in their gardens, banging on their doors and windows at night and generally making a nuisance of themselves. Northumbrian District Council has announced plans to send police into the area to talk to parents and teachers in a bid to stop further escalation of the problem.

8.2.6

Reading

A     

Read through the article and say if you think

the title is appropriate.

Little Joey’s Lost Childhood

One day last summer, when Joey has been arrested yet again for yet another burglary, his solicitor went down to the police station to see him. He sat down opposite him in the interview room, sighed and asked him straight: ‘Joey, why do you do it?’

And Joey looked straight back and told him, ‘I dunno. I gotta buy fags, drink. There’s drugs and things. I gotta girl. It’s money you know …’ Joey shrugged, like any man with weight on his mind. Joey was then eleven years old.

Soon afterwards, he became famous when, in October last year, he was locked away in a secure unit outside Leeds where he was three years younger than any other inmate, so young that his incarceration required the personal authority of the Home Secretary. As he was led away from court, he hurled insults at the press and then disappeared in a cloud of publicity.

He became a caricature – ‘the Artful Dodger’, ‘Britain’s most notorious young crook’, ‘Crime baby’, ‘the Houdini Kid’. He made all the papers. Soon his case was being used as ammunition in a sustained assault which has seen the Home Secretary, the Police Federation, the Daily Express and various Chief Constables campaigning to lock up more children.

They pointed not only to Joey but to a rash of other adolescent delinquents: the eleven-year-old brother and sister whose attempted arrest caused a riot at a wedding party; the six ‘Little Caesars’ from Northumbria who were blamed for 550 offences; the thirteen-year-old armed robber from Cheshire. Their solution was simple: these children had to be punished; the courts needed more powers to put them behind bars.

Joey grew up with his father, Gerry, a Southern Irish labourer who has not worked regularly for years; and his mother, Maureen, also Irish and barely literate, who was only eighteen when she married Gerry, fifteen years her senior. The neighbours remember Joey playing with his go-cart in the street, running around with his two smaller brothers, banging on the door to scrounge cigarettes for Gerry. They say he was a nice kid. They remember him skiving off school, too, and thieving, but they don’t remember it well. Almost everybody’s kids skive off school, and a lot of them go thieving.

Gerry says he’s not too sure when Joey first broke the law. He thinks he stole some crisps for dinner when he was four. In Gerry’s family there has often been trouble with the law: petty crimes, handling, the occasional fight, a succession of brothers and uncles behind bars.

By the time he was 10, thieving was the only game Joey knew. He had 35 arrests behind him and the social workers decided he had to be locked up. They had tried taking him into care but he had simply walked out of the homes where they put him, so, in December 1990, he was sent to the secure unit at East Moor outside Leeds.

He liked it there. Everyone at East Moor agrees that Joey liked it. It is not like a prison: there are no peaked caps or truncheons. It is more like a school with extra keys. Tucked away there, far from the mean crescents of the housing estate, he was a child again. He played with Lego. He practised joined-up writing. He woke up feeling ill in the night and cried on the principal’s shoulder.

Joey is due to be released from the secure unit in February. Everyone who has dealt with him is sure that he will go straight back to his old ways. They say they have given up on him. They have two options: lock him up or let him go. Everyone in social services knows the danger of locking up a child: it breaks up the family, it stigmatizes the child, it floats him in a pool with older criminals.

Yet letting him go is no better, not when it means returning to the battered streets of the city. Joey is not the only child like this. Every English city has them. Joey just happens to be the famous one. He’s bright and he’s brave and the psychiatrists agree he is not disturbed. He is, by nature, anxious to please. In the secure unit now, he conforms with everything around him.

If you throw a child into the sea, it will drown. If you throw it into an English ghetto, it will grow up like Joey.

Comprehension

B      Answer the following multiple-choice questions:

1. Joey became famous because

a. he had committed so many burglaries.

b. he was always being arrested.

c. he was the youngest inmate in the secure unit.

d. he swore at the press photographers.

2. How did the Home Secretary and the police respond to the rise in juvenile crime?

a. They wanted to see more young criminals put in prison.

b. They believed that there should be a return to corporal punishment.

c. They thought that the courts had too much power.

d. They thought that the police force should be strengthened.

3. What can the neighbours recall about Joey?

a. He smoked cigarettes.

b. He was a bully.

c. He started stealing when he was four.

d. He played truant from school.

4. Why was it decided that Joey should go to a secure unit?

a. He refused to give up thieving.

b. He kept running away from the homes.

c. He behaved better in a secure unit.

d. He was too old for the children’s home.

5. What does the writer think is the main cause of Joey’s behaviour?

a. He is a victim of his own circumstances.

b. He is unable to sort himself out.

c. He has been forced to behave in an anti-social way.

d. He has been badly treated by the police.

Meaning 

C    

Find words or phrases in the text which are

similar in meaning to the words in italics.

  1. Amy looked as if she had a lot to worry about.

  2. The prison staff found it difficult to keep the prisoners in their cells.

  3. The young man’s imprisonment in a small, windowless cell was cruel and unnecessary.

  4. Kevin has been breaking the law all his life; he’s a criminal and nothing is going to change him.

  5. Most people would prefer to see convicted criminals in jail rather than doing community service.

  6. When the prison governor stopped the prisoners from watching TV, they went on the rampage, causing hundreds of pounds worth of damage.

  7. Many people commit minor offences when they are young.

  8. I don’t think he’s likely to improve – we have no hope for him. 

8.2.7

Vocabulary  

A     

Read the following texts and match the

words in bold to the definitions below.

Text A

Hi Ralph,

Sorry we didn’t get to see each other while I was in town, but my day didn’t quite go according to plan!

I started by 1) bolting down my breakfast, as I wanted to leave early to avoid the traffic. By 8.00 I was 2) bombing along the M4 until I got stopped for speeding by a police officer. I started to explain but he 3) butted in, saying, ‘The speed limit 4) applies to everyone, you know.’ Luckily, he 5) let me off with a warning.

When I eventually got to town my adventure really began. Anyway, when you’ve read this clipping from ‘The Evening Star’, I’m sure you’ll forgive me for not calling you.

See you next time! 

Dominic

a. interrupt somebody                                            

b. be relevant to somebody / something

c. eat something very quickly

d. excuse somebody from punishment

e. travel very fast

Text B

Nicholas Forbes (43), who is wanted for armed robbery and has been 1) on the run from the police for several weeks, was apprehended outside a supermarket in Long Street yesterday.

Forbes was attempting to 2) dispose of a bag in a rubbish bin when a police officer approached him. Forbes sprinted off, with the officer in hot pursuit, and bystander Dominic Clarke (23) joined the chase. Onlookers 3) cheered Clarke on as he quickly 4) gained on Forbes and wrestled him on the ground.

A crowd of shoppers 5) congregated around the struggling men and Forbes was arrested. A police spokesman praised Clarke’s bravery but urged the public not to tackle dangerous criminals themselves. ‘Such matters are best left in the hands of the police,’ he said.

a. gather round somebody / something in a large group

b. throw something away

c. try to avoid being captured by somebody

d. get nearer to somebody / something one is chasing

e. give somebody loud encouragement

Word Choice

B     Fill in each gap with a suitable expression.

Two teenagers convicted yesterday on a charge of car theft should be 1) ______ with a suspended sentence in view of their age, their lawyer argued.

Andrew McWade and Peter Duncan, both 17, were already 2) ______ the police in connection with another crime when they stole the car. The stolen vehicle was spotted by the driver of a police patrol car, who immediately gave chase. Realizing that the patrol car was 3) ______ them, the youths attempted to 4) ______ evidence linking them to both crimes, but were soon arrested.

Prosecution lawyer insisted that, given the circumstances of the crime, normal grounds for a reduction in punishment did not 5) ______ the two accused. Sentence will be passed today.

Rephrase 

C     

Replace each word / phrase in bold with

suitable expression, using the correct

tense / form.

  1. Tourists gathered round the statue as the guide began to talk about its finer points.

  2. Most accidents on this motorway are caused by drivers who travel fast with no regard for road safety.

  3. The crowd gave the runners loud encouragement as they approached the finishing line.

  4. I was running late, so I had to eat my lunch quickly and rush off.

  5. I’d have liked to ask a question, but I didn’t want to interrupt while he was talking.

8.2.8

Preparation

A    

Gang Violence. Discuss your answers to the

following questions:

  1. Do gangs exist in our country?

  2. What methods are used to control teenage criminals?

  3. Why do you think teenagers join gangs?

Vocabulary

B    

Give a synonym or your own definition

of the words in italics:

  1. Gangs won’t normally allow girls to join them, so they tend to be exclusively male.

  2. People will instinctively duck and cover themselves when a gun is fired in their direction.

  3. Gang members will sometimes identify with a pimp, not because he works with prostitutes, but because he makes a lot of money.

  4. In order to identify which gang a member belongs to, certain signals are used to represent his affiliation.

  5. Gangs use a much more severe method of fighting than the traditional punch in the nose.

  6. Gang members are considered to be insensitive because they feel so little remorse after they’ve hurt someone.

  7. The money brought in from crime is often the only source of livelihood for gang members.

  8. People living in cities are forming more and more block clubs to provide protection for their communities.

  9. One of the least dangerous crimes committed by gangs is the drawing of graffiti on public property.

Definition

C    Match the word with its definition.

1. exclusively male

2. duck

3. pimp

4. affiliation

5. punch

6. remorse

7. livelihood

8. block club

9. graffiti

a. a way to earn money

b. a neighbourhood group

c. a man who sells sex

d. with only men included

e. bend down quickly to avoid being hit

f. association

g. writing on a wall, bus, or subway car, etc.

h. a blow with the fist of a hand

i. regret for wrongdoing          

8.2.9

Listening     

A    

Listen to the interview. Each of its 5 parts expresses

main idea. After a beep, answer the question

for each part. You will have five statements

that make summary of the interview. Compare

your summary with those of other students.

  1. Where is there a large number of gangs in the United States?

  2. How do gangs fight?

  3. Why do kids join gangs?

  4. How do gangs identify themselves to each other?

  5. What solution does Bill Recktenwald propose for controlling gang violence?

Comprehension

B      

Decide whether the statements for each

part are true of false.

Part 1

  1. In 1983, there were at least seventy-five gang murders in Chicago.

  2. Ten per cent of Chicago’s murders are gang murders.

  3. Chicago has fewer than 100 gangs.

  4. Each gang has about 4,000 members.

  5. Gang members are generally less than twenty years old.

Part 2

Gang members …

  1. are male.

  2. are independent.

  3. fight alone.

  4. shoot at people.

  5. kill innocent people.

Part 3

People join gangs because …

  1. they have a strong identity.

  2. gangs make them feel big.

  3. pimp and drug dealers are in gangs.

  4. they want to make money.

  5. they can use drugs and narcotics.

Part 4

Innocent people are victimized because …

  1. hand signals are not understood.

  2. they punch the wrong people in the nose.

  3. gangs are insensitive to someone getting killed.

Part 5

Recktenwald says gangs should be controlled by …

  1. parents.

  2. schools.

  3. the community.

  4. neighbourhood block clubs.

8.2.10

Role Play      

A      

Take notes on what gangs are like

and what neighbourhood

watch clubs can do. Key phrases

have been provided for you.

Description of gangs:

a. under age 20

b. individuals afraid to stand alone

c. _________________________

Reason for gangs:

d. _________________________

Gang rituals:

e. __________________________

What neighbourhood watch clubs can do:

f. ___________________________

Situation         

B     

The class is divided into two groups. Two

students will prepare the witnesses’ stories.

The others will prepare the interrogation

by the police. Read the situation, choose

roles, and, after a fifteen-minute preparation,

begin the interrogation of witnesses to a crime. 

Last night at 10:30 pm, two members of a neighbourhood block club witnessed a theft. They saw two boys break into a car that was parked in the neighbourhood. The boys broke the side window and ran off with the car’s radio and tape deck.

The police were notified by the witnesses. By the time they got to the scene of the crime, the boys were gone.

Two teenage boys, who seem to fit the description given by the witnesses, were found loitering on a corner in the neighbourhood at 11:30 pm. They have been brought to the station.

However, members of the neighbourhood watch club have been known to accuse the wrong people of street crimes, since they are so concerned about the protection of their neighbourhood. Because the police are not sure whether these boys are the ones the witnesses really saw, they have separated the two witnesses to hear each one give his or her own version of the story. The witnesses’ testimony will certainly have a great influence on the future of these two young boys.

You are witnesses to the crime. You will prepare a detailed account of what happened. You should be able to explain:

a. Where you were

b. Who you were with

c. What the boys were doing

d. What the boys looked like, etc.

You will prepare questions to ask the witnesses. For example:

a. Where were you?

b. Who were you with?

c. What time was it?

d. What did you see?

e. Why were you watching the street corner?

f. How were the boys dressed?

Interrogation Procedure          

  1. The police divide into two groups. One group interrogates one witness while the other interrogates the second. These interrogations last three minutes.

  2. Each witness is interrogated by the other group of police for another three minutes. If the police find discrepancies in the two witnesses’ stories, the boys will be released. If the stories are similar, they will be accused of being guilty of the crime.

  3. Each group of police explains the inconsistencies, if any, that they were able to find in the two versions. They then decide on their verdict.

8.2.11

Discussion

Discuss the answers to the following questions:

  1. Do you agree that the community should control gangs?

  2. To what extent should people watch the activities of others?

  3. What should the punishment be for minors (kids under the age of twenty-one) when they kill innocent people?

8.2.12

Interaction 

A    

Read the short texts below and answer the questions.

A young woman, called Kitty Genovese, was walking along the streets of a middle-class neighbourhood in New York at 3.00 a.m., when she was attacked. She screamed for help and managed to escape. A few minutes later her assailant caught her again and she continued screaming for half an hour whilst 38 neighbours watched transfixed from their windows and did nothing. They didn’t even call the police. Kitty died of multiple stab wounds.

In another town in America, a man went to a garage sale and bought an old tool box for $15. At home when he opened it up, he found $5,500 hidden under some plates at the bottom of the box. He returned the money to the woman he’d bought the box from.

  1. Which seems to be the strangest story – Kitty Genovese’s or the man returning money?

  2. What do you think? True or False?

People did nothing to help Kitty because they:

a. prefer to protect themselves rather than get involved and risk being killed.

b. no longer have a group or tribal feeling which binds them together – we are all too individual and we always put ourselves first.

c. convince themselves that there are special institutions in cities to deal with this kind of problem; they don’t need to intervene because the police will intervene for them.

d. are basically selfish and just don’t care about other people.

The man returned the box because:

e. he was a noble altruist.

f. he was simply afraid he might have been caught.

3. What would you do in the following situations?

a. You see someone suspicious hanging around outside a neighbour’s door.

b. You see a teenager stealing some sweets from a shop. (And if it was a little old lady?)

c. You see someone of a different colour skin being beaten up by four of your colour skin.

d. You see a mother violently beating her screaming child.

e. You see some children teasing and taunting another child.

8.2.13

Translation      

Translate the following extracts from fiction

books. Choose one and add a few sentences

of your own to develop the idea.

1. ‘In this city,’ Rosie said, her face hardening with anger that aged her 10 years in an instant, ‘she could have been gang-raped, stabbed by some 12-year-old punk, wrecked on crack, maybe even shot dead by a carjacker in her own driveway.’

‘You’re a real optimist, huh?’

‘I watch the news.’

2. ‘The two carjackers he killed – was that a righteous shooting?’ – ‘Hell, yes, as righteous as they get. One perp was wanted for murder, and there were three felony warrants out on the second loser. Both were carrying, shot at him. Spence had no choice. The review board cleared him as quick as God let Saint Peter into Heaven.’

3. A surveillance subject, sitting in bright sunshine and reading a newspaper, could be filmed from a satellite with sufficiently high resolution that the headlines on his paper would be legible.

4. Inside the dark house, an automatic weapon stuttered briefly, spitting out several rounds. One of the cops must be trigger-happy, shooting at shadows or ghosts. Curious. Hair-trigger nerves were uncommon among special-forces officers.

8.2.14

Story-making   

Make up a shot summary presenting

a plot of this story. Use active vocabulary.

1. It was not a game played by kids in the woods. Romey stuck a real gun in his mouth. These were real FBI agents. He had hired a real lawyer who’d stuck a real tape-recorder to his stomach to outfox the FBI. The man, who killed the senator, was a professional killer according to Romey, and a member of the Mafia, and they would think nothing of rubbing out an 11-year-old kid. This was just too much for him to handle alone. He’d tell the FBI every detail Romey had unloaded on him. Then they would protect him. Maybe they would send in bodyguards. Maybe. Then he remembered a movie about a guy who squealed on the Mafia and thought the FBI would protect him, but suddenly he was on the run with bullets flying over his head. The FBI wouldn’t return his phone calls. In the final scene, the guy’s car was blown to bits and as he took his final breath, a dark figure stood over him and said, ‘The mob never forgets’. It wasn’t much of a movie, but its message was suddenly clear to Mark.

2. Truman and McThune braced themselves for a reprimand. But Reggie kept her cool. She slowly extended a finger and pointed it at them. ‘If you get near my client again and attempt to obtain anything from him without my permission, I’ll sue you and the FBI. I’ll file an ethics complaint with the state bar in Louisiana, and I’ll haul you into juvenile court here and ask the judge to lock you up.’ Everyone in the room knew that she would do exactly that.

3. The law was quite simple: every citizen owes to society the duty of giving testimony to aid in the enforcement of the law. And a witness is not excused from testifying because of his fear of reprisal. There were no exceptions, no loopholes for scared little boys.

4. …‘The child moves this court to dismiss the petition filed against him on the grounds that the allegations are without merit and the petition has been filed in an effort to explore things the child might know. The petition is a hopeless mishmash of maybes and what-ifs, filed under oath without the slightest hint of the real truth…’

8.2.15

Writing

Choose one of the following topics:

1. Write a letter to the editor of your local newspaper, making the point that you are unhappy about street-gang violence in your neighbourhood. Explain your reasons clearly, giving examples of gang incidents that you know about. Ask the community to form a block club to support the case of fighting gang violence. 

2. People say that it is the society who prepares the crime and a criminal only commits it. Do you agree? Write an essay in which you state your opinion, and define the best ways to tackle the problem.

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Every crime is defined by certain elements, each of which must be proven at trial in order to convict the offender. Thus, in addition to proving any required guilty mental state, the prosecutor must prove beyond a reasonable doubt that all of the elements of the crime were committed. For example, robbery is defined as the unlawful taking and carrying away of goods or money from someone’s person by force or intimidation. Thus, the elements of robbery are (1) the taking and carrying away of goods or money, (2) the taking from someone’s person, and (3) the use of force or intimidation.

If someone breaks into your house when you are not at home and takes your property, the person cannot be convicted of robbery. The person did not take the property from a person (no one was home) and therefore could not force or intimidate anyone. However, the person could be guilty of burglary—breaking and entering into a home with intent to commit a felony—because the elements of that crime do not require the taking from a person or the use of force. A single act can be both a crime and a civil wrong. For example, if Clay purposely sets fire to Tamika’s store, the state may file criminal charges against Clay for arson. Tamika may also bring a separate civil action (lawsuit) against Clay to recover for the damage to her store.

Criminal laws exist at both the state and federal levels. Some acts, such as simple assault, disorderly conduct, drunk driving, and shoplifting, can be prosecuted only in a state court unless they occur on federal property, such as a national park. Other acts, such as failure to pay federal taxes, mail fraud, espionage, and international smuggling, can be prosecuted only in a federal court. Certain crimes, such as illegal possession of drugs and bank robbery, can violate both state and federal law and can be prosecuted in both state and federal courts.

Crimes are classified as either felonies or misdemeanors. A felony is any crime for which the potential penalty is imprisonment for more than one year. Felonies are usually more serious crimes. A misdemeanor is any crime for which the potential penalty is imprisonment for one year or less. Minor traffic violations are not considered crimes, although they are punishable by law.

VOCABULARY AND COMPREHENSION EXERCISES

Exercise 5. Answer the questions:

1.What can be considered as a guilty state of mind?

2.When is carelessness not guilty state of mind?

3.Is the state of mind different from motive?

4.What are strict liability crimes?

5.When is a person guilty of burglary?

6.What classes can crimes be divided into?

7.What crimes are prosecuted in criminal court?

8.What crimes are prosecuted in federal court?

9.When is a person guilty of committing a burglary?

10.When is a person chared with committing a shoplifting?

Exercise 6. Fill in the gaps with the words from the box:

Conspiracy

involved

suspect

prisoners

cillegal victims

solicit

withholding

proof

inchoate

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1.It is ________ for public officials to solicit gifts or money in exchange for favours.

2.The second accident ___________two cars and a lorry.

3.Last night the police apprehended the ___________.

4.She had a child’s ___________awareness of language.

5.The children are the innocent/helpless _________ of the fighting.

6.Two _________ have escaped.

7.She has been charged with __________ to murder.

8.Grace has run an online campaign to ___________ employee suggestions.

9.He got five years in prison for ___________ evidence and obstructing the course of justice.

10.Do they have any _________ that it was Hampson who stole the goods?

Exercise 7. Put the verbs in the passage below into the correct tenses. There is an example in the first sentence.

The car thief

My cousin and her husband live in one of the suburbs of London. One morning they (O) ____

(wake up) to find to their dismay that their car (1) ____ (steal) from outside their house. They immediately (2) ____ (phone) the police to report the theft, before (3) ____ (leave) for work by bus.

When they (4) ____ (return) home later the same day, they (5) ____ (find) to their surprise that their car (6) ____ (bring back) and was parked in its usual place outside their house. Under one of the windscreen wipers (7) ____ (be) a small envelope.

They quickly (8) ____ (open) it and (9) ____ (find) a note(10) ____ (apologise) profusely for “borrowing” their car. The man who (11) ____ (write) it explained that he (12) ____ (not have) a car himself, and his wife (13) ____ (go) into labour in the middle of the night with their first baby. So he (14)____(hope) they (15) ____ (not mind) too much that he (16) ____ (take) their car without their permission in order to run her to the hospital, as it was something of an emergency.

By way of compensation, he (17) ____ (enclose) two tickets for the West End show on Saturday evening. They (18) ____ (be) both delighted as they loved music and (19) ____ (try) for ages to get tickets to this particular musical.

It was a perfect evening. They (20) ____ (have) front row seats and the show itself was every bit as good as they (21) ____ (expect). They (22) ____ (be) in such a good mood after it that they

(23)____ (decide) to go for a meal at their favourite Italian restaurant. When they eventually

(24)____ (get) home just after midnight, a new shock (25) ____ (await) them. While they were away, their house (26) ____ (burgle)! Everything of value (27) ____ (steal). They (28) ____ (know) immediately who the thief was because (29) ____ (lie) on the kitchen table was a note in handwriting they (30) ____ (recognise), (31) ____ (say): HOPE YOU (32) ____ (enjoy) THE SHOW!

Exercise 8. Match the names of types of crimes with their associated verbs and the name of the person who commits the crimes.

murder

stealing something from a shop

shoplifting

taking something illegally into another country

burglary

killing someone

123

smuggling

setting fire to something in a criminal way

arson

taking a person hostage in exchange for money or other

favours, etc.

kidnapping

stealing from someone’s home

Exercise 9. Here are some more crimes. Give the definition in English: pickpocketing = stealing something from someone’s pocket or bag;

terrorism

…..

…..

blackmail

…..

…..

drug-trafficking

…..

…..

forgery

…..

…..

assault

…..

…..

mugging

…..

…..

Exercise 10. Make up sentences using the prepositions: For, of, from, on, upon, against, to, into and the following words:

1.her employer / accuse / her / steal / money.

2.His mother / punish / him / be / rude / to their neighbor.

3.The lock / prevent / burglar / break / house.

4.The jury / convict / him / murder / his wife.

5.His son / apprehend / sell / drugs teenagers.

Exercise 11. Read and discuss the story. Write out the unknown words.

Jack Thatcher. Like his father, he’s a jailbird (закоренелый преступник) – at the age of 40 he has spent most his life in prison for different wrongs of violence and theft. He comes from a poor family, has no real education and has never had a job. The only way he knows how to make money is by stealing it. When he came out of prison last week he decided to rob a village mail office. During the robbery, the mail master tried to ring the alarm (сигнал тревоги) so Jack hit him on the head with his gun. At that moment a customer came into the mail office. She screamed. In panic jack wanted her to keep quite. Than he escaped with the money.

Exercise 12. Answer the questions:

1.What kind of crime was committed by Jack?

2.Why did Jack try to commit the crime?

3.What were the causes of Jack’s way of life?

4.Will the Police be able to arrest him and return the stolen money?

5.In what court must this case be heard?

DISCUSSION

Exercise 1. Discuss the problems:

Problem 1

Anton is a bully. One night while eating at local diner, he notices Derek eating at a nearby table. Anton does not like the band displayed on Derek’s T-shirt, so to show his pals who is in charge, Anton orders Derek to sit at another table. When Derek refuses, Anton punches him in the

124

jaw. As a result of the injury, Derek misses several weeks of work and has to pay both medical and dental bills.

1.Has Anton violated civil laws, criminal laws, or both?

2.Who decides whether Anton should be charged criminally? Who decides whether or not to sue Anton in a civil action?

3.If Anton is charged with a crime and is sued in a civil action, would the civil and criminal cases be tried together? Why or why not?

4.Is going to court the only way to handle this problem? What alternatives are there and which do you think would work best?

Problem 2

Harold and Marci decide to burglarize Superior Jewelers. Their friend Carl, an employee at Superior, helps by telling them the location of the store vault. Marci drives a van to the store and acts as the lookout while Harold goes inside and cracks the safe. After Harold and Marci make their getaway, Harold meets a friend, Shawn, who was not involved in the actual burglary. Harold tells Shawn about the burglary, and Shawn helps Harold get a train out of town. David, a former classmate of Harold and Marci, witnesses the crime but does not tell the police, even though he recognizes both Harold and Marci.

1. How will each person be charged? Explain your answer.

Part 2. Crimes and criminals.

VOCABULARY AND READING EXERCISES

Exercise 1. Read and translate the underlined words.Then read and translate the text.

The person who commits a crime is called the principal (or the criminal). For example, the person who fires the gun in a murder is the principal. An accomplice is someone who helps the principal commit a crime. For example, the person who drives the getaway car during a bank robbery is an accomplice. An accomplice may be charged with a crime or helps the principal commit the crime but who is not present during the crime — for example, the mob leader who hires a professional killer—is known as an accessory before the fact. This person can usually be charged with the same crime and can receive the same punishment as the principal. An accessory after the fact is a person who, knowing a crime has been committed, helps the principal or an accomplice avoid capture or helps them escape. This person is not charged with the original crime but may be charged with harboring a fugitive, aiding the escape, or obstructing justice. Being an accessory after the fact has been made a separate crime by statute in many jurisdictions. The victim of a crime is not a party to the crime but might be called as a witness at the trial.

Most crimes occur when a person does something or performs some act in violation of a law. In a few cases, however, failing to act — called an omission — may be a crime if the person had a legal duty to act. For example, it is a crime for a taxpayer to fail to file a tax return or for a motorist to fail to stop after being involved in an automobile accident. A person is guilty of a crime of omission when he or she fails to perform an act required by a criminal law, if he or she is physically able to perform the required act.

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Certain types of behavior take place before or in preparation for committing a crime. These preliminary actions—such as attempt, solicitation, and conspiracy—are crimes in themselves. Sometimes called inchoate crimes, they require proof of criminal intent but can be punished even if the harm intended never occurred. If two people agree to rob a bank, for example, they have committed the offense of conspiracy whether or not they actually rob the bank.

A number of states make it a crime for a person to solicit (or ask, command, urge, advise) another person to commit a crime. The offense is committed at the time the solicitation is made. It does not require that the person solicited, or asked, actually commits the crime. For example, Dennis wishes to kill his wife, Carmella. Lacking the nerve to do the job himself, he asks William to kill her. Even if William refuses, Dennis has committed the crime of solicitation.

In most states, an attempt to commit a crime is itself a crime. To be guilty of an attempted crime, the accused must have both intended to commit a crime and taken some “substantial step” toward committing the crime. When someone performs all of the elements of a crime but fails to achieve the criminal result, an attempt has occurred. For example, when a person intends to shoot and kill someone but misses or merely wounds the intended victim, the person is guilty of attempted murder. Sometimes the crime is foiled before all the necessary steps are completed, such as when a person purchases a gun and intends to shoot another person but is arrested on the way to the intended victim’s house. Courts must then determine whether the actions of the accused constituted a “substantial step” toward the actual commission of the crime or were mere acts of preparation.

VOCABULARY AND COMPREHENSION EXERCISES

Exercise 2. Answer the questions:

1.Who can be called a principle?

2.What person can be called an accomplice?

3.What’sthedifferrence between the terms “misdemeanor” and “felony”?

4.Who can be called as an accessory before the fact?

5.Who can be called as an accessory after the fact?

6.Why can a person be guilty of a crime of omission?

7.Are attempt, solicitation, and conspiracy crimes?

8.What types of behavior are criminal?

9.When do the mere acts of preparation of a crime take place?

10.When do people commit the crime of solicitation?

Exercise 3. Match each word on the left with the appropriate definition on the right:

1)

An arsonist

a) attacks and robs people, often in the streets

2)

A shop-lifter

b) sets fire to property illegally

3)

A murder

c) is anyone who breaks the law

4)

An offender

d) breaks into houses or other buildings to steal

5)

A vandal

e) steals from shops while acting as an ordinary customer

6)

A burglar

f) kills someone

7)

A murderer

g) deliberately causes damage to property

8)

A kidnapper

h) steals things from people’s pockets in crowded places

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9) A pickpocket

i) gets secret information from another country

10) An accomplice

j) buys and sells drugs illegally

11) A drug dealer

k) takes away people by force and demands money for their return

12) A spy

l) helps a criminal in a criminal act

13) A terrorist

m) uses violence for political reasons

14) An assassin

n) causes damage or disturbance in public places

15) A hooligan

o) hides on a ship or plane to get a free journey

16) A stowaway

p) takes control of a plane by force and makes the pilot change course

17) A thief

q) murders for political reasons or a reward

18) A hijacker

r) is someone who steals

19) A forger

s) makes counterfeit (false) money or signatures

20) A robber

t) is a member of a criminal group

21) A smuggler

u) steals money, etc. by force from people or places

22) A traitor

v) marries illegally, being married already

23) A gangster

w) is a soldier who runs away from the army

24) A deserter

x) brings goods into a country illegally without paying tax

25) A bigamist

y) illegally carries drugs into another country

26) A drug smuggler

z) betrays his or her country to another state

Exercise 4. Translate the sentences into English:

1.Отнесение сговора к преступлениям позволяет полиции арестовывать сговорщиков до того, как преступление будет совершено.

2.В понедельник трое подростков совершили поджог школы.

3.Преступления против личности включают убийства, похищения, нападения, побои, грабеж и изнасилование.

4.Женщины часто являются объектами для преследования с преступным умыслом.

5.Поджог является умышленным и вредоносным деянием.

6.Люди понесли убытки в миллионы долларов из-за актов вандализма.

7.В большинстве штатов хищение делится на два класса: мелкое и крупное.

8.Почти половина всех школьников в США признались, что они воровали в магазинах в течение предыдущих 12 месяцев.

9.Угон автомобиля является федеральным преступлением и карается заключением на длительный срок, до пожизненного заключения.

10.Компьютерная преступность наносит вред людям и их собственности.

Exercise 5. Look through the list of phrases with the word “crime” in A and find their Russian equivalents in B. Make up your own sentences with the phrases.

A

B

1. crime of aforethought

a) мелкое преступление

2. crime wave

b) покушение на совершение преступления

3. attempted crime

4. grave crime

c) преступление против всеобщих законов

5. infamous crime

d) трудно раскрываемое преступление

6. latent crime

e) предумышленное преступление

7. organized crime

f) организованная преступность

8.petty crime

9.crime difficult to trace

10.crime against law of nations

11.crime against property

12.capital crime

13.desist from crime

14.capital crime

15.confess to a crime

16.crime instrument

17.crime investigation

18.crime scene

19.crime suspect

20.crime victim

21.detected crime

22.domestic crime

23.juvenile crime

24.war crime

25.charge with crime

26.to deter crime

27.compulsed participant in a crime

Eercise. 6. Complete the table.

crime

murder burglary shoplifting smuggling kidnapping terrorism blackmail forgery assault rape

arson mugging pickpocketing

drug-trafficking blackmail high-jacking drunken driving

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g) преступление против собственности h) тяжкое преступление

i) волна, динамика преступности j) позорящее преступление

k) отказываться от совершения преступления

l) преступление, караемое смертной казнью

m) скрытая преступность

n) преступление, наказуемое смертной казнью

o)потерпевший от преступления

p)лицо, подозреваемое в совершении преступления

q)обвинять в совершении преступления

r)вынужденный участник преступления

s)признаться в совершении преступления

t)расследование преступления

u)преступление, совершенное несовершеннолетним

v)военное преступление

w)бытовое преступление

x)орудие преступления

y)сдерживать преступность

z)место совершения преступления

aa) раскрытое преступление

criminal

verb

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theft

robbery

Ex.7. In each group of words find an odd word and explain your choice.

1.blame — charge — prosecution — accusation

2.injure — hurt — harm — haunt

3.witness — testimony — confession — evidence

4.await — expect — estimate — anticipate

5.trial — inquest — ruling — inquiry

6.atrocity — barbarities — outrage — wickedness

7.legality — lawfulness — liability — validity

8.offence — crime — felony — equity

9.outdated — feeble — obsolete — stale

10.recognize — ostracize — accept — acknowledge

11.custody — testimony — captivity — internment

12.hearing — inquiry — inquest — request

13.persuasive — inductive — hypnotic — convincing

14.tribunal — court of law — court-martial — jailbird

15.appeal — prosecution — defense — custody

16.conclude — terminate — determine — close

17.allege — pronounce — declare — state

18.offence — crime — violation — casualty

19.surveillance — observation — surrender — watch

20.regulation — ordeal — rule — law

Exercise 8. Insert prepositions where necessary:

1.A military tribunal sentenced the terrorists ___ life imprisonment.

2.He was tried ___ court-martial and found guilty.

3.They are all ___ detention.

4.The appeal ___ the ruling will be heard next month.

5.You should allow six days ___ check clearance.

6.They tried to impose a ban ___ smoking.

7.The Supreme Court has just turned ___ our appeal.

8.Demands were made for the leader of the sect to be barred ___ Britain.

9.We should get papers ___ next Monday if we are lucky.

10.He died ___ detention.

11.She imposed severe discipline ___ her children.

12.Last week the suspect was finally put ___ custody.

Exercise 9. Read the word combinations with the word “violence”. Insert suitable prepositions where necessary, and make sentences of your own using the phrases. Translate the phrases into Russian.

1. to resort ___ violence

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2.to die ___ violence

3.to do violence ___ a superior

4.to handle smb ___ violence

5.to enter a house ___ violence

6.robbery ___ violence

7.major violence — грубое насилие

8.act ___ violence

9.personal ___violence

10.domestic ___violence

Exercise 10. Take notice of the difference in the use of the following words:

1.imprisonment — the condition of being (put) in prison;

2.confinement — the condition of being confined in or to a place (e.g. solitary confinement);

3.custody — imprisonment under guard (until trial);

4.house arrest — confinement to one’s home;

5.captivity — the state of being a captive;

6.internment — the act of interning or the period of time during which a person is imprisoned.

Exercise 11. Insert one of the words of exercise 22 to suit the situation:

1.His period of ______ was up, he was set free.

2.It has become a custom to raise wild animals in ______.

3.The government was afraid of mass protests if Defoe was imprisoned, so he was put under

______.

4.The “Solidarity” leaders were put in ______ camps.

5.Peter was remanded in ______.

6.The Colonel ordered to keep the Gadfly in solitary ______.

7.His ______ ended last night.

8.His sentence was ______ for five years.

9.The ______ of political prisoners without trial is quite common.

Exercise 12. A criminal is someone who commits a crime. Below are the word combinations with the word “criminal”. Translate them and link each word combination to its definition.

Court of Criminal Appeal, criminal contempt, criminal negligence, criminal court, criminal forfeiture, criminal law, criminal lawyer, criminal procedure, criminal record, habitual criminal, criminal liability, war criminal

1.A barrister or solicitor who specializes in felonies and misdemeanours.

2.A person charged with or convicted of crimes against humanity.

3.Previous crimes of which an individual has been convicted.

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4.Rules governing the investigation of crimes; the arrest, charging and trial of accused criminals; and the sentencing of those convicted.

5.One of the higher courts of law hearing cases sent up for review.

6.Disorderly behaviour, disrespect, or disobedience of a judge’s orders, particularly during a

trial.

7.A person who repeatedly commits offences.

8.Where an individual fails to exercise a duty of care and the resulting action leads to the commission of a crime.

9.The branch of law which deals with felonies and misdemeanours.

10.Loss of property or a right as a consequence of an offence.

11.A court with jurisdiction to hear felonies and misdemeanours.

12.Responsibility for committing a crime (excluded persons include minors and the insane).

Exercise 13. Match the words with their definitions and learn them.

murder, intention, defence, duress, argue, self-defence, convince, mitigation, protect, violence

1.Actions or words which are intended to hurt people; extreme force.

2.The crime of intentionally killing a person.

3.To show disagreement, esp. strong disagreement, in talking or discussing.

4.Reduction in the severity of some penalty; making or becoming milder, less severe, or less painful; moderate.

5.Threats used to force a person to do something.

6.To keep (someone or something) safe from injury, damage or loss.

7.Protection of yourself, either by fighting or discussion.

8.Determination to do a specified thing or act in a specified way.

9.To make someone certain; to persuade.

10.An argument or explanation which you use to prove that you are not guilty of something.

Exercise 14. Read the words denoting different types of legal offences. Match the words in the box with their definitions below.

arson, assault, battery, bigamy, burglary, conversion, coup, libel, robbery, manslaughter, perjury, rape, slander, treason, trespass, theft, sedition, forgery.

1.A sudden action against the government to force it to be changed.

2.The offence of using force against any person, or putting them in fear of being subjected to force, in order to commit a theft.

3.The offence of giving false evidence.

4.A defamatory statement made in permanent form, such as writing, film, television or other public performance.

5.Sexual intercourse with another person without his/her consent.

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