What are the above pictures?

37
What are the above pictures? Despite being thousands of years old, both are still important to us today. Why do you think that is? What is the difference between a moral law and a legal law?

description

What are the above pictures? Despite being thousands of years old, both are still important to us today. Why do you think that is? What is the difference between a moral law and a legal law?. The Law and the Individual. Unit VII Sources of Our Laws. What are laws?. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of What are the above pictures?

Page 1: What are the above pictures?

What are the above pictures? Despite being thousands of years old, both

are still important to us today. Why do you think that is?

What is the difference between a moral law and a legal law?

Page 2: What are the above pictures?

The Law and the Individual

Unit VII

Sources of Our Laws

Page 3: What are the above pictures?

What are laws? Set of rules that help people live together

Page 4: What are the above pictures?

What should laws do? Major purpose is to keep the peace and

prevent violent acts Provide rules for resolving disagreements

between groups or individuals

Page 5: What are the above pictures?

What makes a good law? Fairness – all people treated equally Reasonable – punishment fits the crime Understandable – laws are not to

complicated for people to be able to follow Enforceable – laws can be monitored and

carried out by communities, state or federal authorities

Page 6: What are the above pictures?

Where do our laws come from? Based on ideas,

customs, and laws passed down from generations

Page 7: What are the above pictures?

History of Law Code of Hammurabi

First known written legal system

Around 2000 BCE Harsh penalties based

on principle of “an eye for an eye”

Page 8: What are the above pictures?

The Ten Commandments Found in the Hebrew Bible Around 1200 BCE

Page 9: What are the above pictures?

The Ten Commandments

Page 10: What are the above pictures?

Roman Law Written by the Roman Senate and Judges –

representatives of the citizens Justinian Code – Around 600 CE

Byzantine Emperor Justinian organized Roman law which influenced Catholic Church Napoleonic Code

Page 11: What are the above pictures?

English Common Law Established by Court Decisions rather

than legal code Based on precedents – previous decisions that

are examples to follow Makes the law consistent and fair

Page 12: What are the above pictures?

Burden of Proof In any court case, the burden of proof is on

the prosecution. i.e. Prosecution must prove beyond any doubt

that the defendant is guilty of their crime

Page 13: What are the above pictures?

Criminal Law Cases in which the state or federal

government charges someone with a crime

Page 14: What are the above pictures?

Misdemeanors A relatively minor offense Examples – minor vandalism, stealing

inexpensive items

Page 15: What are the above pictures?

Felonies A serious crime Examples: murder, rape, kidnapping,

robbery

Page 16: What are the above pictures?

Civil Law When a person or group takes a legal

action against another person or group

Page 17: What are the above pictures?

Lawsuit When a person or group sues to collect

damages

Page 18: What are the above pictures?

Tort Law – someone believes that an injury or loss is due to someone else’s negligence

Family Law – child custody, child support, divorce, alimony

Page 19: What are the above pictures?

Types of Laws Constitutional Law – deals with the formation,

construction and interpretation of the Constitution Highest law in the country

Page 20: What are the above pictures?

Administrative Law Rules and regulations that the Executive Branch

makes to carry out its job.

Page 21: What are the above pictures?

Statutory Law Statute – written law by a legislature

Regulate behavior Source of rights and benefits

Page 22: What are the above pictures?

Identify Each of the Following as A) Statutory LawB) Constitutional LawC) Administrative Law

The US Postal Service increases the price of a stamp to 60 cents

The right to get your drivers license when you turn 16

The right to remain silent when accused of a crime

C

A

B

Page 23: What are the above pictures?

Warm-Up What were the 4 influences on American

law?

Page 24: What are the above pictures?

Steps to a civil case1. Plaintiffs attorney files a complaint2. Court sends a summons to defendant3. Defendant’s attorney files a written

answer4. Attorneys for both sides exchange plea

documents5. Attorneys argue case in court6. Court gives verdict

Page 25: What are the above pictures?

Steps to a Criminal Case

1. Arrest

Page 27: What are the above pictures?

Indictment Grand Jury (or judge) hears evidence

and formally charges

Page 28: What are the above pictures?

Arraignment Defendant pleads not guilty and trial date is

set

Defendant pleads guilty and accepts plea bargain – conviction of lesser charge for softer sentence

Page 29: What are the above pictures?

Trial Prosecution and Defense present case Jury (or judge) reaches verdict

Page 30: What are the above pictures?

Acquittal Defendant found not guilty

Page 31: What are the above pictures?

Sentencing Defendant found guilty and judge

sentences (punishes)

Page 32: What are the above pictures?

Two Options Create a comic strip that illustrates the

steps to a criminal case and a civil case OR

Write your own episode of Law & Order (or any police show you have watched). Include all the steps of either a criminal or a civil case in you narrative. DETAIL IS IMPORTANT.

Page 33: What are the above pictures?

Conclusion

Why do most people voluntarily comply (follow along) with the

law?

Page 34: What are the above pictures?

How are Juvenile cases handled in NC?

Juvenile –

in most states anyone under the age of

18 Juvenile Delinquent –

young people who commit crimes Purpose of the Juvenile Court System =

Rehabilitate

Page 35: What are the above pictures?

Two Types of Cases Neglect

Juveniles whose caregivers neglect or abuse them

Delinquency

Cases involving juveniles who commit crimes

Page 36: What are the above pictures?

Differences between juveniles and adult justice?

No juries only a judge Closed to the public Identities are kept secret

Not fingerprinted Not photographed

If juvenile completes probation then charges are dropped and removed from record

Page 37: What are the above pictures?

Other Court Officials Clerk of Superior Court Records wills and handles foreclosures

(selling some ones property to pay debts)

MagistratesIssues search and arrest warrants, issues

arraignments (charges) District Attorney Represents state in all criminal cases