Annual Report of the State Probation Commission, Volume 5J.B. Lyon Company, 1912 |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 55
Page 9
... convicted adult offenders and juvenile delinquents , without commitment to an institution , by release on good behavior and under the authoritative , helpful oversight of an official known as a probation officer . Those placed on proba ...
... convicted adult offenders and juvenile delinquents , without commitment to an institution , by release on good behavior and under the authoritative , helpful oversight of an official known as a probation officer . Those placed on proba ...
Page 21
... conviction . This has been done in cases where the judge has believed the defendants guilty , in order to avoid stigmatizing them with a criminal record . This practice has been followed especially among children and also in cases of ...
... conviction . This has been done in cases where the judge has believed the defendants guilty , in order to avoid stigmatizing them with a criminal record . This practice has been followed especially among children and also in cases of ...
Page 22
... conviction , if necessary , would seem to be through the legislative amendment of the court procedure . It has already been provided that except in capital cases , children shall not be convicted of a crime , but only of juvenile ...
... conviction , if necessary , would seem to be through the legislative amendment of the court procedure . It has already been provided that except in capital cases , children shall not be convicted of a crime , but only of juvenile ...
Page 28
... conviction , have been frequently pointed out by judges and prison officials . Probation may be used to permit the defendant in such a case to avoid imprison- ment through going to work and earning the money with which to pay his fine ...
... conviction , have been frequently pointed out by judges and prison officials . Probation may be used to permit the defendant in such a case to avoid imprison- ment through going to work and earning the money with which to pay his fine ...
Page 36
... convicted of felonies . The accumulating experience had in dealing with felons through probationary measures shows that a considerable proportion of the defendants convicted of felonious crimes are fully as amenable to the restraining ...
... convicted of felonies . The accumulating experience had in dealing with felons through probationary measures shows that a considerable proportion of the defendants convicted of felonious crimes are fully as amenable to the restraining ...
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
absconded adult Albany appointed arrested bation officer Board of Magistrates Brooklyn charge Chemung County chief probation officer child Children's Court City Court committed committee conduct conference convicted County Court Court of Special crime criminal defendant delinquent Discussion opened district attorney duties Elmira Erie county facts feeble-minded felony girls Hudson institution Ithaca City jail judge juvenile keep larceny magistrate ment mentally defective misdemeanor Monroe County non-support offense Oneida County parents parole payments penitentiary persons on probation physician placed on probation pledge Police Justice Poughkeepsie City practicable preliminary investigations Prison Probation Commission Probation Officer Masters probation system probationary probationer proper public intoxication railroad receipt Recorder's records reformatory restitution Rule Saratoga county sixteen Special Sessions Suggested Sub-topics superintendent supervision Supreme and County thing tion train treatment Utica Vice-President Wade violations Watertown City wife women York City
Popular passages
Page 159 - Appointments and promotions in the civil service of the State, and of all the civil divisions thereof, including cities and villages, shall be made according to merit and fitness to be ascertained, so far as practicable, by examinations, which, so far as practicable, shall be competitive...
Page 159 - But -where the position is one, as to the proper mode of filling which there is a fair and reasonable ground for difference of opinion among intelligent and conscientious officials, the action of the commission should stand, even though the courts may differ from the commission as to the wisdom of the classification.
Page 208 - Every person in the city of New York, as constituted by this act, who actually abandons his wife or children without adequate support, or leaves them in danger of becoming a burden upon the public, or who neglects to provide for them according to his means, or who threatens to run away and leave his wife and children a burden upon the public, may be arrested...
Page 208 - Persons who actually abandon their wives or children, without adequate support, or leave them in danger of becoming a burden upon the public, or who neglect to provide for them according to their means ; 2.
Page 401 - The president, vice-president, and secretary-treasurer, together with three other members to be elected at the annual meeting, shall constitute an executive committee. At least one member of the executive committee shall be a magistrate of a city of the first class; at least one a magistrate of a city of the second or third class; and at least one magistrate of a village.
Page 341 - The symptoms of mental defeet shown in these imbeciles with criminal instincts are merely the usual signs of feeble-mindedness modified only in degree and not in kind. The mental defect is relatively slight, and the immoral and criminal tendencies are strongly developed, but the mental weakness is the cause of moral delinquency and is a permanent condition.
Page 207 - Section fifty-two of chapter six hundred and fiftynine of the laws of nineteen hundred and ten, entitled "An t. i9i0. act in relation to the inferior courts of criminal jurisdiction in 5 52. as the city of New York, defining their powers and jurisdiction L. i9i2. and providing for their officers," as amended by chapter four hun- am™aed.
Page 158 - If the position is clearly one properly subject to competitive examination, the commissioners may be compelled to so classify it. On the other hand, if the position be by statute or from its nature exempt from examination and the action of the commission be palpably illegal, the commission may be compelled to strike the position from the competitive or examination class, though in such case redress by mandamus would often be unnecessary, as a valid appointment could be made notwithstanding the classification....
Page 208 - ... magistrate upon conviction, may suspend sentence and place the offender under probation and at any time thereafter, during the longest period for which he could have been committed in the first instance, such magistrate, or his successor, if his term has expired, may pronounce any judgment or sentence or impose any fine or other penalty, or make any commitment which might have been pronounced, imposed or made at the time the conviction was had.
Page 353 - Conferences of charities and corrections, this conference, and other public and philanthropic bodies have expressed themselves in favor of this proposition in resolutions and by appointment of committees, and yet practically no progress has been made. I regard the erection of a reformatory for male misdemeanants between the ages of sixteen and twenty-one as the most necessary and urgent prison reform at present under public discussion. Such an institution should be of the character of the Elmira...