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51. Tehachapi News
- www.tehachapinews.com
- In a few months, an officer from the California Correctional Institution in Tehachapi will be thousands of miles away doing what he does best - running.
- Correctional officer José Luis Medina has been running since he was 5 years old, earning more than 100 trophies and awards for his running skills and now he is preparing for international competition.
- Last year, Medina received first place medals for 10K cross country, 10K on the track, 5K on the track and relay team in the 35th annual California State Police and Fire Games. A picture of Medina running in the game was featured on the front of Peacekeeper, a California Correctional Peace Officer's Association magazine.
- Throughout his school years and while attending California State University, Bakersfield Medina was busy competing.
52. Nevada Corrections Association - History of CCPOA
- www.nevadacorrections.org
- In the 1950’s an officer, despondent over working conditions at San Quentin prompted officer Al Mello and eight fellow officers, (five of which were Correctional Lieutenants concerned with the pay scale) to start traveling to the three existing State prisons, Folsom, Soledad and San Quentin to rally support for the creation of a union dedicated to representing the correctional officers’ series. In 1957, the California Correctional Officers Association (CCOA) was formed with members from each adult institution. Almost immediately, law enforcement officers from the California Youth Authority, Youth and Adult Paroles, and Medical Technical Assistants began to inquire about membership.
- CCOA, CSEA, and the Teamsters fought for the right to represent correctional officers. ... CCOA, Bargaining Unit 6, was renamed the California Correctional Peace Officers Association, (CCPOA) to more closely encompass the entire unit which consisted of all peace officer personnel in the Department of Corrections, and the Youth Authority. ...
- Each institution in the state is a chapter. ...
- On April 4, 1983, CCPOA won the first ever-binding arbitration case in California state employee history. The arbitration issue involved the allegation that the state unilaterally changed the Correctional Counselor caseload without meeting in good faith whenever its actions caused a change in the Counselors caseload.
- In 1982, the California voters approved $495 million for new prison construction. ... By the end of the 1980’s, California had constructed ten new prisons.
- In late 1983, the California State Employees Association, newly aligned with the Service Employees International Union, attempted a de-certification election to knock CCPOA out.
- On July 11, 1984, Governor George Deukmejian signed a bill, AB3361 (Elder), providing all Correctional Peace Officers including supervisors a 2. ...
- It was at this time that CCPOA sponsored SB 945 (Presley), the first of five major training bills passed by the legislature to improve selection and training of new Correctional Peace Officers in CDC and CYA. ...
- In 1985, the issue of safety equipment became very heated due to the death of Correctional Sergeant Hal Burchfield at San Quentin Prison, and the position of opposition by the CDC management to AB 19 (Elder), to provide “stab proof vests. ...
- To guide negotiations CCPOA passed SB 1373 (Keene) which advised the state to set Correctional Peace Officers salaries according to “major law enforcement agencies in California. ...
- During this period another unforeseen problem confronted the correctional officer, the growing number of AIDS infected inmates, the California Medical Facility at Vacaville and the Correctional Institute for Men in Chino. ...
53. TacLink - CDC SERT
- www.specwarnet.com
- The California Department of Corrections (CDC) is the nation's largest correctional system. They are reponsible for housing anyone convicted of a crime, and sentenced to serve a prison term within the state of California. ...
- SERT teams are composed of volunteer personnel, who when not training or activated, are assigned to regular full-time correctional duty assignments. Team size varies from institution to institution (12-21 members) depending on the size of the facility, its location, the institution's security level, inmate population, and the response time of addtional support units. All SERT personnel are on 24 hour standby to be recalled to their assigned institution, or to any other institution needing assistance. ...
- Formal SERT training is conducted by SERT instructors at the Emergency Operations Unit Training Center in San Luis Obispo, California. ...
- California has always been on the cutting edge when it comes to the developement and evaluation of new technologies and equipment for use by tactical units. ...
- Addtional transportation is alos provided by California National Guard vehicles and aircraft in emergencies. ...
- TheSoledad Correctional Facility SERT provided security for the Pope during his 1988 visit to Monterey. ...
- -Dominique California Department of Corrections (CDC) Special Emergency Response Team (SERT).
54. Candace Kruttschnitt Transcript
- www.vissr.umn.edu
- A: Ok, several years ago, Rosemary Gartner and I were talking about working on a project together, and we were discussing David Ward's original study of the California Institute for Women, which I'll call CIW, in Frontera, California. ... He happened to be at UCLA at that point and studying the men's facility in southern California, and he and his colleague, Gene Kassebaum thought it would be interesting to go up the road, since the women's facility was right there, and see if the same kinds of factors affected the way that women do time and whether they did time differently than men. ... On the other hand, if you believe Goffman's right, that total institutions exert an effect on individuals, you might expect that it doesn't matter what's happened in society at large, that once you put someone at a total institution, the way they do time is going to be exactly the same. So we went out and did a preliminary visit at the prison, and talked to them about their interest in having us replicate the study, and at that time, people kept talking about the new facilities that had been built in California, that the time Ward and Kassebaum did their research, there was this one and only one prison. ... Subsequently, there are now five prisons in California, the newest having been built in the Central Valley in Chowchilla. CCFW (California Correctional Facility for Women) and across the street, Valley State prison. ...
- A: It played a big role because we basically started with probably the central theories in penology, one of which is "functionalist theory," from which Goffman was working, that says basically how inmates do time is a function of being in a total institution. An offshoot of that, which is "situational-functionalist perspective," which basically argues that it's not just being in the total institution, but it's the characteristics of the institution. ... And a third perspective is the "importation model," which says that neither the characteristics of the institution itself, or just being in an institution is important, but it's really what the inmates bring in with them, what their prior experiences have been, whether they've been incarcerated before, what their family life was like, whether they get contact from the outside, those kinds of characteristics they bring in with them will influence how they do time. ...
- A: Probably the biggest design decision, beside looking at those two facilitiesthe research we were really fortunate; California incarcerates more women than anywhere else in the U. ... or in the world for that matter, there are close to 10,000 women behind bars in Californiaso we knew we had a sufficient population to work with. ... We also knew we probably had a good distribution of inmates, given that the facilities were so different, they were drawn from different segments of the California population. ...
- We had a good connection in the California Department of Corrections in their research branch division who sent us a list of all inmates who had been recently admitted within the past six months, and inmates who'd been there longer than five years. ... And then we sent them out to California and we asked that when we got there that these womenthey have a term that's called "docketed," which means they're released from their cells or their work schedules for a certain time to talk to usand it worked extremely well. ...
- One day we did interviews in the church, in the chapel within the institution. ...
- At the new facility, these were really young pups, these were people who had just come out of correctional officer training schools, and so they were a very different group.
55. TOMPAINE.com - A Cancer Grows
- www.tompaine.com
- Feeling a lump in her breast, Sherrie Chapman, an inmate at the California Institution for Women, in Frontera, first raised an alarm to her assigned doctor in 1991, explaining her family history of breast cancer. ...
- Correctional officers ignored chemotherapy appointments. ...
- "Whether out of willful disregard or because they just blew it off, her doctors did not follow rather standard practice," explains Yuri Parisky, director of breast imaging services at Norris Comprehensive Cancer Center of the University of Southern California. ...
- Across the continent from Chapman, in the Danbury Federal Correctional Institution in Connecticut, Susan Rosenberg faced the opposite dilemma in March 2000. ...
- Egregious violations of women's medical care in general were documented by Amnesty International in a 1999 report, "Not Part of My Sentence," and Amnesty issued an alert in 2001 questioning the unexplained death of nine women in the California system. ...
- Upon sentencing in June 2000, Muniz was sent to the Central California Women's Facility in Chowchilla. ...
- A spokesperson for the California prisons declined to comment, and Ortega is still seeking explanations. ...
- Doctors are ill trained and overburdened, and even competent ones can be trumped by correctional personnel. ...
- "Every single state will tell you women's healthcare is the top problem in women's prisons," says Lucy Armendariz, a former ombudsman for women prisoners in California, now working as counsel to the state's legislature. ...
- The National Commission on Correctional Health Care warned that sexual assault histories require special sensitivity in gynecological examinations and Pap smears. ...
- Danger signals for cancer appeared to be pervasive in a unique comprehensive health survey of 115 women held in Connecticut's York Correctional Institution. ...
- In 1998 Roma Williams, then an associate professor at the University of Alabama School of Nursing, conducted one of the few correctional research projects specifically on breast cancer, in an unnamed Southern prison. ...
- Lawyer Bonnie Kerness has sent thirty letters complaining about De Luca's treatment to Correctional Medical Services, the private corporation that has an annual $89 million contract for New Jersey's correctional healthcare. ...
- After a review of more than 1,200 medical complaints of California women prisoners, professor Nancy Stoller of the University of California, Santa Cruz, reported scores of calamities. ...
- Prisoners must file a formal grievance to appeal a medical decision, since healthcare is intertwined with strictly correctional functions. ...
- Prisoner advocates feel that judges let prisons off the hook, prematurely releasing them from complying with hard-won improvements in women's healthcare after legal settlements were obtained in Washington in 1995 and in California in 1997. ...
56. Correctional Service of Canada - Pet Facility Therapy In Correctional Institutions - Literature Review - April, 1998
- www.csc-scc.gc.ca
- California State - Department of Corrections - Susanville, California.
- The co-ordinator at this institution feels that the vocational aspect of this dog training program is complex but also enjoyable for the inmates. ...
57. Study group material censored in California
- www.etext.org
- Study group material censored in California.
- To protest this censorship send letters to Warden Art Calderon, California Correctional Institution, PO Box 1906, Tehachapi, CA 93581. ...
58. Fugro's geotechnical study for drainage improvements as the Lompoc Correctional Institution.
- www.fugrowest.com
- Projects: By Type: City, County, Redevelopment Agency: Lompoc Correctional .
- City, County, Redevelopment Agency Projects- Lompoc Correctional .
- Lompoc Federal Correctional Institution, Drainage Improvements between FCI and Farm Road, Santa Barbara County, California.
- Fugro provided geotechnical services for the design of drainage improvements at the Lompoc Federal Correctional Institution (FCI). ...
59. California Prisons
- www.straightistheway.com
60. This is a program where inmates in prisons are training dogs to assist the disabled
- www.pathwaystohope.org
- Downeast Correctional. ...
- Sanger B Powers Correctional. ...
- Washington State Correctional. ...
- North Central Correctional. ...
- Maine Correctional. ...
- Maine Correctional welcoming two new puppies for their Prison PUP Program .
- Downeast Correctional. ...
- Washington State Correctional. ...
- Washington State Correctional where inmates are training dogs to come when they fall .
- Washington State Correctional where inmates are learning how to groom dogs .
- Washington State Correctional. ...
- Washington State Correctional. ...
- Maine Correctional at Windham .
- Maine Correctional at Windham .
- Maine Correctional at Windham .
- One of the dogs ready for graduation from the York Correctional Institution in Niantic, Connecticut The dog is wearing a "Gentle Leader", like a horse halter. ...
61. California Prison Dharma Walk
- geronimo33.stormpages.com
- California Prison .
- The California Prison Dharma Walk is an interfaith pilgrimage to the major prisons of California to vigil, pray, and seek a more humane alternative to imprisonment. ...
- It is a call to all of us to connect and learn, to see what is the reality of prisons in California, and across the United States. We believe that by seeing this reality of vast and preventable suffering and injustice, we will be moved to profoundly change the nature of the correctional system. ...
- Now in California: .
- The California Department of Corrections' inmate population "increased from 23,511 in 1980 to 154,000 in 1997. ...
- There are 565 people on California's Death Row, including 415 at San Quentin. ...
- California spends more on prisons than on higher education. (From Classrooms to Cellblocks: How Prison Building Affects Higher Education and African American Enrollment in California, a publication of the Justice Policy Institute) .
- Since the 1960's California has had the largest prison building program in the U. ...
- California has 33 state prisons. ...
- Crime and Prisons Data for California from Stateline. ...
- Offender Information from the California Department of Corrections .
- California Prison Dharma Walk Schedule .
- Deuel Vocational Institution-DVI .
- Federal Prison, California Correctional Institution-CCI .
62. The VVA Veteran
- www.vva.org
- Redondo Beach, California, Chapter 53 President Jerry Yamamoto reports that the California legislature has approved a bill that designates State Highway Route One (also called the Pacific Coast Highway) the "Los Angeles County Vietnam Veterans Memorial Highway. " The designation affects a 104-mile stretch of highway that mostly parallels the Southern California coastline.
- Phoenix Chapter 726 at the Polk Correctional Institution in Polk City, Florida, conducted a Remembrance Day ceremony at the All War Dedication Stand in the institution. ...
- , Chapter 616 at the Mansfield, Ohio, Correctional Institution donated $1,000 to the Mansfield Police Department D. ... The chapter also donated $500 to the institution’s Community Services Program for tools and equipment.
- Virginia Mooney, the widow of a World War II veteran, was the beneficiary of a weekend cleanup project at her home conducted by members of Santa Rosa, California, Chapter 223. ...
- Cathleen Cordova, a member of Bay Area Chapter 400 in Oakland, California, was recently elected national president of the Women’s Overseas Service League. ...
- Chapter 466, Veterans of Graterford, Pennsylvania, hosted the Eighth Annual Round Robin Softball Tournament on July 23 at Graterford State Correctional Institute. ...
- Chapter 691 in Merced, California , held a memorial ceremony June 27 for two of its departed members, Charles J. ...
- Rock Pile Chapter 719 at the Northern Nevada Correctional Center held its fifth Annual Awards Ceremony on August 2.
63. TEHACHAPI California Discounts on hotels in California - CA
- www.surfy.com
- Discounts on hotels in TEHACHAPI, California.
- Surfy! offers a real-time online ordering to most hotels in TEHACHAPI, CA - California. ... Have fun at in TEHACHAPI CA - California. ...
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64. The Salmonier Correctional Institution: Time on the Line - May 1999 newsletter - Page 11
- www.nald.ca
- Live in northern California once, but leave before it makes you soft Travel.
65. http://www.deputypay.net/cacorrectional/front.htm
- www.deputypay.net
66. California Criminal Records Search
- www.usinfosearch.com
- California.
- Records on persons who have been convicted of felonies and state-level misdemeanors and sentenced to serve time in a state correctional institution since 1987. ...
- Indiana statewide records on persons who have been convicted of felonies and state-level misdemeanors and sentenced to serve time in a state correctional institution. ...
- Felony and high-level misdemeanor records on persons sentenced to serve time in a state correctional institution since 1982. ...
- Statewide records on persons who have been convicted of felonies and state-level misdemeanors and sentenced to serve time in a state correctional institution or sentenced to probation since 1982. ...
- Statewide felony records on persons who have been sentenced to serve time in a state institution, or probation, community service or diversion since 1980. ...
- Sentencing records of felony convictions from all counties' Circuit Courts since 1976 of persons sentenced to probation or time in a state institution; includes records on parolees. ...
- Records of felony and high-level misdemeanor records on persons sentenced to serve time in a state correctional institution since 1935. ...
- Nevada statewide records on persons who have been convicted of felonies and state-level misdemeanors and sentenced to serve time in a state correctional institution. ...
- Ohio statewide records on persons who have been convicted of felonies and state-level misdemeanors and sentenced to serve time in a state correctional institution since 1988. ...
- Statewide corrections records on persons who have been convicted of felonies and state-level misdemeanors and sentenced to serve time in a state correctional institution since 1997. ...
- Statewide records on persons who have been convicted of felonies and state-level misdemeanors and sentenced to serve time in a state correctional institution, or received probation sentence since 1987. ...
- South Carolina statewide felony and misdemeanor records on persons found guilty and sentenced to serve time and/or subsequent probation in a state penal institution. ...
- Statewide felony and gross misdemeanor records on persons found guilty and sentenced to serve time and/or subsequent probation in a state penal institution. ...
67. California Route 58
- www.geocities.com
- California's Route 58 .
- This route ceased to exist in California in 1964; it was completely decomissioned elsewhere in 1971. ...
- Cal-NExUS (California Numbered Exit Uniform System) .
- The most important one is the Rio Tinto Borax company, which operates California’s largest open pit mine and one of the richest borate deposits on the planet. ...
- 4 miles east of Route 33: California Legal (40-foot KPRA). ...
- Route 202 in Tehachapi takes you to the Brite Valley and dead-ends at the California Correctional Institution. ...
68. CALIFORNIA CODES
- www.calelections.org
- 2720 CALIFORNIA CODESPENAL CODESECTION 6001-6005 6001. ... (b) The operation of any service, place, institution, hospital,agency, or facility by the Department of Corrections under theauthorization in Section 6003 shall be deemed operation by the YouthAuthority. ... Whenever a person confined to a correctional institutionunder the supervision of the Department of the Youth Authority ischarged with a public offense committed within the confines of suchinstitution and is tried for such public offense, the county clerk ofa county or the city finance officer of a city incurring any costsin connection with such matter must make out a statement of all thecosts incurred by the county or city for the investigation, and thepreparation of the trial, and the actual trial of such case, and ofall guarding and keeping of such person, and of the execution of thesentence of such person, properly certified to by a judge of thesuperior court of such county. ... CALIFORNIA CODESPENAL CODESECTION 4000-4032 4000. ... (a) No law enforcement or correctional official shall give,offer, or promise to give any monetary payment in excess of fiftydollars ($50) in return for an in-custody informant's testimony inany criminal proceeding. ... When there are reasonable grounds to believe that a prisoner maybe forcibly removed from a county jail, the sheriff may remove theprisoner to any California state prison for safekeeping and it is theduty of the warden of the prison to accept and detain the prisonerin his or her custody until his or her removal is ordered by thesuperior court of the county from which he or she was delivered. ... When a county prisoner requires medical treatment necessitatinghospitalization which cannot be provided at the county jail or countyhospital because of lack of adequate detention facilities, and whenthe prisoner also presents a serious custodial problem because of hisor her past or present behavior, the judge of the superior courtmay, on the request of the county sheriff and with the consent of theDirector of Corrections, designate by written order the neareststate prison or correctional facility which would be able to providethe necessary medical treatment and secure confinement of theprisoner. ... The prisonershall not be transferred to the state prison or correctionalfacility prior to the hearing, except upon a determination by thephysician responsible for the prisoner's health care that a medicalemergency exists which requires the transfer of the prisoner to thestate prison or correctional facility prior to the hearing. ... The rate of compensation for the prisoner's medical treatment andconfinement within a California state prison or correctional facilityshall be established by the Department of Corrections, and shall becharged against the county making the request. ... The rate of compensationfor the prisoner's confinement within a California state prison orcorrectional facility shall be established by the Department ofCorrections and shall be charged against the county making therequest. ... (a) When it is made to appear to any judge by affidavit ofthe sheriff or other official in charge of county correctionalfacilities or district attorney and oral testimony that a prisonerconfined in any city or county jail within the jurisdiction of thecourt requires medical or surgical treatment necessitatinghospitalization, which treatment cannot be furnished or supplied atsuch city or county jail, the court in its discretion may order theremoval of such person or persons from such city or county jail tothe county hospital in such county; provided, if there is no countyhospital in such county, then to any hospital designated by suchcourt; and it shall be the duty of the sheriff or other official incharge of county correctional facilities to maintain the necessaryguards, who may be private security guards, for the safekeeping ofsuch prisoner, the expense of which shall be a charge against thecounty.
69. The Menendez Brothers, notorious killers of their parents - Crime Library
- www.crimelibrary.com
- " Later, the California State Medical Board sued Vicary in an attempt to revoke his license. ...
- On September 10, 1996, the California Department of Corrections separated the Menendez brothers. Lyle was bussed from the North Kern State Prison to the California Correctional Institution near Tehachapi and Erik was bussed to the California State Prison, near Sacramento. ...
- Oziel surrendered his psychotherapists license and moved from California to another state.
- On February 27, 1998, the California Court of Appeals upheld the murder convictions of Lyle and Erik Menendez. ...
- On May 28, 1998, the California Supreme Court voted to uphold the murder convictions and life-without-parole sentences of Lyle and Erik Menendez. ...
- On February 9, 1999, the State Bar of California closed its three year investigation of Leslie Abramson after deciding that there was insufficient evidence to conclude she violated ethical rules in the Menendez brothers retrial.
- As of July 1999, Lyle is 31 and works as a janitor at the California Corrections Institution near Tehachapi. ... Erik is now 29 and works as a groundskeeper at the California State Prison outside of Sacramento. ...
70. CALIFORNIA PENAL CODE SECTION 2900-2903
- caselaw.findlaw.com
- FindLaw : FindLaw California : Codes and Statutes : California Code : Penal Code.
- California Codes .
- California Penal Code .
- (b) Except as otherwise provided in this section, the place of reception shall be an institution under the jurisdiction of the Director of Corrections. ... (2) In any case in which, pursuant to the agreement on detainers or other provision of law, a prisoner of another jurisdiction is, before completion of actual confinement in a penal or correctional institution of a jurisdiction other than the State of California, sentenced by a California court to a term of imprisonment for a violation of California law, and the judge of the California court orders that the California sentence shall run concurrently with the sentence which such person is already serving, the Director of Corrections shall designate the institution of the other jurisdiction as the place for reception of such person within the meaning of the preceding provisions of this section. He may also designate the place in California for reception of such person in the event that actual confinement under the prior sentence ends before the period of actual confinement required under the California sentence. (3) In any case in which a person committed to the Director of Corrections is subsequently committed to a penal or correctional institution of another jurisdiction, the subsequent commitment is ordered to be served concurrently with the California commitment, the prisoner is placed in a penal or correctional institution of the other jurisdiction, and the prisoner is not received by the Director of Corrections pursuant to subdivision (a), the Director of Corrections shall designate the institution of the other jurisdiction as the place for reception and service of the California term. (c) Except as provided in this section, all time served in an institution designated by the Director of Corrections shall be credited as service of the term of imprisonment. ... (2) If a prisoner escapes from the custody and jurisdiction of the Director of Corrections, the prisoner shall be deemed an escapee and fugitive from justice, until the prisoner is available to return to the custody of the Director of Corrections or the State of California. ... (a) In all felony and misdemeanor convictions, either by plea or by verdict, when the defendant has been in custody, including, but not limited to, any time spent in a jail, camp, work furlough facility, halfway house, rehabilitation facility, hospital, prison, juvenile detention facility, or similar residential institution, all days of custody of the defendant, including days served as a condition of probation in compliance with a court order, and including days credited to the period of confinement pursuant to Section 4019, shall be credited upon his or her term of imprisonment, or credited to any fine on a proportional basis, including, but not limited to, base fines and restitution fines, which may be imposed, at the rate of not less than thirty dollars ($30) per day, or more, in the discretion of the court imposing the sentence. ... All criminals sentenced to prison by the authority of the United States or of any state or territory of the United States, may be received by the Director of Corrections and imprisoned in California state prisons in accordance with the sentence of the court by which they were tried. The prisoners so confined shall be subject in all respects to discipline and treatment as though committed under the laws of this State and the Director of Corrections is authorized to enter into contracts with the proper agencies of the United States and of other states and territories of the United States with regard to the per diem rate such agencies shall pay to the State of California for the keep of each prisoner. ... (a) In any case in which a woman offender can be sentenced to imprisonment in the county jail, or be required to serve a term of imprisonment therein as a condition of probation, or has already been so sentenced or imprisoned, the court which tried the offender may, with the consent of the offender and on application of the sheriff or on its own motion, with the consent of the offender, commit the offender to the sheriff with directions for placement in the California Institution for Women in lieu of placement in the county jail if the court finds that the local detention facilities are inadequate for the rehabilitation of the offenders and if the court concludes that the offender will benefit from that treatment and care as is available at that institution and the county has entered into a contract with the state under subdivision (b). The offenders may be received by the Director of Corrections and imprisoned in the California Institution for Women in accordance with the commitment of the court by which tried.
71. California, New York, Florida, Indiana, Texas, Illinois, Criminal Records
- www.efindoutthetruth.com
- California (CA) Criminal Record Detail.
- Contra Costa Criminal Superior Court - Data herein relates to records maintained by the criminal superior court system of the state of California, county of Contra Costa. Fresno Superior Court - Data herein relates to records maintained by the criminal Superior Court system of the State of California, county of Fresno. ... Riverside Criminal Index - Data herein relates to index records maintained by the criminal court system of the state of California, county of Riverside. Sacramento Criminal Index - Data herein relates to index records maintained by the criminal court system of the state of California, county of Sacramento. San Bernardino Criminal Index - Data herein relates to defendant information maintained by the Superior Court system of the state of California, county of San Bernardino. Santa Cruz Criminal Index - Data herein relates to defendant information maintained by the Superior Court system of the state of California, county of Santa Cruz. San Diego Criminal Index - Data herein relates to criminal court records maintained by the county of San Diego, California. Santa Barbara Criminal Index - Data herein relates to index information maintained by the criminal court system of the State of California, county of Santa Barbara. Ventura Criminal Index - Data herein relates to index information maintained by the criminal court system of the state of California, county of Ventura. Riverside Civil Index - Data herein relates to index records maintained by the Civil court system of the state of California, county of Riverside. Sacramento Civil Index - Data herein relates to index records maintained by the Civil court system of the state of California, county of Sacramento.
- Corrections records of Illinois statewide felony convictions on persons found guilty and sentenced to serve time and/or subsequent probation in a state penal institution. ...
- Corrections records of felony and high-level misdemeanor records on persons sentenced to serve time in a state correctional institution since 1982. ...
- Corrections records of persons convicted of felony and gross misdemeanor offenses and sentenced to serve time in a state correctional facility since 1987, or placed on probation and who have been released or paroled. ...
- Corrections records of Michigan statewide felony convictions on persons who have been sentenced to serve time in a state institution or probation since 1982. ...
Other
pages with similar relevance:
72. INMATE CLASSIFIED PEN PAL - DAVID VALDEZ
- www.inmate.com
- THE CALIFORNIA DEPARTMENT OF CORRECTIONS .
- THE CALIFORNIA DEPARTMENT OF CORRECTIONS .
- With the crime rate on the rise in California and the passage of legislation like the "THREE-STRIKES LAW", our state prison system is packed beyond capacity. ... 6 billion, California taxpayers often complain that prisons are like country clubs, since inmates get three square meals a day and higher education more than even some law abiding citizens can hope for. California has the second largest prison system in the world, second only to China (See FOOTE Page 1). ... This report will examine the California Department of Corrections, exploring the taxpayers view that prisons are like country clubs. ... While some of these services are available, I will show that the average California prison does not serve simply as a vacation spot for criminals, but in fact, life inside is difficult and dangerous. ...
- Taxpayers tend to complain about the money spent on the system, because as the California Department of Corrections (CDC) states in its web page, it costs more to house an inmate than to educate a child. ... " Instead, it is for the security of the institution guarding inmates around the clock. ... " The prison staff must oversee the inmates movements "from the time they wake up, during meals, when working or in class, during free time in the dayroom, and believe it or not, when they are asleep" (See CALIFORNIA Page 1). ...
- In 1994 the Little Hoover Commission, an independent agency created to oversee state government operations, studied the California Department of Corrections. ...
- (See CALIFORNIA Page 22). ...
- " (See CALIFORNIA Page 108) .
- (See CALIFORNIA Page 1). ...
- " (See CALIFORNIA Page 147). ...
- " (See CALIFORNIA Page 2). ...
73. FreshReleases.com - The HOTTEST in Christian music at great prices!
- www.freshreleases.com
- Helen Baylor ministers to over 400 women at correctional institution.
- Diadem Music artist Helen Baylor continued her ministry to women as she performed a concert at the California Correctional Institution for Women in Chino, CA. Over 400 inmates, correctional officers, and staff attended the concert.
- The institution's gospel choir opened the concert after which Baylor and her band ministered in concert for over two hours. ...
- The correctional facility in Chino is a medium security facility, housing over 1500 women, serving terms from six months to life.
74. Correctional Institution History California
- affordable-attorney.com
- Correctional Institution History California.
- dispute resolution services : process service, correctional institution history california, civil wills and trusts. ... environmental liability, getting keeping rental subsidies section 8 correctional institution history. ...
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75. Correctional Boot Camps: A Tough Intermediate Sanction.
- www.ncjrs.org
- Correctional Boot Camps: A Tough Intermediate Sanction. MENU TITLE: Correctional Boot Camps: A Tough Intermediate Sanction Series: NIJ Report Published: February 1996 314 pages 661,676 bytes A Tough Intermediate Sanction Edited by Doris L. ... Photos courtesy of New York State Department of Correctional Services (cover and chapter 3), Illinois Department of Corrections (chapter 4), Georgia Department of Corrections (chapters 5 and 12), U. ... Bureau of Prisons (chapters 6 and 15), Mobile County (Alabama) Juvenile Court (chapter 9), and California Youth Authority (chapter 10). ... Bourque Chapter 10: First-Year Evaluation of the California Youth Authority Boot Camp Jean Bottcher and Teresa Isorena Chapter 11: The Development and Operation of Juvenile Boot Camps in Florida Elizabeth S. ... , and Neil Kaltenecker Chapter 12: Discipline in Georgia's Correctional Boot Camps Billie S. Erwin Chapter 13: Substance Abuse Programming in Adult Correctional Boot Camps: A National Overview Ernest L. ... Chapter 18: Multisite Study of Correctional Boot Camps Doris Layton MacKenzie, Ph. ... Foreword Over the past dozen years, correctional boot camps, or shock incarceration programs, have mushroomed as an intermediate sanction, first in State and then in the Federal prison systems, and more recently even in county jails. The notion of a strict, military-style punishment as an alternative to extended incarceration is an attractive one, on a number of fronts: It appeals politically, because it promises both tough punishment and the promise of financial savings through shortened sentences; it appeals to the citizenry, largely because of its noncompromising image of rigorous discipline for offenders; it appeals to corrections administrators by offering the opportunity to free up scarce correctional bedspace. Recognizing the vast potential of correctional boot camps as a tool to aid the criminal justice system in coping with the burgeoning populations in the Nation's prisons and jails, the Violent Crime Control and Law Enforcement Act of 1994 directed the National Institute of Justice to solicit research in and evaluations of the impact of both existing boot camps and those to be funded under the Act.
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