Final Project MGT332VC
Running head: PLEA BARGAINING 1
Plea Bargaining: Unpopular but Necessary to Our
Criminal Justice System
Student Name
Genesee Community College
Author Note
This paper was prepared for Criminal Justice 101, Section 01, taught by Professor Garigen.
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PLEA BARGAINING 2
Abstract
This paper explores the importance of the concept of plea bargaining to the criminal justice
system. For some plea bargaining is an important and useful tool used to keep the wheels of
justice moving in a timely fashion, but to others it is a slap on the wrist to offenders and a further
insult to victims and their families. Some argue that the results of plea bargains make for
inconsistent justice, but the Supreme Court has endorsed the practice and therefore it is important
that judges monitor the system to make sure plea bargains are used fairly and without
discrimination.
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PLEA BARGAINING 3
Plea Bargaining: Unpopular but Necessary
to Our Criminal Justice System
A Livingston County teen was recently charged with criminally negligent homicide in the
heroin overdose death of a female friend. The young man was accused of administering the
dose. In order to receive a lighter sentence, he forfeited a trial and pled guilty to the charges; as a
result he will spend six months in a New York State “shock camp” rather than serve extensive
prison time.
An editorial in the Livingston County News, “A Doubly Meaningless Death,” (2001)
raised objections to the plea bargain. The writer saw the plea bargain and subsequent sentence as
“equivalent to a slap on the wrist” (p. A4). The writer believed that such a decision sent the
wrong kind of message for such a serious crime. Furthermore, said the writer, “To free [the
young man] with no more than a six-month slap on the wrist makes her death doubly
meaningless and should not happen” (p. A4).
This instance of plea bargaining points out the significance of this process in the criminal
justice system. On the one hand plea bargaining reduces the time and thus the money spent on a
trial, however, the accused usually receives a lighter sentence.
According to Black’s Law Dictionary (2009), a plea bargain is a “negotiated agreement
between a prosecutor and a criminal defendant whereby the defendant pleads guilty to a lesser
offense … in exchange for some concession by the prosecutor … a more lenient sentence or a
dismissal of other charges” (p. 1173).
As explained in Schmalleger (2007), such a process is beneficial to all parties. A plea
bargain is in the best interest of a defense team if they feel they cannot win an acquittal and
prosecutors will choose to plea bargain if they feel their evidence is weak. The accused benefits
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PLEA BARGAINING 4
from the possibility of “reduced or combined charges, lessened defense costs, and a lower
sentence than might have otherwise been anticipated” (p. 312). The victims also begin to restore
their lives to some sort of normalcy.
Although there was a recommendation by the National Advisory Commission on
Criminal Justice Standards and Goals in 1973 to abolish the practice of plea bargaining, the
Supreme Court has ruled that the process is an “important and necessary component of the
American system of justice…it is to be encouraged” (Schmalleger, 2007, p. 312). The reason is
that the current judicial system—both court facilities and manpower—is not equipped to handle
every criminal case in this country. “If every case went to jury trial,” wrote Mirsky and Kahn
(1997) in their article in The American Prospect, “resources would have to multiply by ‘many
times’” (p. 56). Thus a provision must be in place to administer justice in a reasonable, timely
and cost effective manner. Plea bargaining allows for that.
Despite its sanction by the Supreme Court, plea bargaining does have its opponents. The
primary complaint is that it lets defendants off with lighter punishment than they ought to get. In
fact, it’s so unpopular that “prosecutors who regularly engage in the practice rarely advertise it”
(Schmalleger, 2007, p. 313).
Another complaint against plea bargaining is that results are inconsistent and dependent
on the kind of attorney representing the client. Research done by Peter Nardulli (1986), a
professor at the University of Illinois, Urbana, found the complaint to be probably invalid (p.
380). Nardulli (1986) studied plea bargaining in nine medium sized counties in Illinois,
Michigan and Pennsylvania. He compared the plea bargains obtained by various kinds of
attorneys—privately retained or publicly paid. He found that there were few statistically
significant differences and thus concluded that the results of plea bargaining were reasonably
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PLEA BARGAINING 5
consistent. In these counties, at least, the results depended more on local rules and practices than
on the type of attorney.
While plea bargaining may be viewed with suspicion by much of the public, given the
amount of crime and the present structure of our judicial system and available resources, it is
unlikely to disappear anytime soon. Judges must remain diligent in monitoring plea bargaining
to ensure justice is served to all, regardless of race, color, gender or social status.
PLEA BARGAINING 6
References
Di Natali, C. (2001, December 27). New charges delay Dalton’s plea deal in drug death.
Livingston County News, p. A1. Retrieved from http://thelcn.com/2001/12/27/new-
charges/
A doubly meaningless death. [Editorial]. (2001, December 27). Livingston County News, p. A4.
Retrieved from http://thelcn.com/2001/12/27/doubly-meaningless-death/
Garner, B. A. (Ed.). (2009). Black’s law dictionary (9th ed.). St. Paul: West Group.
Mirsky, C. L., & Kahn, G. (1997). No bargain. The American Prospect, 32, 56. Retrieved from
http://www.prospect.org/
Nardulli, P. F. (1986). “Insider” justice: Defense attorneys and the handling of felony cases. The
Journal of Criminal Law & Criminology, 77, 379-417. doi:10.2307/1143338
Schmalleger, F. (2007). Criminal justice today: An introductory text for the twenty-first century
(9th ed.). Upper Saddle River, NJ: Pearson.
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