With violence plaguing inner-city youth at epidemic rates, the report of a new study in the November issue of The Journal of the American College of Surgeons illustrated a research-based approach to confronting this national problem. The study showed that “Caught in the Crossfire,” a hospital-based peer intervention program, reduced involvement in the criminal justice system among youth aged 12 to 20.
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Ever been to the Smoky Mountain National Park and watched the short movie called " Don't Feed the Bears " ? The reason you can't feed them is that once you do they no longer will find food for them selves, and will expect you to provide it for them. If you don't they will break in your camp site, tents and steel your food. If you get in their way they will kill you. They'll become such a nuisance and a danger to the public they eventuality have to be impounded and sometimes put to s ....
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Juries across the country make decisions every day on the fate of defendants, ideally leading to prison sentences that fit the crime for the guilty and release for the innocent. Yet a new Northwestern University study shows that juries in criminal cases many times are getting it wrong.
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The pious outrage Thursday over heiress Paris Hilton's "early release"Â from jail in Los Angeles, accusations of "special treatment"Â and the vindictive demands that she receive "justice,"Â i.e., punishment, have nothing healthy or progressive about them-as the images of Hilton being taken in handcuffs to court Friday morning and from there, sobbing, back to prison should indicate.
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