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A 4 page research paper that offers an overview of plea bargaining, the various types of plea bargains, the purposes they serve, etc. Bibliography lists 3 sources.
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4 pages (~225 words per page)
File: KL9_khpleabar.doc
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listed below. Citation styles constantly change, and these examples may not contain the most recent updates. Plea Bargaining
Enterprises Inc. By - properly! Purpose of plea bargains Plea bargains are a
process, which usually includes a defendant "pleading guilty to a lesser offense" and thereby receiving a lighter sentence than the defendant would have incurred if found guilty of the original
charge (Meyer and Meyer, 2002, P. 292). Plea bargains are attractive to all participants in the judicial process for a number of reasons. Defense attorneys find that they can "maximize
their efficiency and profit through careful use of plea bargaining" (Meyer and Meyer, 2002, p. 308), As the politics associated with judicial proceedings places more value on "convictions than actual
sentences," prosecutors view plea bargaining as a strategy that allows them "to improve their batting averages," as plea bargains helps them to improve their conviction rates. Plea bargaining benefits judges
by allowing them to "avoid the time-consuming, expensive, unpredictable snares and pitfalls of the adversary trial" (Meyer and Meyer, 2002, p. 308). Examples of plea bargains There
are three major types of plea bargains, the first of which is referred to as "charge bargaining," that is, a situation in which the defendant pleads guilty to a lesser
charge than the defendant originally faced (Meyer and Meyer, 2002, p. 294). For the guilty, the plea bargain enables the defendant to receive a less severe sentence in response to
a lower charge; for the political system, the guilty plea saves time and money. On the negative side, it can be argued that justice is not adequately served when sentences
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