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FREE ESSAY ON DUE PROCESS OF LAW

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Due Process of Law
This paper discusses and explains the term due process of law. -- 750 words; MLA

Due Process
This paper discusses due process, truth and the US criminal justice system. -- 750 words; APA

The Due Process Law
An examination of the due process law that requires a thorough evidentiary hearing before a person can be deprived of benefits. -- 978 words; MLA

Balancing Due Process and Crime Control
An analysis of the due process and crime control considerations in the administration of criminal justice in the United States. -- 2,633 words; APA

Criminal Justice: Substantive vs. Procedural Law
This paper compares substantive versus procedural law and the related concepts of substantive and procedural due process. -- 1,336 words; APA

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DUE PROCESS OF LAW

USING THE MOVIE 
Helpful Background:
In the Southern United States, before the 1960s, blacks were segregated from whites. Not
only did blacks live in different areas than whites, but by law they were not permitted
to go to the same schools, sit in the same part of the courthouse, eat in the same
restaurants, use the same public rest rooms or drink at the same water fountains. These
laws were unconstitutional and have now been changed. 
The Constitution of the United States requires that before a person is convicted of a
crime he must be given due process of law. In the case of persons accused of a felony or
a crime for which they can be imprisoned for a substantial period of time, this includes
the right to a lawyer. If the defendant is poor and cannot afford to hire a lawyer, the
state must provide a lawyer for him. The judge appointed Atticus as defense counsel for
the man accused of rape to comply with this provision of the Constitution. For a film
which teaches the meaning of due process of law, see The Ox-Bow Incident. 
Lynching is an execution, usually by hanging, in punishment for a crime or offense for
which the person lynched has not been convicted in a court of law. Often, people who are
lynched have committed no crime at all, as in The Ox-Bow Incident. See also The
Autobiography of Miss Jane Pittman in which a black man was lynched for trying to educate
his people. 
Lynching was named after a Virginia Justice of the Peace, Charles Lynch, who ordered the
extra-legal hanging of Tory sympathizers during the American Revolution. Vigilante mobs,
most often in the West, resorted to lynching when police or judges had been corrupted or
were ineffectual. See Barbary Coast. Before the Civil War, white opponents of slavery
were subjected to lynchings in the South. After the Civil War, lynching by white mobs
became a favorite method of intimidating blacks. Beginning in 1886 more blacks than
whites were lynched. Since 1882, when records began to be kept, more than 4700 people
have been lynched in the United States. The largest number in any single year was 230 in
1892. Civil rights workers in the South in the 1950's and 1960's were sometimes lynched.
Lynching has now been effectively suppressed by law enforcement officials and public
disapproval. 

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