Justice Served? Perceptions of Plea Bargaining Involving a Sexual Assault in Child and Adult Females

Seventy-four community members (46 women, 28 men) read vignettes describing a plea bargain in a mock sexual assault case. We employed a within-participant design and manipulated rape victim age (6- vs. 26-year-old), type of plea bargain agreement (reduced prison sentence vs. only probation), and rea...

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Veröffentlicht in:Criminal justice and behavior 2018-04, Vol.45 (4), p.503-518
Hauptverfasser: Golding, Jonathan M., Lynch, Kellie R., Malik, Sarah E., Foster-Gimbel, Olivia
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Seventy-four community members (46 women, 28 men) read vignettes describing a plea bargain in a mock sexual assault case. We employed a within-participant design and manipulated rape victim age (6- vs. 26-year-old), type of plea bargain agreement (reduced prison sentence vs. only probation), and reason for plea bargain (save victim from reliving a traumatic experience vs. save time in court). Participants answered questions about the plea bargain agreement (e.g., was justice served). The results showed less support of plea bargaining when it (a) involved a child, (b) involved only probation, and (c) when the rationale for the plea bargain was to save time. Significant moderation revealed that plea deals involving probation in 6-year-old child cases were perceived most negatively. The results are discussed in terms of procedural justice theory in sexual assault cases, and how perceptions of the general public impact the use of plea bargaining as a legal tool.
ISSN:0093-8548
1552-3594
DOI:10.1177/0093854817743538