These patterns have some bearing on popular explanations for crime. For example, crime has been blamed on “poverty, racism and discrimination”208 and on “the inhumanity of our prisons.”209 As already noted, poverty and racial discrimination (whether measured in incomes, education, or segregation laws) were greater in the past, and their continuing effects are more apparent among older blacks than the younger. Crime, however, is greatest among youthful blacks210 and hostility to police is greatest among
The level and trend of American crime rates may be put in perspective by comparison with those of other nations. Murder rates in the United States have been several times those in such comparable societies as those of Western Europe and Japan.215 Robbery rates are also higher.216 Crime rates in general are only moderately higher in the United States than in Europe,217 but it is in the violent crimes that the difference between the U.S. and other countries is greatest. For example, New York, London, and Tokyo have comparable numbers of inhabitants (Tokyo the most), but there are eight times as many murders in New York as in Tokyo,218 and fifteen times as many murders as in London.219 Intertemporal comparisons show a rise in crime rates around the world220 — with the notable exception of Japan. What is different about Japan may provide some factual basis for testing competing theories of crime control.
The rising murder rate in the United States is largely a phenomenon dating from the mid-1960s, and continuing to escalate in the 1970s221 — a rise generally coinciding with the sharp dropoff in executions.222 This rise in murder rates reversed a long-term
CRIMINAL LAW PROCEDURE
One of the basic questions about criminal law procedure is simply how much of it there is, in purely quantitative terms. In England, the longest criminal trial on record lasted forty-eight days.225 In the United States, there have been criminal trials in which the selection of a jury alone has taken months.226 In England the selection of a jury “usually takes no more than a few minutes.227 A criminal trial length that would be “routine” in California228 would be record-breaking in England. The British example is particularly appropriate, not only because of general similarities between the two countries but more particularly because American law grew out of British law, the two countries have similar notions of fairness, and England is not regarded as either a police state or a place where innocent defendants are railroaded to jail.
Delays in American courts did not just happen. A procedural revolution in criminal law was created by the Supreme Court in the 1960s — the decade when crime rates more than doubled. Much attention has been focused on the specifics of these procedural changes — warnings to suspects, restrictions on evidence, etc. — but it is also worth noting the sheer multiplicity of new grounds for delay at every stage of criminal procedure, from jury selection all the way to appeals to the Supreme Court.