Showing posts with label public drunkenness. Show all posts
Showing posts with label public drunkenness. Show all posts

Friday, August 31, 2012

Status Offenses

In the age of Facebook, the word “status” has had a remarkable new lease on life. Two millennia removed from its Latin roots, the word pours forth over the Internet, a vessel into which millions pour their expressions of self.

There are, however, other specific uses for the word. In criminal justice vocabulary, “status offense” is a term of art for conduct that, though not criminal, carries consequences because the offender is a juvenile.

Examples of status offenses include:

• Underage drinking

• Skipping school (truancy),

• Running away from home

• Curfew violations

Behaviors such as these can bring juveniles under the supervision of the courts. If the problem is persistent enough, a judge may find that the juvenile is delinquent. This, in turn, can trigger placement in a custodial setting that has most, if not all, of the elements of incarceration.

A glance at the entry for “status crime” in the Fifth Edition of Black’s Law Dictionary (1979) points to a time when open-ended offenses were used against adults as well. A “status crime,” according to this edition of Black’s, is “[a] class of crime which consists not in proscribed action or inaction, but in the accused’s having a certain personal condition or being a person of a specified character.”


The example given in Black’s is vagrancy. I’m reminded also, though, of Otis the Drunk in reruns of the “Andy Griffith Show” that I saw in my youth.

Sheriff Andy Taylor and Deputy Barnie Fife did not have a systemic procedure in place for testing Otis’s blood-alcohol level. But that did not stop them from using their discretion to put him behind bars when they deemed it appropriate.





Saturday, July 4, 2009

No Shame in Bowing


Tsuyoshi Kusangi, a popular Japanese entertainer, had too much to drink and was arrested for dancing naked in a Tokyo park around 3 a.m. on April 23.

The next day, he appeared at a news conference and apologized for his behavior. “I drank a lot, and did not know what I was doing. As an adult, I did something shameful.” His apology also included a non-verbal component, as he bowed his head so that it nearly grazed the thick row of microphones arrayed in front of him.

Following Kusangi’s apology, the authorities dropped the charges, and he has returned to his hit television show.

Could this ever happen in America?