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Predictions: Crime and Criminal Justice in the 21st Century
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- Subject: Predictions: Crime and Criminal Justice in the 21st Century
- From: User of DOOM <[email protected]>
- Date: Thu, 17 Sep 1998 09:30:44 +0200 (CEST)
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Predictions: Crime and Criminal Justice in the 21st Century
1. The United States will experience a significant economic
recession/crisis very close to the turn of the Century.
2. As the large pool of young people born in the early 1990s
become teenagers and young adults, there will be a dramatic
increase in violent crime around the year 2005-2010.
3. America will experience sporadic civil disorders/riots in
many of its urban areas during the next 10-15 years -- much of it
related to racial/ethnic problems.
4. Terrorist acts by "fringe"/special issue groups will
increase at a significant rate -- becoming a major law enforcement
and security problem.
5. As faith in the criminal justice system declines, there
will be a rise in vigilante-based incidents where citizens take
the enforcement of crime problems into their own hands.
6. Much of middle- and upper-class America will take a
"retreatist" attitude and move into private high-security
communities located in suburban or rural areas. Because of
technological advances, many companies and corporations will also
move out of the urban environments as well.
7. Due to many of the predictions listed above, much of law
enforcement and security in the 21st Century will become
privatized and contractual. Traditional law enforcement agencies
will primarily serve urban and rural communities.
8. Law enforcement will evolve into two major and divergent
roles: traditional law enforcement and a more specialized
military tactical role to deal with the growing urban violance
and terrorist incidents.
9. Significant violence and unrest will plague our nation's
prisons. Major prison riots will become a regular occurrence.
10. With the decrease of the possibility of major global
warfare, the United States military will take on an increased
domestic "peace-keeping" role with America's law enforcement
agencies.
John Young wrote:
>
> Tim asks:
>
> >Freeh and Company continue to mumble about "meeting
> >the legitmate needs of law enforcement." What can they
> >be speaking of?
> ...
> >Obviously his side is contemplating domestic crypto restrictions.
>
> Threat of terrorism will be the impetus for applying national security
> restrictions domestically, for relaxing cold war limitations on spying
> on Americans, for dissolving barriers between law enforcement
> and military/intelligence agencies.
>
> Technical means for access to encrypted data will probably
> come first in communications, then to stored material. There
> will be an agreement for increased CALEA wiretap funding, which
> is what the two cellular and wired suits against the FBI intend,
> (paralleling what the hardware and software industries want from
> federal buyers of security products).
>
> This will provide the infrastructural regime for the gov to monitor
> and store domestic traffic as NSA does for the global, using the
> same technology (NSA may provide service to domestic
> LEA as it now does for other gov customers for intel).
>
> Other access will come through hardware and software for
> computers, paralleling technology developed for telecomm tapping,
> tracking and monitoring.
>
> Most probably through overt/covert features of microprocessors
> and OS's, as reported recently of Wintel and others, but also
> probably with special chips for DSP and software for modular
> design -- why build from scratch when these handy kits are
> available.
>
> As noted here, the features will appear first as optional, in response
> to demand from commerce, from parents, from responsible
> institutions, to meet public calls for protection, for privacy, for
> combating threats to the American people.
>
> Like wiretap law, use of the features for preventative snooping will
> initially require a court order, as provided in several of the crypto
> legislative proposals.
>
> Like the wiretap orders, gradually there will be no secret court refusals
> for requests to use the technology in the national interest.
>
> A publicity campain will proclaims that citizens with nothing to hide
> will have nothing to fear. Assurance of safety will be transparent,
> no clicks on the line. In a digital world, home-office devices will send
> lifestyle data to the device manufacturers over the always monitoring
> transparental Net.
>
> Personal privacy will evaporate almost unnoticeably, as with the tv
> remote control, cp/defcon/bar brag, telephone, fax and forever-lovers
> pillowtalk.