The Bill of Rights and Administration of Justice and Security
The comparisons between the Bill of Rights to the Administration of Justice and Security in America are many. This paper will focus on the Bill of Rights and in particular the First, Fourth, Fifth, Sixth, and Fourteenth Amendments of the Bill of Rights and how they compare to the Administration of Justice and Security.
When defining justice many in this country are raised to believe justice stands for fairness, punishment for those who commit crime, equality between all citizens, and individual rights of each citizen. There are those in this country that have been accused of crimes and believe they were guilty before being proven innocent in a court of law. Many times this is the attitude many American citizens tend to follow when they look at the American criminal justice system as a whole, and that being of one that is not justice for all but more used against them than for them.
Are fairness and justice synonymous? Many believe so, while others would say no. Some believe that fairness is treating all equally while justice is treating those according to their surrounding circumstances according to written law. Justice is after all suppose to blind in the fact that it does not treat any one party involved differently but only according to written law. In other words sentenced are handed down by the cause not by the person themselves.
When we view the Sixth Amendment it was the purpose of the founding fathers that the purpose behind the Sixth Amendment was to protect citizens from lengthy trails and allow them to be tried by a jury of their peers in the town where the crime occurred in the first place. This amendment also allowed for the accused to face their accuser and question them as to their findings. However when the Sixth amendment was created there were not the huge caseloads we see in today’s criminal justice system, so in regards to a quick and speedy trial for all, this term...