CRIMINOLOGY is that body of knowledge regarding crime as a social phenomenon which
includes within its scope, the process of making of laws, breaking of laws and the reaction
towards the breaking of laws.
         “crimen” – accusation
         “logy” (logia) – study
Classical School
         •       Cesare Becarria (father of classical criminology)
         •       Jeremy Bentham
         •       Free will
         •       Hedonism - pleasure seeking but avoiding pain
Neo-Classical
         •       Followers of Cesare Becarria
         •       free will with exceptions
Italian School
             •    Cesare Lombroso (father of criminology)
             •    Goring
             •    Enrico Ferri
             •    Raffaele Garofalo
             •    Stigmata of Degeneracy – outside of free will – characteristics
Positivist School
             •    Gluecks
             •    Charles Darwin
             •    Ernest Hooton
             •    William Sheldon
             •    Internal and External factors
             •    Outside of the free will (environment)
Philippine Criminal Justice System
   1.    Police > Suspect
   2.    Prosecution > Accused
   3.    Court > Defendant
   4.    Correctional > Convict
   5.    Community > Ex-Convict
Four Principal Division of Criminology
   1.    Criminal Etiology (origin and causes of crime)
   2.    Sociology of Law (making of laws)
   3.    Penology or Correction (reaction towards the breaking of laws)
   4.    Victimology
     -     “There can never be a crime without the victim and the criminal cannot be a criminal
           without victimizing someone.”
Crime Elements
   1. There must be an act or omission
         a. Act (positive) (ginawa ang labag sa batas)
         b. Omission (negative) (hindi ginawa ang responsibilidad)
   2. The act or omission must be punishable by RPC (Revised Penal Code) (367 articles)
   3. The act must be performed by means of dolo (deceit) or culpa (fault)
         a. dolo – deliberate intent (freedom, intelligence, intent)
         b. culpa – not intention (freedom, intelligence, imprudent, negligent, lack of
             foresight, lack of skill)
Criminal Law
      branch of law or public law which defines crime, treats of their nature and provide for
       their punishment.
January 1, 1932 – effectivity of criminal law
1998 – revised
Characteristics of Criminal Law
      General (irrespective of sex, religion)
      Territorial (maritime)
      Prospective (time)
      Uniform (equality)
      Specific / Definite (specific crime, specific punishment)
Homicide – generic term of all kinds of killings
Parricide – legitimate parents, relatives
Affinity – by marriage
Consanguinity – related by blood
      4th civil degree
            1. Parents
            2. Grand Parents
            3. Uncle/Aunties
            4. Cousins
Subject in Criminology Board Exam
1. Criminal Jurisprudence and Procedure (20%)
   1.1. Law 1 > Article 1-115
   1.2. Law 2 > Article 116-365
   1.3. Criminal Procedure > process of handling criminal
   1.4. Evidence
   1.5. Court Testimony > actual observation in court
2. Law Enforcement Administration (20%)
   2.1. Police Organization and Administration with Police Planning > police operation, rango
        ng police, retirement
   2.2. Industrial Security Management > fire alarms, lighting
   2.3. Police Intelligence
   2.4. Police Patrol
   2.5. Police Personnel and Records Management
   2.6. Comparative Police System
3. Criminalistics (20%)
   3.1. Dactyloscopy > fingerprint
   3.2. Police Photography
   3.3. Forensic Ballistics
   3.4. Questioned Documents Examinations
   3.5. Polygraph > Lie Detection
   3.6. Legal Medicine > Autopsy
4. Criminal Detention and Investigation (10%)
   4.1. Fundamentals of Criminal Investigation
   4.2. Traffic Management and Accident Investigation
   4.3. Special Crimes Investigation > child abuse, illegal recruitment
   4.4. Organized Crime Investigation > terrorists
   4.5. Drug Education and Vice Control
   4.6. Fire Technology and Arson Investigation
5. Criminal Sociology (15%)
   5.1. Introduction to Criminology
   5.2. Philippine Criminal Justice System
   5.3. Ethics and Values
   5.4. Juvenile Delinquency > minors who do crimes
   5.5. Human Behavior and Crisis Management > hostage taking
   5.6. Criminological Research and Statistics > thesis
6. Correctional Administration (15%)
   6.1. Institutional Corrections > 7 penal farms
   6.2. Non-Institutional Corrections > community base rehabilitation, pardon parol
Seven Penal Farms in the Philippines
1.   The New Bilibid Prison in Muntinlupa City
2.   The Correctional Institution for Women in Mandaluyong City
3.   Iwahig Prison and Penal Farm in Puerto Princesa City, Palawan
4.   Sablayan Prison and Penal Farm in Occidental Mindoro
5.   San Ramon Prison and Penal Farm in Zamboanga City
6.   Letye Regional Prison in Abuyog, Leyte
7.    Davao Prison and Penal Farm in Panabo, Davao
Leo Echegaray Y Pilo
        First filipino to be executed death penalty in the Philippines through lethal injection for
         the crime rape
        born on July 11, 1760 and died on Feb. 5, 1999
        Rodessa Echegaray – step daughter
        Zeneida Echegaray – wife
        Theodore Te – lawyer
        “Sambayanang Pilipino, patawarin ako sa kasalanang ipinaratang ninyo sa akin. Pilipino,
         pinatay ng kapwa Pilipino.”
Ceasare Lombroso – born criminals
Charles Darwin – theory of evolution
Raffaele Garofalo - criminologia
Atavistic – failed to involve to a fully human and civilized state (animalistic)
Divine Law – law believed to come directly from God
Sin – act or omission against the spiritual or divine law
Statutory Law – all laws made by people
Society – similar institutions, traditions, nationality – people>police power>laws>jurisdictions –
(crime is not a component of society, it is a social phenomenon)
Mens Rea – criminal intent
Actus Reus – criminal act
Aoyia logia – study/studies (Greek)
Criminalistics – expert more on physical evidences (identifies, compares, analyses, interprets
physical evidences)
Penologists – studies theory and practice management (correctional facilities)
Victimologists – studies relationship between offender and victim
Principal Parts of the Revised Penal Code
      Article 1 to 20 – Principles of Affecting Criminal Liability
      Article 21 to 113 – Provisions on penalties including criminal and civil liability
      Article 114 to 367 – felonies defined under the different titles
Crime – any act or omission punishable by law
Criminal – refers to a person who had been investigated, arrested and convicted for violating
the criminal law
Italian School – school of thought theorized that criminals differ from non-criminal with
reference to certain physical traits which Lombroso called “Stigmata of Degeneracy”
Republic Act No. 6506 – an act creating the board of examiners for criminologist in the
Philippines and for other purposes.
Section 22. Criminologist Defined. Criminologist is any type of person who is a graduate of the
Degree of Criminology, who has passed the examination for criminologists and is registered as
such by the board.
Significance of the Study of Criminology
     -    Study of the causes of crimes and development of criminals
     -    Study of the origin and development of criminal laws
     -    Study of the different factors that enhances the field such as:
             a) Criminal Demography – study of the relationship between criminology and
                population
             b) Criminal Ecology – study of the relationship between environment and
                criminality
             c) Criminal Epidemiology – study of the criminality in relation to special
                distribution of community
             d) Criminal Physical Anthropology – study of the criminality in relation to physical
                construction of man
             e) Psychiatry – study of human mind in relation to criminality
             f) Criminal Sociology – study of the effects of social conditions on crime and
                criminals including the machinery of justice and the evolution of criminal and
                punishment
             g) Victimology – study of the role of the victim in the commission of the crime
Offense – act or omission that is punishable by special laws such as Republic Acts (RA),
Presidential Decrees (P.D.), Executive Orders (E.O.), Memorandum Circulars (M.C.), Ordinances
and Rules and Regulations.
Delinquency / Misdemeanor – acts that are in violations of simple rules and regulations usually
referring to acts committed by minor offenders.
Felony – acts that are in violation of Revised Penal Code
Philosophies that govern adulthood
   1.    General Deterrence
   2.    Specific Deterrence
   3.    Incapacitation
   4.    Vengeance
   5.    Retribution
First offenders – first time to commit crime
Recidivist – 3 or more times of offending crime
Age of discernment – capacity of an adult to think what is right and wrong
Criminal Formula – C=T+S/R
T – Criminal Tendency
S – Total Situation
R – Resistance
Kallikak Family – feeble minded persons; researched by Calvin Goddard
Kallos – good (Greek word)
Kakos – bad
Deborah Kallikak – Emma Wolverton (real name); quacker woman; impregnate by Martin
Kallikak
Martin Kallikak – soldier in England; war soldier
John Wolverton – Martin Kallikak Jr.; son of Deborah and Martin
Juke Family – criminality, prostitutes; researched by Richard Dugdale
Ada Juke – Mother of all Criminals (Margaret)
Holy three of criminology
   1. Cesare Lombroso
   2. Enrico Ferri
   3. Raffaele Garofalo
                                         THEORIES OF CRIME
The Schools of Thought of Criminology
                  A school of thought is a body of ideas or principles advocated by its proponents.
           Their proponents explain the causes of crime established the schools of thought of
           criminology.
3 major criminology schools of thought
   1. Classical School
   2. Neo-Classical School
   3. Positive School
Classical School
       •    Crimes and their punishments should be balanced and fair
       •    Utilitarianism – behavior must be useful, purposeful, and reasonable
       •    “let the punishment fit the crime”
Cesare Beccaria (1738 – 1794)
   •       Cesare Bonessa Marchese Beccaria
   •       Lawyer from Milan Italy whose writings descripted both a movie for committing crime
           and methods for its control.
   •       His book “Dei Dellitie delle pene” (Ob Crimes and Punishment) described both motive
           for committing crime and methods for its control was published in July 1764 in Italy.
   •       His theory was based on free will and that people want to achieve pleasure and avoid
           pain.
Freewill – a philosophy advocating punishment severe enough for people to choose to avoid
criminal acts. It includes the benefit the belief that a certain criminal act warrants a certain
punishment without any variation.
Jeremy Bentham (1748 – 1832) – Utilitarian Theory
   •   An English legal philosopher devoted his life in searching for scientific approaches in the
       making of laws and the solutions of breaking of laws.
   •   “greatest happiness of the greatest number of pain”
   •   He proposed the “Utilitarian Hedonism”, the theory which explains that a person always
       acts in such a way as to seek pleasure and avoid pain.
   •   If a person commits a crime, he causes pain (damage or injury) to his victim while he
       gains pleasure (fruit of the crime) of his act.
   •   Laws are created to provide happiness (pleasure, due to peace and order) in the
       community.
Argument Against the Classical Theory
   1. Unfair – it treats all men as if they are robots without regard to individual differences
      and surrounding circumstances when the crime is committed.
   2. Unjust – it imposes equal punishments to first offenders and recidivists.
   3. It is the Magna Carta (a document constituting a fundamental guarantee of rights and
      privileges) of the professional criminals. He knows what is coming to him and could
      calculate the risk.
   4. It considers only the injury caused, not the mental condition of the offender.
Neo-Classical School of Criminology
   •   The Neo (new) Classical School was a modifier of the classical school of Becarria. It also
       adhered to the principle of responsibility under the free will, but provided some
       improvements.
   •   This theory argues that classical theory should be modified in certain details. Since
       children and lunatics cannot calculate pleasure and pain, they should not be regarded as
       criminals, or to be punished.
   •   Individual responsibility is taken into account, considering the psychology and sociology
       of crimes.
   •   Became the basic principles of judicial and legal systems of the western civilization
       during the last century, and even up to the present.
Principles of the Neo-Classical School
   •   Judges should render sentence with minimum and maximum limits.
   •   Mitigating and justifying circumstances should be recognized in the imposition of the
       penalties.
   •   Minors are exempted from criminal responsibilities.
   •   Mentally deficient and insane persons at the time of the commission of the crime are
       also exempted from criminal responsibility.
Positive School of Criminology
   •   Rather than rely on pure thought and reason, careful observation and analysis of natural
       phenomena was being undertaken to understand the way the world worked. This
       movement inspired new discoveries in biology, astronomy, and chemistry.
Auguste Comte (1798 – 1857)
   •   Founder of Sociology
   •   French national who applied scientific methods to the study of society and the one who
       gave sociology its name published in his six volume “Course de Philosophies Positive”
       (Course Positive Philosophy) between 1830 – 1842.
   •   According to Comte, societies pass through stages that can be grouped on the basis of
       how people try to understand the world which they live. People in the primitive
       societies believed that inanimate objects have life (for example, the sun is god); in later
       social stages, people embrace a rational, scientific view of the world.
   •   Comte called this final stage the positive stage, and those who followed his writings
       became known as positivists. He contends the idea that there could be no real
       knowledge of social phenomenon unless it was based on a positive (scientific) approach.
       Thus, he earned the title of the Father of Positivism.
Two main elements of positivism
   1. The first is the belief that human behavior is a function of external forces that are
      beyond individual control. Some of these forces are social, such as wealth and class,
      while others are political and historical, such as war and famine. Other forces are more
      personal and psychological, such as an individual’s brain structure and his or her
      biological makeup or mental ability. Each of these factors influences human behavior.
   2. The second aspect of positivism is the embrace of the scientific method to solve
      problems. Positivists rely on strict use of empirical methods to test hypotheses. That is,
      they believe in factual, firsthand observation and measurement of conditions and
      events. Positivists would agree that an abstract concept such as “intelligence” exists
      because it can be measured by an IQ test. They would challenge a concept such as the
      “soul” because it is a condition that cannot be verified by the scientific method. The
      positivist tradition was popularized by Charles Darwin (1809 – 1882), whose work on
      human evolution encouraged a nineteenth-century “cult of science” that advocated
      verifying all human activity by scientific principles.
Positivists Criminology
        The positive school of criminology is composed of many schools of thought that are
using scientific methods in explaining crime.
      Biological School
      Psychological School
      Social School
Criminology in Europe
         It was in the late 19th century, Dr. Cesare Lombroso, an Italian founded for the first time
ever, the Positive School of Criminology. According to Dr. Lombroso, a criminal person by birth
is a distinct type. This type of criminal can be recognized through his own personal stigmata or
anomalies, such as symmetrical (divided) cranium or bones forming the enclosure of the brain;
long lower jaw, flat nose, scanty (barely sufficient) beard; and low sensitivity to pain. These
physical anomalies do not in themselves cause crime, rather they identify the personality which
is predisposed to the savage type atavism or appearance in an individual or some
characteristics founds in a remote ancestor but not in a nearer ancestor.
        The proponents of the Italian or Positive School were Cesare Lombroso, Enrico Ferri and
Raffaele Garofalo. In this field, they are renowned as the “Holy Three of Criminology” since
they spearheaded the scientific or positive way of looking at the criminal. The three agreed in
shifting the old orientation from the criminal.
        In Italy Cesare Lombroso (1835 – 1909) studied the cadavers of executed criminals in a
effort to scientifically determine whether law violators physically different from people of
conventional values and behavior. Lombroso known as the “Father of Criminology” was a
physician who served much of his career in the Italian army. That experience gave him many
opportunity to study the physical characteristics of soldiers convicted and executed for criminal
offenses. Later he studies inmates at institutes for the criminality insane at Pavia, Pesaro and
Reggio Emilia.
        Lombrosian theory can be outlined in a few simple statements. First, Lombroso believed
that serious offenders, those who engaged in repeated assault or theft-related activities,
inherited criminal traits. These “born criminals” inherited physical problems that impelled them
into a life of crime. This view helped stimulate interest in criminal anthropology. Second,
Lombroso held that born criminals suffer from atavistic anomalies – physically, they are
throwbacks to more primitive times when people were savages.
        Lombroso compared criminal behavior to that of the mentally ill and those suffering
some forms of epilepsy. According to Lombrosian theory, criminologenic traits can be acquired
through indirect heredity, from a degenerate family with frequent cases of insanity, deafness
syphilis, epilepsy, and alcoholism among its members. He believed direct heredity – being
related to a family of criminals – is the second primary cause of crime.
        Lombroso’s version of criminal anthropology was brought to the United States via
articles and textbooks that adopted his ideas. He attracted a circle of followers who expanded
upon his vision of biological determinism. His work was actually more popular in the United
States than it was in Europe. By the turn of the century, American authors were discussing “the
science of penology” and “the science of criminology”.
        Lombroso’s version of strict biological determinism is no longer taken seriously. Today
criminologists who suggest that crime has some biological behavior. Hence the term biological
theory has been coined to reflect the assumed link between physical and mental traits, the
social environment, and behavior.
       Classification of Criminals by Lombroso:
              Born Criminals – there are born criminals according to Lombroso, the belief that
               criminal behavior is inherited.
              Criminal by Passion – are individuals who are easily influenced by great
               emotions like fit of anger.
              Insane Criminals – are those who commit crime due to abnormalities or
               psychological disorders. They should be exempted from criminal liability.
              Criminaloid – a person who commit crime due to less physical stamina/self-
               control.
              Occasional Criminal – are those who commit crime due insignificant reasons that
               pushed them to do at a given occasion.
              Pseudo-criminals – are those who kill in self-defense.
Enrico Ferri (1856 – 1929)
        He was best known Lombroso’s associate. Member of Parliament accomplished public
lecturer, brilliant lawyer, editor, and scholar. Although he agreed with Lombroso on the
biological bases of criminal behavior, his interest in socialism led him to recognized the
importance of social, economic, and political determinants.
       His greatest contribution was his attack on the classical doctrine of free will.
        He believed that criminals could not be held morally responsible for their crimes
because they did not choose to commit crimes but, rather were driven to commit them by
conditions in their lives. He also claimed that strict adherence to preventive measures based on
scientific methods would eventually reduce crime and allow people to live together in society
with less dependent on penal system.
Rafaelle Garofalo (1852 – 1934)
        Another follower of Lombroso, an Italian nobleman, magistrate senator, and professor
of law. Like Lombroso and Ferri, he rejected the doctrine of free will and supported the position
that the only way to understand crime was to study it by scientific methods. Influenced on
Lombroso’s theory of atavistic stigmata (man’s inferior/animalistic behavior), he traced the
roots of criminal behavior not to physical features but to their psychological equivalents, which
he called “moral anomalies.”
       According to his theory, natural crimes are found in all human societies, regardless of
the views of the lawmakers, and no civilized society can afford to disregard them.
       Natural crimes, according to Garofalo, are those that offend the basic moral sentiments
of probity (respect for property of others) and piety (revulsion against the infliction of suffering
on others).
       Types of Criminals by Garofalo:
      Murderers – those who are satisfied from vengeance / revenge.
      Violent Criminals – those who commit crime against property.
      Lasciviousness Criminals – those who commit crime against chastity.
   Comparison of the Classical and Positivist School
 Classical School                                  Positivist School
      Legal definition of crime                       No to legal definition
      Punishment fit for the crime                    Punishment fit the criminal
      Doctrine of Freewill                            Doctrine of determinism
      Death penalty allowed                           Abolition of the death penalty
      No empirical research                           Inductive method
      Definite sentence                               Indeterminate sentence
Edwin Sutherland (1883 – 1950)
      Theory of Differential Association
      His theory was based on the Theory of Imitation of Gabriel Tarde (1843 – 1904). Tarde
       believed that criminal skills can be learned imitated.
      Sutherland stressed that individuals acquire or learn criminal behavior through
       association or socialization.
      Sutherland has been referred to as “the most important criminologist of the twentieth
       century” because his explanation about crime and criminal behavior can be seen as a
       corrected extension of social perspective. For this perspective, he was considered as the
       “Dean of Modern Criminology”.
      DAT – Differential Association Theory, which maintains that the society is composed of
       different group organization, the societies consist of a group of people having
       criminalistic tradition and anti-criminalistic tradition. And that criminal behavior is
       learned and not inherited. It is learned through the process of communication, and
       learning process includes technique of committing the crime, motive and attitude.
    Sociology causes refer to things, place and people with whom we come in contact and
which play a part in determining out actions and conduct. These causes may bring about the
development of criminal behavior and author Sutherland briefly explains the process by which a
particular person comes to engage in criminal behavior. The following are the processes:
          Criminal Behavior is learned. This conclusion negates the theory that criminal
           behavior is inherited. Likewise criminal behavior is not an invention by the criminal
           himself but learned in the process of association with others.
          Crime is learned by participation with others in verbal and non-verbal
           communications.
          Families and friends have the most influence on the learning process.
          The learning process includes the technique of committing the crime and the specific
           directions of motives, drive and attitude.
          Not everyone in the society agrees that the law should be obeyed; some people
           define it unimportant.
          A person becomes delinquent because of an excess definition favorable to the
           violation of laws over to the definitions unfavorable to the violations of laws.
          Differential associations vary in frequency, duration, priority and intensity. The
           extent to which associations and definitions will result in criminality is related to the
           frequency of contacts and their meaning to the individual.
          The process of learning criminal behavior by association with criminal and anti-
           criminal patterns involves all the mechanisms that are involved in any other learning.
          While criminal behavior is an expression of general needs and value, it is not
           explained by those general needs and values, since non-criminal behavior is an
           expression of the same needs and values. Thieves generally steal in order to secure
           money, but likewise honest laborers work in order to secure money, the needs or
           value.