Found 21 prisons Experts and Expert Witnesses.
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| I have gained my expertise in Corrections from first hand experience, enhanced by years of nation-wide consulting assignments/experience.
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| police jails prisons force policies procedures wrongful death firearms security cases training suicides failure to protect assaults deliberate indifference civil criminal cases plaintiff defense
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| EW #6977 has contributed in a variety of clinical areas, including the treatment of intimacy disorders, marital and sexual dysfunction, sexual compulsivity, sexual trauma and eating disorders.
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| This expert has over 45 years of experience in the mechanical engineering field. His experience includes the design of mechanical systems for the building industry as well as forensic engineering
analysis of mechanical systems and components....
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| Board ceritfied in Psychiatry and Forensic Psychiatry.
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| 25 years of expertise, Nationally Board Certified Physician Assistant in family practice, urgent care medicine and emergency medicine. Consulting Available Nationwide
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| Veteran Sheriffs Captain, Jail Researcher, Corrections Trainer, Correctional Author, Offers Technical Assistance To Trial Lawyers On Adult & Juvenile Custody And Detention Cases. FREE CASE ASSESSMENT
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| EW #1814 Ph.D., is considered by many to be the nation's premiere expert on courtroom testimony.
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| Over three decades of experience in the field of corrections. Intensive line and top management experience in one of the largest local correctional facilities in the United States.
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| 30 years Police & Training Experience, Senior Master TASER Instructor, Vast Knowledge of Police Procedures, Firearms, and Combative Skills/Tactics. Expert Witness who Knows the police world!
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| DWI/DUI expert , Isntructi-or in MHTSA Standardized Field Sobriety Test battery, Intoxilyzer 5000 operator/maintenance technician, criminal investigator with over 20 years expierence.
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| Former Chief of Police. 30 years law enforcement experience. Founding Director, National Center for Women & Policing. Consultant/expert witness regarding discrimination and sexual harassment.
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| 18 years of experience in the governmental sector.
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| 50 years as a criminologist has involved me in almost every facet of the American crime problem. 130 cases, 100+ cases are specific to gangs and gang behavior.
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| Detection of Deception & interview & interrogation methods, training & research.
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| 33 years of construction industry experience. Expert witness expertise: construction delay; lost productivity; disruption; schedule analysis; damages; program management standard of care.
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| Dean A. Schiffman, Ph.D., is an expert in statistics, economics, econometrics and probability. Dr. Schiffman is also an attorney able to conduct cross examination in these same areas.
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| Recognized worldwide premier provider of engineering and management consulting services to the engineering, legal, regulatory, industrial, commercial and construction sectors.
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| EW #990 is a Superior Court-Certified Expert Witness, and has worked for Plaintiffs and Defendants, in cases involving Gangs; School Safety; and Child Abuse/Mandated Reporting.
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| EW #13214 has over 27 years of law enforcement experience, is the former Captain of the Rocklin Police Department, and has served as a Parole Agent and Deputy Inspector General.
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| since 1990 and through 60,000 cases has provided exemplary in house case evaluation services and provisions of medical expert witnesses from our panel of over 6,200 specialists nationwide.
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| Looking for a prisons expert?
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Find Prisons experts and consultants for Prisons litigation support at www.ewitness.com. Available to be Prisons expert witnesses and provide Prisons forensic consulting in Prisons litigation, in addition prepare Prisons expert witness reports for use in deposition and/or in-court trial testimony.
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Categories To Find "Prisons" Experts:
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AUTOMOBILE ACCIDENT |
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Car accidents are damaging events involving road traffic, particularly automobiles. They can cause damage to vehicles, people or structures. Car accidents also called traffic collisions, auto accidents, road accidents, personal injury collisions, motor vehicle accidents, and (particularly by American radio traffic reporters) crashes kill an estimated 1.2 million people worldwide each year, and injure about forty times this number (WHO, 2004). The term "accident" is considered inappropriate by some, as reliable sources estimate that upwards of 90% are the result of driver negligence.
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CHILD PORNOGRAPHY |
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Generally, child pornography (sometimes referred to as CP, child porn, KP, or kiddie porn) is an illegal form of pornography, featuring minors. The term "child" is defined for this purpose by each country's child pornography laws, and these laws also set forth criteria to use in determining whether a particular depiction of a child is child pornography.
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CIVIL RIGHTS - EQUAL RIGHTS |
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Civil rights are the protections and privileges of personal liberty given to all citizens by law. Civil rights are distinguished from "human rights" or "natural rights"; civil rights are rights that are bestowed by nations on those within their territorial boundaries, while natural or human rights are rights that many scholars claim ought to belong to all people. For example, the philosopher John Locke (1632-1704) argued that the natural rights of life, liberty, and property should be converted into civil rights and protected by the sovereign state as an aspect of the social contract. Others have argued that people acquire rights as an inalienable gift from a god or at a time of nature before governments were formed.
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CORRECTIONS |
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Corrections refer to one of the components of the criminal justice system. This includes halfway houses, parole programs, jails, prisons, and probation programs. In some countries, as well as in Western countries in the past, this also included judicially-ordered corporal punishment. Corrections is the process of trying to correct an individual so that they do not engage in criminal behavior.
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CRIMINOLOGY |
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Criminology is the study of crime as a social phenomenon, including the causes and consequences of crime, criminal behavior, as well as the development of, and impact of laws. Research in criminology applies the scientific method to test hypotheses and ultimately develop theories that help explain the causes and other aspects of crime. Though both deal with crime, criminology differs from criminal justice in that latter focuses on the components of the justice system including police, courts, and corrections.
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DEATH PENALTY |
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Capital punishment, or the death penalty, is governmental killing by execution as punishment for a crime often called a capital offense or a capital crime. Historically, the execution of criminals and political opponents was used by nearly all societies either by means of judicial process or through political motivations such as the supression of political dissent. Among democratic countries around the world, most European and Latin American ones have abolished capital punishment (except the United States, Guatemala and most of the Caribbean), while democracies in Asia and Africa retain it. Among nondemocratic countries the use of the death penalty is common.
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DRUG ABUSE |
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Drug abuse has a wide range of definitions, all of them relating to the use, misuse or overuse of a psychoactive drug or performance enhancing drug for a non-therapeutic or non-medical effect. Some of the most commonly abused drugs include alcohol, amphetamines, barbiturates, caffeine, cannabis, cocaine, methaqualone, nicotine, opium alkaloids, and minor tranquilizers. Use of these drugs may lead to criminal penalty in addition to physical, social, and psychological harm.[1] Other definitions of drug abuse fall into four main categories: Public health definitions, Mass communication and vernacular usage, Medical definitions, and Political and criminal justice definitions.
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DRUG ENFORCEMENT |
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The Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) is a United States Department of Justice law enforcement agency tasked with enforcing the Controlled Substances Act of 1970. Not only is the DEA the lead agency for domestic enforcement of Federal drug laws (sharing concurrent jurisdiction with the Federal Bureau of Investigation), it also has sole responsibility for coordinating and pursuing U.S. drug investigations abroad.
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DRUG TESTING |
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A Drug test is a process using some kind of biological matter taken from an individual to determine previous drug use. Drug testing is a subject of much controversy. Many have argued that it is an invasion of privacy. The accuracy and effectiveness of some tests are also in question, however, if proper steps are followed, including a GC/MS quantitative laboratory confirmation test, drug testing technology is highly reliable.
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DUI - Driving Under Influence |
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Driving under the influence, drunk driving, or drink-driving, is the act of operating a motor vehicle (and sometimes a bicycle or similar human-powered vehicle) after having consumed alcohol (ethanol) or other drugs, to the degree that mental and motor skills are impaired. In addition to driving under the influence of alcohol and driving under the influence of other drugs, a third "DUI" offense consists of driving under the combined influence of alcohol and other drugs. The drugs causing or contributing to the impairment need not be illegal, but can consist of lawfully prescribed or over-the-counter medication. Anti-drunk-driving advertising campaigns have aimed to raise awareness of the legal situation and the dangers of driving while intoxicated. Drunk-driving is responsible for a very large number of deaths, injuries, damage and accidents every year.
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FORENSIC PATHOLOGY |
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Forensic Pathology is the branch of medical science that uses medical knowledge for legal purposes. The forensic pathologist performs autopsies to determine the cause and manner of death in situations falling under the jurisdiction of the local medical examiner or coroner. It can also include the examination of tissues, wounds and injuries due to crime or negligence.
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FORENSIC PSYCHOLOGY |
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Forensic psychology is the application of psychological priniciples and knowledge to various legal activities involving child custody disputes, child abuse of an emotional, physical and sexual nature, assessing ones personal capacity to manage ones affairs, matters of competency to stand trial, criminal responsibility & personal injury and advising judges in matters relating to sentencing regarding various mitiagants and the actuarial assessment of future risk.
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FRAUD |
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Experts in detecting and handling deception deliberately practiced to secure unfair or unlawful gain.
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FRAUD - GENERAL |
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Experts in detecting and handling deception deliberately practiced to secure unfair or unlawful gain.
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GANGS |
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A gang is a group of individuals who share a common identity and, in current usage, engage in illegal activities. Historically the term referred to both criminal groups and ordinary groups of friends, such as Our Gang. Some anthropologists believe that the gang structure is one of the most ancient forms of human organizations.
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JAILS |
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A prison is a place in which individuals are physically confined or interned and usually deprived of a range of personal freedoms. Prisons are conventionally institutions which form part of the criminal justice system of a country, such that imprisonment or incarceration is the legal penalty that may be imposed by the state for the commission of a crime.
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MOTOR VEHICLE ACCIDENT MVA |
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Motor-vehicle collisions are damaging events involving road traffic, particularly automobiles. They can cause damage to vehicles, people or structures. Motor-vehicle collisions also called traffic collisions, auto accidents, road accidents, car accidents, personal injury collisions, motor vehicle acccidents, and (particularly by American radio traffic reporters) crashes kill an estimated 1.2 million people worldwide each year, and injure about forty times this number.
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ORGAN TRANSPLANT |
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An organ transplant is the transplantation of a whole or partial organ from one body to another (or from a donor site on the patient's own body), for the purpose of replacing the recipient's damaged or failing organ with a working one from the donor site. Organ donors can be living, or deceased (previously referred to as cadaveric).
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PHYSICIAN ASSISTANT - PA |
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In the United States, Physician Assistants (PAs) are non-physician clinicians licensed to practice medicine with a physician's supervision. This supervision, in most cases, need not be direct or on site and many PAs practice in remote or underserved areas in satellite clinics. PAs can treat patients and, in most states, prescribe medicine, and in some states in the US they carry a DEA number that gives them authority to prescribe controlled medications like narcotics. PAs in surgical practices also serve as first assists in surgery. PAs provide medical services that are reimbursed under Medicare and third party insurances. Physician Assistants and Nurse Practitioners both provide similar services in most states, the major distinction being that nurse practitioners are registered nurses by trade. Both are also known as Advanced Practice Clinicians (APCs) or mid-level practitioners (MLPs).
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POLICE BRUTALITY |
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Police brutality is a term used to describe the excessive use of physical force, assault, verbal attacks, and threats by police officers. Widespread, systematic police brutality exists in many countries, even those which prosecute it. Brutality is one of several forms of police misconduct which include; false arrest, intimidation, racial profiling, political repression, surveillance abuse, sexual abuse, and police corruption.
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PRISONS |
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A prison is a place in which individuals are physically confined or interned and usually deprived of a range of personal freedoms. Prisons are conventionally institutions which form part of the criminal justice system of a country, such that imprisonment or incarceration is the legal penalty that may be imposed by the state for the commission of a crime.
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REHABILITATION |
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Rehabilitation - 1. To restore to good health or useful life, as through therapy and education. 2. To restore to good condition, operation, or capacity.
3. To reinstate the good name of. 4. To restore the former rank, privileges, or rights of
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USE OF FORCE |
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The use of force to settle conflicts is much debated in theory and in practice (see moral philosophy, ethics).When a conflict is viewed as being between parties having the same standing, observers often recommend the use of negotiation or other "conflict resolution" techniques. When a conflict is viewed as being between a law-breaker and a law-enforcer, observers tend to side with the enforcer (but with important exceptions). Analysis of conflicts, and of when and where it is legitimate for an involved (or intervening) party to use force to settle it, quickly becomes complicated.
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VIOLENCE |
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Violence refers to acts of aggression and abuse which causes or intends to cause criminal injury or harm to persons, and (to a lesser extent) animals and property.1 The term "violence" also connotes an aggressive tendency to act out destructive behaviours. Violence falls into essentially two forms random violence, which includes unpremeditated or small-scale violence, and coordinated violence, which includes actions carried out by sanctioned or unsanctioned violent groups as in war (ie. inter-societal violence) and terrorism.
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Prisons Experts Witnesses - Prisons Forensic Consultants.
Find Prisons experts and consultants for Prisons litigation support. Available to be Prisons expert witnesses and provide Prisons forensic consulting in Prisons litigation, in addition prepare Prisons expert witness reports for use in deposition and/or in-court trial testimony.
Find a Forensic Expert Witness who has experience with your problem and is willing help you with
Prisons
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