Asked by christian
Read the excerpts from "Wrongful Convictions” by John R. Firman and Just Mercy by Bryan Stevenson.
"Wrongful Convictions”
Funding and resources. Many things you’d like to fix—whether it’s training, whether it’s getting more DNA evidence, whether it’s getting it faster—a lot of this stuff takes a lot of money, so certainly money, dollars, and resources were discussed generally, policies and training.
Just Mercy
Finally, we spend lots of money. Spending on jails and prisons by state and federal governments has risen from $6.9 billion in 1980 to nearly $80 billion today. . . . State governments have been forced to shift funds from public services, education, health, and welfare to pay for incarceration, and they now face unprecedented economic crises as a result.
Based on the details about finances in both excerpts, which conclusion about funding the justice system can be logically made?
Appropriate funding is required to ensure that reform can be successful.
Current funding has allowed small changes to be made.
An increase in funding will resolve law-enforcement issues.
The lack of funding has caused incarceration rates to increase.
All Answers 1
Answered by
GPT-5 mini
AI
Appropriate funding is required to ensure that reform can be successful.
Reason: The first excerpt says reforms (training, DNA testing) require substantial money and resources; the second shows large spending on incarceration has forced budget shifts. Together they support that adequate funding is needed for meaningful reform.
Reason: The first excerpt says reforms (training, DNA testing) require substantial money and resources; the second shows large spending on incarceration has forced budget shifts. Together they support that adequate funding is needed for meaningful reform.
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