Richardson spent 19 years in prison before killing Monica Reyes in 1994, after which the DNA test proved his innocence. Investigation officials learned that Reyes who is addicted to heroin repeatedly sold drugs to Richardson to support her customs and paid him about 90 dollars. Richardson 's belief depends largely on testimony of forensic dentists who claim that bite to the victim is consistent with Richardson' s teeth. Harrington considers the belief of Richardson to be evidence of the failure of the judicial system. He wrote:
There are loopholes that we call it a "crack" structurally. There, citizens can live through these cracks and destroy the lives of the people they love. There are few people claiming to change our judicial process before sending a sentence or requiring more evidence. We need to reevaluate the whole system, then we need to send the person to jail, and the question of undeniable guilt remains unresolved. As a society, we did not execute innocent people, incorrectly imprisoned a righteous person, cursed unworthy people, and cried for a more accurate institution. Due to the fear of the population, do we want to imprison an innocent person instead of spending time to build a system that has not used suspicious eyewitness testimonies or less accurate science and technology? What? If a person unfairly falls into prison, our system will not function. If thousands of people unjustly enter the prison, our society will fail.
On the other hand, the abolitionists should avoid traps of so-called humanization of the prison system and humanitarian criminal justice management. This is not a priority to the decommissioningist; there is a controversy at least trying to abolish the system worthy of rejection and trying to establish a criminal justice system. Reforms may strengthen "painful delivery" systems (Hudson, 1998). This is very important; the abolitionists should avoid new bureaucratic traps by abolishing the bureaucracy of the criminal system. This is a great department of critical criminology; struggle should not be used to build a skilled and effective criminal justice system, but it is necessary to rebuild the community.
The US Criminal Justice System Course examines criminal justice decision, police, criminal law, court, jail and juvenile justice system. This course, as well as the effectiveness of criminal justice policy in modern American criminal justice system, is designed to introduce these broad subject areas to students and explore equality and treatment problems. American society is deepening the understanding and understanding of students' implicit and explicit prejudice against different cultures, race, ethnicity, nationality, age, sex, economic status, sexual orientation, and disability. Students learn how these concepts relate to communication, attitudes and behavior within the criminal justice system, and the effectiveness of interaction between law enforcement agencies and criminal justice courts and people with different backgrounds I will improve sex.