Report
Resources
| Attachment | Size |
|---|---|
| Criminal forfeiture and restriction-of-use orders in sentencing high tech offenders | 441.1 KB |
Description
Courts have experimented with sanctions which require the computer of an offender convicted of high tech crimes to be forfeited, or which prohibit the offender from undertaking computer-related activities. Some courts have also imposed requirements that the offender's computer activities be monitored by a probation officer or that the computer have filtering software installed to prevent access to certain types of content. Russell G. Smith considers whether such orders are legally and practically justifiable as appropriate judicial punishments.
Publication Details
Copyright:
Australian Institute of Criminology 2005
Access Rights Type:
open
Post date:
27 Jan 2005
