Question 1
4 out of 4 points
Which prison system was known as the congregate system?
a. New Jersey system
b. Auburn system
c. Pennsylvania system
d. Newbern system
Question 2
4 out of 4 points
When did the concept of incarcerating convicted offenders as a form of punishment become the norm for corrections?
a. During biblical times
b.14thcentury
c.17thcentury
d.19thcentury
Question 3
4 out of 4 points
The Pennsylvania system in corrections, was the first to take the radical step of what?:
a. Creating a specific gang intervention program
b. Creating dormitory type spaces for inmates to stay
c. Placing each inmate in a single cell
d. Placed inmates in pre-release work
Question 4
4 out of 4 points
In the federal system, prosecutors are appointed by whom?
a. Congress
b. The Senate
c. The President
d. The U.S. Supreme Court
Question 5
4 out of 4 points
Which of the following would not constitute a specialty court?
a. Probate court
b. Circuit court
c. Drug court
d. Mental health court
Question 6
4 out of 4 points
What is the duty of a defense lawyer to his client and the legal system?
a. To participate in the courtroom workgroup
b. To fully and competently defend his client
c. To engage in the pursuit of justice
d. To represent the state
Question 7
4 out of 4 points
If you are charged with the crime of armed robbery, your trial would take place in which type of court?
a. A court of limited jurisdiction
b. A court of general jurisdiction
c. An appellate court
d. A specialty court
Question 8
4 out of 4 points
This therapy assumes that most people can become conscious of their own thoughts and behaviors and then make positive changes.
a. Cognitive behavioral therapy
b. Motivational suspicions
c. Youth finding boundaries
d. All of the above
Question 9
4 out of 4 points
In ____, the Supreme Court held that a probationer’s home may be searched without a warrant on the grounds that probation departments “must respond quickly to evidence of misconduct.”
a. United States v. Weeks
b. Minnesota v. Murphy
c. Griffin v. Wisconsin
d. United Sates v. Knights
Question 10
4 out of 4 points
Probation sentences involve;
a. A contract between the prison and the offender where they are released early
b. Rules or conditions mandated by the prison
c. A deserving suspect
d. A deserving defendant
Question 11
4 out of 4 points
The effect of intoxication upon criminal liability depends on:
a. the type of intoxicant used.
b. whether the defendant uses drugs or alcohol voluntarily.
c. whether the consumption of intoxicant began prior to the crime.
d. whether the defendant has prior convictions
Question 12
4 out of 4 points
Intoxication and age are examples of what?
a. Legal defenses used to negate the required proof ofmens rea
b. Legal defenses that negate the required proof ofactus reus
c. Defenses based on double jeopardy
d. Legal defenses based on a presumption of conclusive incapacitation
Question 13
4 out of 4 points
The term actus reus refers to the:
a. measurement of mental ability
b. exclusion of omission
c. guilty person
d. guilty act
Question 14
4 out of 4 points
Which standard solely considers whether the accused is able to distinguish right from wrong?
a. The Durham rule
b. The substantial capacity test
c. The M’Naghten rule
d. The irresistible impulse test
Question 15
4 out of 4 points
Which of the following is an advantage of diversion programs?
a. It allows the offender to postpone prison/jail time until diversion completion
b. Rehabilitation services can be accessed while in the community.
c. The cost is higher but so is the success rate
d. diversion allows the inmate out of their cell for longer lengths of time
Question 16
4 out of 4 points
It is unlikely that plea bargaining will be eliminated in the future because it:
a. ensures even-handed justice in the system.
b. eases the pressure of congested caseloads.
c. encourages defendants to waive their rights.
d. results in sentencing disparity.
Question 17
4 out of 4 points
Which of the following is a pretrial procedure?
a. Bail
b. Arraignment
c. Plea negotiation
d. All of these
Question 18
4 out of 4 points
Some scholars contend that bail is problematic because it:
a. is a weak incentive to show up to court.
b. creates fear and coercion in the defendant.
c. is discriminatory to the poor.
d. is not guaranteed under the law
Question 19
4 out of 4 points
What was the principle factor that shaped the punishment of criminals in the sixteenth century?
a. The spread of the black plague and the social hysteria that came with it
b. The shift from a stable to a wandering nomadic way of life
c. Sharp increases in the crime rate
d. The changing labor markets that stemmed from urbanization and colonization
Question 20
4 out of 4 points
“Let the sentence fit the criminal” best describes the basic philosophy of:
a. determinate sentencing.
b. mandatory minimums.
c. fixed terms.
d. indeterminate sentencing
Question 21
4 out of 4 points
Which of the following factors is not a legitimate consideration in setting the length of a prison term?
a. The severity of the offense
b. Whether the offender used a weapon
c. Whether the crime was committed for money
d. The offender’s age
Question 22
4 out of 4 points
Which of the following statements is true?
a. Eighty-eight countries and territories have abolished the death penalty for allcrimes.
b. Twenty-nine counties retain the death penalty in law but have not carried out anyexecutions for the past ten years or more.
c. Since 1994 there have been twenty executions of juvenile offenders, includingthirteen in the United States.
d. All of these statements are true
Question 23
4 out of 4 points
Which of the following is not true about the sexual exploitation of female inmates?
a. The acts are usually perpetrated by male members of the prison staff.
b. The acts usually go unreported.
c. Most of the acts are consensual due to isolation and loneliness.
d. The majority of states have passed laws criminalizing staff sexual misconduct
Question 24
4 out of 4 points
Which type of case is most likely to be referred to the juvenile court by the police officer?
A minor dispute between juveniles
b. School and neighborhood complaints
c. Cases involving violence
d. Petty shoplifting
Question 25
4 out of 4 points
The modern practice of legally separating adult criminals and juvenile offenders can be traced back to two developments in English custom and law that occurred centuries ago, one of which is/are
The Carriers case
b. Chancery Courts
c. In re Gault
d. Parens Patriae