The domestic violence study conducted in 1984 by Sherman and Berk had an ethical concern in that:

a. They financially profited from the research.
b. They did not adhere to special protections for vulnerable populations.
c. They potentially withheld a beneficial treatment.
d. They deceived their subjects.


c. They potentially withheld a beneficial treatment.

Criminal Justice

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____________________ is a filling in of the memory gaps to make the event more comprehensible, a fantasy that has unconsciously replaced fact in memory

a. Faking c. Memory hardening b. Confabulation d. Suggestibility

Criminal Justice

The triads, Tongs, and Chinese street gangs operating in the United States are able to deflect most __________________________ to control their activities

a. law enforcement efforts b. rival gangs c. taxes and tariffs d. attention from the public

Criminal Justice

Which of the following means that after hearing all the evidence in a trial, the jurors do not possess an overwhelming belief that the charges against the defendant are true?

A. preponderance of evidence B. reasonable doubt C. a guilty verdict D. affirmative defense

Criminal Justice

Match the following impossibility tests with the characteristics listed below.

A. According to this test, an attempted murder would not occur until the trigger had been pulled; an attempted arson would not occur until the fire had been set. B. Under this test, an attempt occurs when a person has performed all of the acts that he or she believed were necessary to carry out the action that would constitute an underlying offense. C. Under this approach, an attempt has not been committed unless the accused has the immediate power to actually carry through with the crime at the time of the intervention of the police. D. Under this test, the perpetrator need not have advanced to the final step of a crime, but the conduct must be very close to the completed crime. E. The factors which are used in this test to decide whether an attempt was accomplished are the closeness of a danger, the significance of the harm, and the level of apprehension felt by a potential victim. F. Under this test, a person is guilty of attempt when his or her conduct is extremely close to success, or when an act is so near to the result that the probability of success is very great. G. This test requires that a suspect must have done or omitted to do something that constitutes a needed act toward the commission of the substantive offense. H. Under this test, a person who purchases flammable materials and soaks rags in them could be convicted of attempted arson without his doing anything else, because the purchase, coupled with the act of soaking the rags, may be deemed sufficient to prove attempted arson. I. Under this test, a suspect who has not yet gained control over a necessary instrumentality of the criminal plan cannot be guilty of attempt. J. Under this test, a person planning a killing by shooting who has not obtained a gun, or a person planning arson who has not yet acquired the incendiary material necessary to start a fire, could not be held guilty for attempted arson. K. This test does not look at how close the defendant came to succeeding but at whether his or her conduct was indicative of his criminal intent. L. Under this test, an attempt occurs when a person's conduct alone unambiguously manifests his or her criminal intent.

Criminal Justice