In _______________, the Court held that the purpose of the clergy-penitent privilege is to allow individuals to confess and to find forgiveness for their sins and salvation without fear that their statements will be used against the in a criminal trial.
a. Chimel v. California
b. Trammel v. United States
c. Sherman v. Connecticut
d. Waters v. O’Connor
b. Trammel v. United States
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In the past, "consensual crimes" were also known as
a. quality of life crimes b. unlawful assembly crimes c. guilt by association d. victimless crimes
Value judgments can be verified:
A. Based on data. B. Based on Facts. C. Based on reason. D. Based on observations. E. None of the above.
Police arrested a prostitute who they caught performing oral sex on a customer in the customer's motor vehicle. Police seized a purse that turned out to be the prostitute's purse from within the customer's motor vehicle and searched the purse
Police discovered a used crack pipe. The search of the purse was done without probable cause to search the purse. The evidence of the crack pipe taken from the prostitute's purse should A) not be excluded from evidence against the prostitute since the prostitute had no standing to argue about a search in someone else's automobile. B) be excluded from admission into evidence against the prostitute because the police possessed no probable cause to search the purse. C) be excluded from admission into evidence against the prostitute since the police had no reason to search the customer's automobile for evidence of sexual activity. D) be admitted into evidence against the prostitute since the police would have discovered the crack pipe inevitably during routine booking procedures involving the prostitute's personal property or an inventory of the towed costumer's vehicle. E) none of the above statements is a correct response.
What alternative to large-scale correctional facilities did the "child saver" Charles Loring Brace propose in the early 19th century?
A. enlisting offenders in the Merchant Marines B. forcing juvenile offenders to live in a self-sustaining commune in the Northeast C. banning juvenile offenders from appearing in public D. placing urban youngsters with farm families in the Midwest