Deck 15: Victims of Crime and Victimless Crimes
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Deck 15: Victims of Crime and Victimless Crimes
1
Which is not one of the six attributes that we typically associate with the idea of an innocent victim according to Christie?
A)The victim is weak in relation to the offender.
B)The victim is going about his or her legitimate, everyday business.
C)The victim is blameless.
D)The victim knows the stranger who has committed the offense.
A)The victim is weak in relation to the offender.
B)The victim is going about his or her legitimate, everyday business.
C)The victim is blameless.
D)The victim knows the stranger who has committed the offense.
D
2
This researcher believed that most victims had an unconscious attitude that led to their victimization.
A)Mendelsohn.
B)Christie.
C)von Hentig.
D)Sellin.
A)Mendelsohn.
B)Christie.
C)von Hentig.
D)Sellin.
A
3
This is the idea that crime victims sometimes play an active role in initiating a crime or escalating it.
A)Victimology.
B)Decriminalization.
C)Offender-precipitation theory.
D)Victim-precipitation theory.
A)Victimology.
B)Decriminalization.
C)Offender-precipitation theory.
D)Victim-precipitation theory.
D
4
This researcher considered biological, sociological, and psychological factors of victimization.
A)Mendelsohn.
B)Christie.
C)von Hentig.
D)Sellin.
A)Mendelsohn.
B)Christie.
C)von Hentig.
D)Sellin.
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5
These two researchers presented a victim typology based upon the victims' situations rather than their personal characteristics or relationships.
A)Bentham and Beccaria.
B)Wolfgang and Jack.
C)Fine and Howard.
D)Wolfgang and Sellin.
A)Bentham and Beccaria.
B)Wolfgang and Jack.
C)Fine and Howard.
D)Wolfgang and Sellin.
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6
This researcher attributes much of victimization to the structural characteristics of the culture.
A)Mendelsohn.
B)Galtung.
C)von Hentig.
D)Sellin.
A)Mendelsohn.
B)Galtung.
C)von Hentig.
D)Sellin.
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7
Victims have several reasons for not reporting criminal offenses. Which is not one of these?
A)The victim fears reprisal or getting the offender in trouble.
B)The victim believes that the police can help.
C)The offense is not important enough to the victim to report.
D)The victim dealt with the offense in another way.
A)The victim fears reprisal or getting the offender in trouble.
B)The victim believes that the police can help.
C)The offense is not important enough to the victim to report.
D)The victim dealt with the offense in another way.
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8
This is an account given by the victim, the victim's family, or others affected by the offense that expresses the effects of the offense.
A)Victim's account.
B)Plea bargain.
C)Testimony.
D)Victim-impact statement.
A)Victim's account.
B)Plea bargain.
C)Testimony.
D)Victim-impact statement.
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9
These are behaviors that are deemed undesirable because they offend community standards rather than directly harm people or property.
A)Misdemeanors.
B)Victimless crimes.
C)Federal crimes.
D)Inchoate crimes.
A)Misdemeanors.
B)Victimless crimes.
C)Federal crimes.
D)Inchoate crimes.
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10
The first popular drug in the United States was .
A)Opium.
B)Alcohol.
C)Marijuana.
D)Cocaine.
A)Opium.
B)Alcohol.
C)Marijuana.
D)Cocaine.
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11
During the Civil War, this drug was used to combat pain and dysentery.
A)Opium.
B)Morphine.
C)Cocaine.
D)Marijuana.
A)Opium.
B)Morphine.
C)Cocaine.
D)Marijuana.
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12
This was used to treat morphine addiction.
A)Alcohol.
B)Cocaine.
C)Opium.
D)Marijuana.
A)Alcohol.
B)Cocaine.
C)Opium.
D)Marijuana.
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13
The Pure Food and Drug Act of 1906 required producers of food and drugs .
A)To remove opium.
B)To clearly label their products' contents.
C)To sell patent medicines in bottles.
D)To add cocaine.
A)To remove opium.
B)To clearly label their products' contents.
C)To sell patent medicines in bottles.
D)To add cocaine.
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14
This 1914 act ensured that the government collected taxes from those who sold drugs.
A)Lindner Act.
B)Pure Food and Drug Act.
C)Harrison Act.
D)Narcotics Control Act.
A)Lindner Act.
B)Pure Food and Drug Act.
C)Harrison Act.
D)Narcotics Control Act.
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15
In this 1919 case, the courts ruled that prescribing narcotics to addicts to maintain their comfort was not a legitimate medical practice.
A)Nye County v. Plankinton.
B)Weeks v. United States.
C)United States v. Oakland Cannabis Buyers' Cooperative et al.
D)Webb v. United States.
A)Nye County v. Plankinton.
B)Weeks v. United States.
C)United States v. Oakland Cannabis Buyers' Cooperative et al.
D)Webb v. United States.
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16
This 1951 act increased penalties for violating drug laws and regulated both narcotics and marijuana in a single federal law.
A)Boggs Act.
B)Narcotics Control Act.
C)Pure Food and Drug Act.
D)Lindner Act.
A)Boggs Act.
B)Narcotics Control Act.
C)Pure Food and Drug Act.
D)Lindner Act.
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17
This 1956 act increased penalties and federal authority concerning narcotics.
A)Lindner Act.
B)Narcotics Control Act.
C)Pure Food and Drug Act.
D)Boggs Act.
A)Lindner Act.
B)Narcotics Control Act.
C)Pure Food and Drug Act.
D)Boggs Act.
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18
This 1970 act set forth the drug schedules currently used to classify drugs.
A)Narcotics Control Act.
B)Controlled Substances Act.
C)Boggs Act.
D)Pure Food and Drug Act.
A)Narcotics Control Act.
B)Controlled Substances Act.
C)Boggs Act.
D)Pure Food and Drug Act.
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19
Which constitutional amendment allowed passage of the National Prohibition Act?
A)Sixth.
B)Fifth.
C)Fourth.
D)Eighteenth.
A)Sixth.
B)Fifth.
C)Fourth.
D)Eighteenth.
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20
When did Prohibition end?
A)1933.
B)1963.
C)1953.
D)1923.
A)1933.
B)1963.
C)1953.
D)1923.
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21
Currie specified several goals that drug treatment programs should strive for.
A)Taking treatment seriously.
B)Making aftercare a priority.
C)Making treatment user-friendly.
D)All of the above.
A)Taking treatment seriously.
B)Making aftercare a priority.
C)Making treatment user-friendly.
D)All of the above.
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22
This is the total removal of legal prohibitions on specific acts that were previously proscribed and punishable by law.
A)Emendation.
B)Legalization.
C)Prohibition.
D)Decriminalization.
A)Emendation.
B)Legalization.
C)Prohibition.
D)Decriminalization.
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23
This is the emendation of laws or statutes to lessen or remove penalties for specific acts subject to criminal prosecution, arrest, and imprisonment.
A)Decriminalization.
B)Legalization.
C)Defenestration.
D)Prohibition.
A)Decriminalization.
B)Legalization.
C)Defenestration.
D)Prohibition.
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24
Which is typically termed a "nuisance" sex offense?
A)Prostitution.
B)Child molestation.
C)Rape.
D)All of the above.
A)Prostitution.
B)Child molestation.
C)Rape.
D)All of the above.
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25
Which state licenses brothels?
A)Montana.
B)New Jersey.
C)Nevada.
D)All of the above.
A)Montana.
B)New Jersey.
C)Nevada.
D)All of the above.
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26
These are practices, acts, and/or media accepted by a given social group who share a geographic area and/or government.
A)Obscenity laws.
B)Community standards.
C)Standards and practices
D)Collective agreement.
A)Obscenity laws.
B)Community standards.
C)Standards and practices
D)Collective agreement.
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27
In this case, the Supreme Court set forth a new three-part test for obscenity.
A)Nye County v. Plankinton.
B)Jacobellis v. Ohio.
C)Miller v. California.
D)Miller v. Fenton.
A)Nye County v. Plankinton.
B)Jacobellis v. Ohio.
C)Miller v. California.
D)Miller v. Fenton.
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28
Which of these drugs is illegal?
A)Alcohol.
B)Caffeine.
C)Tobacco.
D)None of the above.
A)Alcohol.
B)Caffeine.
C)Tobacco.
D)None of the above.
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29
Increased penalties for drug usage and sales is based on the principle.
A)Rational choice.
B)Labeling.
C)Biological.
D)Deterrence.
A)Rational choice.
B)Labeling.
C)Biological.
D)Deterrence.
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30
In this case, Justice Potter Stewart illustrated the difficulty of defining obscenity by saying, "I know it when I see it."
A)Miller v. California.
B)Weeks v. United States.
C)Jacobellis v. Ohio.
D)Nye County v. Plankinton.
A)Miller v. California.
B)Weeks v. United States.
C)Jacobellis v. Ohio.
D)Nye County v. Plankinton.
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31
When victims do not report offenses, it affects how the system can assist them.
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32
According to the National Crime Victimization Survey, people age 24 or older had higher rates of violent victimization than younger people.
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33
Offenders who are strangers to the victim commit more than half of most offenses.
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34
The number of indirect victims or co-victims of crime can be quite large.
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35
Domestic violence incidents are usually sudden or isolated.
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36
The government keeps statistics on the occurrence of financial crime and victimization to the extent that it does on street crime.
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37
The federal government uses the U.S. Postal Service to control some pornography.
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38
The legal definition of obscenity is very specific and exact.
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39
Because prostitution is essentially a consensual activity, there is no victim to alert law enforcement.
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40
State laws and penalties concerning marijuana do not vary much.
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41
One method for combating drugs is to provide treatment for addicts.
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42
It is illegal to be a drug addict.
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43
The Pure Food and Drug Act of 1906 criminalized most drugs.
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44
Prohibition was a resounding success.
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45
Cocaine and morphine were key ingredients in many patent medicines.
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46
According to Abadinksy, drug abuse is "ingesting a psychoactive substance that is illegal to possess or that is taken in quantities that are clearly harmful."
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47
In colonial America, drinking alcohol was popular because it was safer than drinking the water.
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48
The resources dedicated to the drug war have stretched the ability of the criminal justice systems so that it must establish priorities as to which offenses to pursue.
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49
Most arrests for prostitution are a result of customers reporting their interactions with prostitutes.
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50
Many times, the act of prostitution is not a consensual one.
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51
How does the National Crime Victimization Survey classify an offense as a hate crime?
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52
Describe the typical financial offender and the typical financial victim.
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53
Discuss why the elderly and children are two particularly vulnerable classes of victims.
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54
List two items typically included on a state's victims' "bill of rights."
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55
Discuss the criminal justice system's treatment of drugs among marginalized classes versus its reaction once these drugs reached the mainstream of society.
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56
Why is treating drug addiction an important aspect to the war on drugs?
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57
How might drug legalization reduce crime?
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58
What are some tasks of law enforcement in dealing with illegal drugs?
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59
Why are prostitution, exotic dancing, and pornography considered less serious than rape, child molestation, and sex-related homicide?
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60
List three benefits of the legalization of prostitution suggested by those who advocate for its legalization.
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