Deck 10: Theft and Property Crimes

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Question
Larceny is a crime that is directed:

A) against possession, not ownership, of property.
B) against ownership, not possession, of property.
C) against both ownership and possession of property.
D) against individuals using tricks to obtain property.
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Question
The chief difference between larceny and embezzlement is:

A) in embezzlement the embezzler is not entitled to possess the property at the time of the taking whereas in larceny the thief has no right to possess the property in question.
B) in embezzlement the crime involves violence whereas in larceny the crime does not involve force or violence.
C) in embezzlement the embezzler is entitled to possess the property at the time of the taking whereas in larceny the thief has no right to possession of the property in question.
D) in embezzlement the embezzler is entitled to possess the property at the time of the taking whereas in larceny the thief has a right to possession of the property in question.
Question
The essence of the crime of false pretenses is that:

A) the taking of the property was lawful.
B) the owner of the property is induced to transfer title to personal property as a result of false pretenses.
C) Both A and B.
D) None of the above
Question
Common law larceny included:

A) a taking of the property of another by force or fear.
B) a taking of the property of an individual by trick.
C) a trespassory taking.
D) a conversion of property.
Question
Embezzlement involves:

A) the conversion of property.
B) a trespassory taking of property.
C) a taking of property by force or fear.
D) a taking of property by fear.
Question
Which of the following acts is not part of the crime of receiving stolen property?

A) Buying and transferring the stolen property.
B) Continuing possession of the stolen property.
C) Stealing the property.
D) Concealing the stolen property.
Question
Forgery may be committed by:

A) filling in blanks on a check without authorization.
B) endorsing a check with a false endorsement.
C) significantly altering an existing document.
D) All of the above.
Question
At common law, counterfeiting was limited to:

A) paintings.
B) money.
C) documents.
D) consumer goods.
Question
The key thing for the identity thief is:

A) identifying personal information.
B) knowledge of the victim.
C) physical access to the victim.
D) ignorance of the victim.
Question
Receiving stolen property is also known as:

A) trafficking in stolen goods.
B) fencing.
C) a chop shop.
D) larceny.
Question
Embezzlement is a crime based upon:

A) trust.
B) employment.
C) custody.
D) fraud.
Question
The crime of false pretenses:

A) must go to a material fact.
B) is like embezzlement in that the taking must be wrongful.
C) is a crime against possession.
D) is a crime against custody.
Question
Larceny by trick is a crime where ____ is passed to the defendant.

A) possession
B) title
C) ownership
D) title and ownership
Question
The key to determining whether receiving stolen property is a felony or a misdemeanor is:

A) involvement of the defendant after the original theft.
B) what he victim paid for the property.
C) involvement of the defendant in the original theft.
D) fair market value of the property.
Question
Identity theft is:

A) the most important new crime of the 21st century.
B) the unauthorized use of another individual's personal identity in a legal manner.
C) is a crime in all states.
D) None of the above.
Question
Money laundering is a crime in which criminals do what with money which they receive from illegal activity?

A) Try to disguise it as legitimate income.
B) Use the money overseas in attempt to profit more from it.
C) Invest it in the stock market.
D) Give it to a family member or other non-criminal.
Question
What is "structuring?"

A) Moving money from one financial institution to another in attempts to disguise its illegal origins.
B) Depositing illegally-obtained money in to a legitimate financial institution.
C) The delivery of counterfeit checks to money laundering operations.
D) To break up a single transaction above the financial institution's reporting threshold for the purpose of evading the $10,000 reporting requirement.
Question
Which of these is not one of Congress' original goals of the RICO Act?

A) Elimination of repetitive criminality.
B) Elimination of terrorism.
C) Destroy the Mafia.
D) Elimination of the profits of organized crime.
Question
RICO acts have been enacted at what jurisdictional level?

A) Federal only.
B) Both Federal and State.
C) In the U.S. Constitution.
D) Both A and C.
Question
What problem did the RICO Act solve for prosecutors?

A) Defects in the evidence gathering process of the law.
B) Increasing interest in illegal activities.
C) Judicial corruption.
D) Difficulty prosecuting Mafia members because of death threats.
Question
Embezzlement and false pretenses are basically different forms of larceny.
Question
False pretenses and forgery are the same crime except that forgery only applies to written instruments.
Question
Receiving stolen property is a form of larceny.
Question
A fake Picasso painting is an example of a forgery.
Question
False pretenses involve obtaining title by making a material false representation with the intent to permanently deprive the owner of the property in question.
Question
Receiving stolen property includes receiving, concealing, continuing possession, buying, and transferring of stolen property.
Question
Possession in theft crimes may be actual, constructive, and false.
Question
Larceny was originally developed where the unlawful taking was nonviolent and by stealth.
Question
An essential element of larceny is the intent to permanently deprive.
Question
Larceny is often characterized as either a felony or a misdemeanor based upon the value of the property taken.
Question
The key difference between embezzlement and larceny is the entitlement to possess the property that was taken.
Question
The transfer of title is an essential element of the crime of false pretenses.
Question
Receiving stolen property is a crime upon a crime.
Question
Making, uttering, and material alteration are all essential components of the crime of forgery.
Question
Counterfeiting is most often associated with phony money.
Question
Identity theft has become the most important new theft crime of the twenty-first century.
Question
State RICO acts are much broader and have much less detail than the Federal RICO Act.
Question
The RICO Act was used against the Mafia primarily in the 1980's.
Question
Identity theft often involves many jurisdictions in the same crime.
Question
The term __ is often used to refer to three different and distinct crimes: larceny, embezzlement, and obtaining property by incorrect pretenses.
Question
The chief difference between the two crimes is that, in the case of embezzlement, the embezzler is entitled to __ the property at the time of the taking.
Question
Obtaining property by incorrect pretenses is similar to larceny and different from embezzlement in that the taking must be ___.
Question
To eliminate some of the subtle distinctions between the various theft offenses, the trend is to consolidate them into a single ___ offense.
Question
A person may not be convicted of both stealing and receiving the __ stolen property because to be guilty of receiving stolen property, the property must be __ at the time it is received.
Question
Any item of personal property that is not subject to __ is subject to counterfeiting.
Question
Forgery is falsely making, materially altering, or ___ a writing that, if genuine, would either have legal efficacy or be the foundation of legal liability, with intent to defraud or prejudice the rights of another.
Question
The crime of money ___ is designed to combat the methods used by criminals to hide, disguise, and legitimize their ill-gotten gains.
Question
___ theft is defined as the unauthorized use of another individual's personal identity to fraudulently obtain money, goods, or services; to avoid the payment of debt; or to avoid criminal prosecution.
Question
The ___ Trade Commission (FTC) runs a clearinghouse for complaints by identity theft victims.
Question
___ is aimed at repetitive criminality that either affects or utilizes enterprises in accomplishing its unlawful ends.
Question
The crime of larceny by trick has no ___ taking of the property.
Question
The federal RICO act has both criminal and ___ applications.
Question
__ is the attempted passing of a forged document.
Question
One of Congress's goals in passing the racketeering laws was to destroy the __.
Question
Match words with associated meaning, concepts, issues or principles

-The crime at early common law protected personal property.

A) Personal property
B) real property
C) intangible property
D) Robbery
E) forgery
F) larceny
G) larceny by trick
H) receiving stolen property
I) carrying away
J) trespassory taking
Question
Match words with associated meaning, concepts, issues or principles

-Developed as a crime to handle the situations where the personal property was taken from the possession of another without consent and nonviolently by stealth.

A) Personal property
B) real property
C) intangible property
D) Robbery
E) forgery
F) larceny
G) larceny by trick
H) receiving stolen property
I) carrying away
J) trespassory taking
Question
Match words with associated meaning, concepts, issues or principles

-Defined as all property except land and buildings attached to land.

A) Personal property
B) real property
C) intangible property
D) Robbery
E) forgery
F) larceny
G) larceny by trick
H) receiving stolen property
I) carrying away
J) trespassory taking
Question
Match words with associated meaning, concepts, issues or principles

-Wrongful taking

A) Personal property
B) real property
C) intangible property
D) Robbery
E) forgery
F) larceny
G) larceny by trick
H) receiving stolen property
I) carrying away
J) trespassory taking
Question
Match words with associated meaning, concepts, issues or principles

-asportation

A) Personal property
B) real property
C) intangible property
D) Robbery
E) forgery
F) larceny
G) larceny by trick
H) receiving stolen property
I) carrying away
J) trespassory taking
Question
Match words with associated meaning, concepts, issues or principles

-Land and building attached to land

A) Personal property
B) real property
C) intangible property
D) Robbery
E) forgery
F) larceny
G) larceny by trick
H) receiving stolen property
I) carrying away
J) trespassory taking
Question
Match words with associated meaning, concepts, issues or principles

-checks or bonds

A) Personal property
B) real property
C) intangible property
D) Robbery
E) forgery
F) larceny
G) larceny by trick
H) receiving stolen property
I) carrying away
J) trespassory taking
Question
Match words with associated meaning, concepts, issues or principles

-Taking personal property with consent of owner.

A) Personal property
B) real property
C) intangible property
D) Robbery
E) forgery
F) larceny
G) larceny by trick
H) receiving stolen property
I) carrying away
J) trespassory taking
Question
Match words with associated meaning, concepts, issues or principles

-An aggravated form of being an accessory after the fact.

A) Personal property
B) real property
C) intangible property
D) Robbery
E) forgery
F) larceny
G) larceny by trick
H) receiving stolen property
I) carrying away
J) trespassory taking
Question
Match words with associated meaning, concepts, issues or principles

-creating a new false document

A) Personal property
B) real property
C) intangible property
D) Robbery
E) forgery
F) larceny
G) larceny by trick
H) receiving stolen property
I) carrying away
J) trespassory taking
Question
The term theft is often used to refer to what three different crimes.
Question
How does embezzlement differ from larceny?
Question
Explain the crime of obtaining property by incorrect pretenses.
Question
Explain why states are moving toward the consolidation of theft offenses.
Question
Why can't a person cannot be convicted of both stealing and receiving the same stolen property?
Question
How does counterfeiting differ from the crime of forgery?
Question
What are the two types of forgery crimes?
Question
What constitutes an identity theft crime?
Question
What functions does the Federal Trade Commission perform in preventing identity crime?
Question
What activities are the RICO statutes aimed at?
Question
Thomas has accumulated several bundles of cash from his drug selling. If he deposits the money into a bank, the bank will make a report on each transaction in excess of $10,000 dollars. To counter the reporting requirement he is advised by a friend to engage in structuring. How would Thomas do that?
Question
The police suspect that Jack is involved in receiving stolen property and reselling it. An undercover police officer takes some recovered stolen property to Jack for him to resell. The officer then arrested Jack. Did Jack commit the crime of receiving stolen property? Explain.
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Deck 10: Theft and Property Crimes
1
Larceny is a crime that is directed:

A) against possession, not ownership, of property.
B) against ownership, not possession, of property.
C) against both ownership and possession of property.
D) against individuals using tricks to obtain property.
against possession, not ownership, of property.
2
The chief difference between larceny and embezzlement is:

A) in embezzlement the embezzler is not entitled to possess the property at the time of the taking whereas in larceny the thief has no right to possess the property in question.
B) in embezzlement the crime involves violence whereas in larceny the crime does not involve force or violence.
C) in embezzlement the embezzler is entitled to possess the property at the time of the taking whereas in larceny the thief has no right to possession of the property in question.
D) in embezzlement the embezzler is entitled to possess the property at the time of the taking whereas in larceny the thief has a right to possession of the property in question.
in embezzlement the embezzler is entitled to possess the property at the time of the taking whereas in larceny the thief has no right to possession of the property in question.
3
The essence of the crime of false pretenses is that:

A) the taking of the property was lawful.
B) the owner of the property is induced to transfer title to personal property as a result of false pretenses.
C) Both A and B.
D) None of the above
the owner of the property is induced to transfer title to personal property as a result of false pretenses.
4
Common law larceny included:

A) a taking of the property of another by force or fear.
B) a taking of the property of an individual by trick.
C) a trespassory taking.
D) a conversion of property.
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5
Embezzlement involves:

A) the conversion of property.
B) a trespassory taking of property.
C) a taking of property by force or fear.
D) a taking of property by fear.
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6
Which of the following acts is not part of the crime of receiving stolen property?

A) Buying and transferring the stolen property.
B) Continuing possession of the stolen property.
C) Stealing the property.
D) Concealing the stolen property.
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7
Forgery may be committed by:

A) filling in blanks on a check without authorization.
B) endorsing a check with a false endorsement.
C) significantly altering an existing document.
D) All of the above.
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8
At common law, counterfeiting was limited to:

A) paintings.
B) money.
C) documents.
D) consumer goods.
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9
The key thing for the identity thief is:

A) identifying personal information.
B) knowledge of the victim.
C) physical access to the victim.
D) ignorance of the victim.
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10
Receiving stolen property is also known as:

A) trafficking in stolen goods.
B) fencing.
C) a chop shop.
D) larceny.
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11
Embezzlement is a crime based upon:

A) trust.
B) employment.
C) custody.
D) fraud.
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12
The crime of false pretenses:

A) must go to a material fact.
B) is like embezzlement in that the taking must be wrongful.
C) is a crime against possession.
D) is a crime against custody.
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13
Larceny by trick is a crime where ____ is passed to the defendant.

A) possession
B) title
C) ownership
D) title and ownership
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14
The key to determining whether receiving stolen property is a felony or a misdemeanor is:

A) involvement of the defendant after the original theft.
B) what he victim paid for the property.
C) involvement of the defendant in the original theft.
D) fair market value of the property.
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15
Identity theft is:

A) the most important new crime of the 21st century.
B) the unauthorized use of another individual's personal identity in a legal manner.
C) is a crime in all states.
D) None of the above.
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16
Money laundering is a crime in which criminals do what with money which they receive from illegal activity?

A) Try to disguise it as legitimate income.
B) Use the money overseas in attempt to profit more from it.
C) Invest it in the stock market.
D) Give it to a family member or other non-criminal.
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17
What is "structuring?"

A) Moving money from one financial institution to another in attempts to disguise its illegal origins.
B) Depositing illegally-obtained money in to a legitimate financial institution.
C) The delivery of counterfeit checks to money laundering operations.
D) To break up a single transaction above the financial institution's reporting threshold for the purpose of evading the $10,000 reporting requirement.
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Unlock for access to all 76 flashcards in this deck.
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18
Which of these is not one of Congress' original goals of the RICO Act?

A) Elimination of repetitive criminality.
B) Elimination of terrorism.
C) Destroy the Mafia.
D) Elimination of the profits of organized crime.
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19
RICO acts have been enacted at what jurisdictional level?

A) Federal only.
B) Both Federal and State.
C) In the U.S. Constitution.
D) Both A and C.
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20
What problem did the RICO Act solve for prosecutors?

A) Defects in the evidence gathering process of the law.
B) Increasing interest in illegal activities.
C) Judicial corruption.
D) Difficulty prosecuting Mafia members because of death threats.
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21
Embezzlement and false pretenses are basically different forms of larceny.
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22
False pretenses and forgery are the same crime except that forgery only applies to written instruments.
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23
Receiving stolen property is a form of larceny.
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24
A fake Picasso painting is an example of a forgery.
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25
False pretenses involve obtaining title by making a material false representation with the intent to permanently deprive the owner of the property in question.
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26
Receiving stolen property includes receiving, concealing, continuing possession, buying, and transferring of stolen property.
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27
Possession in theft crimes may be actual, constructive, and false.
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28
Larceny was originally developed where the unlawful taking was nonviolent and by stealth.
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29
An essential element of larceny is the intent to permanently deprive.
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30
Larceny is often characterized as either a felony or a misdemeanor based upon the value of the property taken.
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31
The key difference between embezzlement and larceny is the entitlement to possess the property that was taken.
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32
The transfer of title is an essential element of the crime of false pretenses.
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33
Receiving stolen property is a crime upon a crime.
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34
Making, uttering, and material alteration are all essential components of the crime of forgery.
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35
Counterfeiting is most often associated with phony money.
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36
Identity theft has become the most important new theft crime of the twenty-first century.
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37
State RICO acts are much broader and have much less detail than the Federal RICO Act.
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38
The RICO Act was used against the Mafia primarily in the 1980's.
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39
Identity theft often involves many jurisdictions in the same crime.
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40
The term __ is often used to refer to three different and distinct crimes: larceny, embezzlement, and obtaining property by incorrect pretenses.
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41
The chief difference between the two crimes is that, in the case of embezzlement, the embezzler is entitled to __ the property at the time of the taking.
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42
Obtaining property by incorrect pretenses is similar to larceny and different from embezzlement in that the taking must be ___.
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43
To eliminate some of the subtle distinctions between the various theft offenses, the trend is to consolidate them into a single ___ offense.
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44
A person may not be convicted of both stealing and receiving the __ stolen property because to be guilty of receiving stolen property, the property must be __ at the time it is received.
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45
Any item of personal property that is not subject to __ is subject to counterfeiting.
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46
Forgery is falsely making, materially altering, or ___ a writing that, if genuine, would either have legal efficacy or be the foundation of legal liability, with intent to defraud or prejudice the rights of another.
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47
The crime of money ___ is designed to combat the methods used by criminals to hide, disguise, and legitimize their ill-gotten gains.
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48
___ theft is defined as the unauthorized use of another individual's personal identity to fraudulently obtain money, goods, or services; to avoid the payment of debt; or to avoid criminal prosecution.
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k this deck
49
The ___ Trade Commission (FTC) runs a clearinghouse for complaints by identity theft victims.
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50
___ is aimed at repetitive criminality that either affects or utilizes enterprises in accomplishing its unlawful ends.
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51
The crime of larceny by trick has no ___ taking of the property.
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52
The federal RICO act has both criminal and ___ applications.
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53
__ is the attempted passing of a forged document.
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54
One of Congress's goals in passing the racketeering laws was to destroy the __.
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55
Match words with associated meaning, concepts, issues or principles

-The crime at early common law protected personal property.

A) Personal property
B) real property
C) intangible property
D) Robbery
E) forgery
F) larceny
G) larceny by trick
H) receiving stolen property
I) carrying away
J) trespassory taking
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 76 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
56
Match words with associated meaning, concepts, issues or principles

-Developed as a crime to handle the situations where the personal property was taken from the possession of another without consent and nonviolently by stealth.

A) Personal property
B) real property
C) intangible property
D) Robbery
E) forgery
F) larceny
G) larceny by trick
H) receiving stolen property
I) carrying away
J) trespassory taking
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 76 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
57
Match words with associated meaning, concepts, issues or principles

-Defined as all property except land and buildings attached to land.

A) Personal property
B) real property
C) intangible property
D) Robbery
E) forgery
F) larceny
G) larceny by trick
H) receiving stolen property
I) carrying away
J) trespassory taking
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Unlock for access to all 76 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
58
Match words with associated meaning, concepts, issues or principles

-Wrongful taking

A) Personal property
B) real property
C) intangible property
D) Robbery
E) forgery
F) larceny
G) larceny by trick
H) receiving stolen property
I) carrying away
J) trespassory taking
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 76 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
59
Match words with associated meaning, concepts, issues or principles

-asportation

A) Personal property
B) real property
C) intangible property
D) Robbery
E) forgery
F) larceny
G) larceny by trick
H) receiving stolen property
I) carrying away
J) trespassory taking
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 76 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
60
Match words with associated meaning, concepts, issues or principles

-Land and building attached to land

A) Personal property
B) real property
C) intangible property
D) Robbery
E) forgery
F) larceny
G) larceny by trick
H) receiving stolen property
I) carrying away
J) trespassory taking
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 76 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
61
Match words with associated meaning, concepts, issues or principles

-checks or bonds

A) Personal property
B) real property
C) intangible property
D) Robbery
E) forgery
F) larceny
G) larceny by trick
H) receiving stolen property
I) carrying away
J) trespassory taking
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62
Match words with associated meaning, concepts, issues or principles

-Taking personal property with consent of owner.

A) Personal property
B) real property
C) intangible property
D) Robbery
E) forgery
F) larceny
G) larceny by trick
H) receiving stolen property
I) carrying away
J) trespassory taking
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63
Match words with associated meaning, concepts, issues or principles

-An aggravated form of being an accessory after the fact.

A) Personal property
B) real property
C) intangible property
D) Robbery
E) forgery
F) larceny
G) larceny by trick
H) receiving stolen property
I) carrying away
J) trespassory taking
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64
Match words with associated meaning, concepts, issues or principles

-creating a new false document

A) Personal property
B) real property
C) intangible property
D) Robbery
E) forgery
F) larceny
G) larceny by trick
H) receiving stolen property
I) carrying away
J) trespassory taking
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65
The term theft is often used to refer to what three different crimes.
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66
How does embezzlement differ from larceny?
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67
Explain the crime of obtaining property by incorrect pretenses.
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68
Explain why states are moving toward the consolidation of theft offenses.
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69
Why can't a person cannot be convicted of both stealing and receiving the same stolen property?
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70
How does counterfeiting differ from the crime of forgery?
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71
What are the two types of forgery crimes?
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72
What constitutes an identity theft crime?
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73
What functions does the Federal Trade Commission perform in preventing identity crime?
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74
What activities are the RICO statutes aimed at?
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75
Thomas has accumulated several bundles of cash from his drug selling. If he deposits the money into a bank, the bank will make a report on each transaction in excess of $10,000 dollars. To counter the reporting requirement he is advised by a friend to engage in structuring. How would Thomas do that?
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76
The police suspect that Jack is involved in receiving stolen property and reselling it. An undercover police officer takes some recovered stolen property to Jack for him to resell. The officer then arrested Jack. Did Jack commit the crime of receiving stolen property? Explain.
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