Deck 3: The Criminal Act: The First Principle of Criminal Liability

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Question
Possession is not an action,but is a condition.
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Question
A parent-child relationship is an example of a "special relationship."
Question
All crimes have to include a criminal act.That's why it's the first principle of criminal liability.
Question
Failure to act can never be a crime.
Question
The term actus reus refers to the act element of a crime.
Question
Failure to file income taxes is an example of a failure to intervene crime.
Question
The actus reus requirement reserves the harsh sanction of the criminal law for cases of actual danger.
Question
Criminal liability is criminal conduct that is without justification or excuse,and,therefore,qualifies for criminal punishment.
Question
​If there's no criminal conduct,there's no criminal liability.
Question
Offenses that don't require a mens rea don't include an attendant circumstances element.
Question
Under the Good Samaritan doctrine,strangers have a duty to aid other strangers in danger.
Question
Omissions can satisfy the actus reusrequirement.
Question
Legal duties are created in three ways: statutes,contracts,and special relationships.
Question
The law recognizes only actual,constructive,and knowing possession.
Question
​Constructive possession means the person has the item on them.
Question
Failing to report child abuse may constitute a criminal omission.
Question
The requirement that attitudes have to turn into deeds is called manifest criminality.
Question
​The general principle of actus reus includes a voluntary act.
Question
Criminal acts are voluntary bodily movements.
Question
​In Robinson v.California,the Supreme Court stated that it would be cruel and unusual punishment to punish someone for a disease or illness.
Question
Actus reusis the first principle of liability.
Question
​What is the name given to "conduct that unjustifiably and inexcusably inflicts or threatens substantial harm to individual or public interests?"

A) legal duty​
B) ​criminal liability
C) automatism​
D) ​criminal omission
Question
Every crime has to include at least one voluntary act.
Question
The majority of minor crimes against public order and morals do not include

A) mens rea.
B) the voluntary requirement.
C) actus reus.
D) a legal duty to obey.
Question
The Constitution bans pure status as a basis for criminal liability.
Question
The name given to all types of unconscious bodily movements is

A) automatism.
B) epileptic seizures.
C) sleep-driving.
D) diminished capacity.
Question
Every act leading up to the completed crime must be voluntary.
Question
We call crimes requiring a criminal act triggered by criminal intent

A) public order crimes.
B) automatism.
C) conduct crimes.
D) moral crimes.
Question
Those crimes requiring a criminal act triggered by criminal intent are

A) result crimes.
B) conduct crimes.
C) intentional crimes.
D) felonies.
Question
Fault-based defenses are defenses based on creating a reasonable doubt about the prosecution's proof of a voluntary act.
Question
Affirmative defenses take place before the prosecution has proved defendant's criminal conduct.
Question
​The idea that a crime requires action is called

A) ​manifest criminality.
B) ​a voluntary act.
C) ​mens rea.
D) ​attendant circumstance.
Question
Crimes that include only a criminal act are rare.
Question
Actus reus is the criminal intent,the mental element in crime.
Question
Criminal conduct that qualifies for criminal punishment is the definition of

A) result liability.
B) civil liability.
C) criminal liability.
D) conduct liability.
Question
Most states follow the Good Samaritan rule.
Question
The character or condition of a person or a thing is known as its

A) status.
B) reus.
C) manus.
D) prospectus.
Question
Status can arise in two ways.
Question
Criminal liability is defined as criminal conduct that qualifies for criminal

A) punishment.
B) mens rea.
C) guilt.
D) actus reus.
Question
Most offenses that don't require a mens rea do include which of the following?

A) a moral but not legal transgression
B) a lapse of good judgment but not criminal
C) a criminal omission
D) an attendant circumstances element
Question
Serious crimes that include the criminal act,criminal intent,concurrence,attendant circumstances,and a criminal harm are called

A) moral duty crimes.
B) public order crimes.
C) crimes of omission.
D) bad result crimes.
Question
Possession is not an action,rather it is

A) a compulsion.
B) a condition.
C) a moral duty.
D) a necessity.
Question
Some serious crimes include five elements.Which of the following is not one of those elements?

A) a voluntary act
B) the mental element
C) causation
D) omission
Question
In Robinson v.California (1962),the Supreme Court held that Robinson's conviction must be

A) upheld because his addiction resulted from a voluntary act.
B) upheld because people addicted to narcotics are a danger to themselvesand others.
C) reversed because a person cannot be punished for a status or condition.
D) reversed because there was no showing that Robinson was dangerous.
Question
When you possess something you don't know you possess,it is called

A) constructive possession
B) actual possession
C) simple possession
D) mere possession
Question
Legal duties can arise from:

A) statutes,contracts,and omissions
B) statutes,contracts,and special relationships
C) moral obligations that are generally recognized
D) none of these answers is correct
Question
The concurrence element means that a criminal intent has to

A) trigger the criminal act.
B) lead directly to the harm.
C) be the legal cause of the result.
D) flow from the act.
Question
Which doctrine imposes a legal duty to help or call for help for imperiled strangers?

A) the "Family Member" doctrine
B) the health care professionals rule
C) the American bystander rule
D) the "Good Samaritan" doctrine
Question
Which of the following are the two kinds of criminal possession?

A) actual possession and constructive possession
B) real possession and constructive possession
C) actual possession and fictional possession
D) actual possession and factual possession
Question
There are two kinds of criminal omission: failure to act and

A) ​failure to intervene.
B) failure to perform moral duty.
C) failure to follow the American bystander rule.
D) failure to be a good Samaritan.
Question
A legal fiction turns what into an act,although it is really a passive state?

A) legal duty
B) omission
C) possession
D) convolution
Question
Most states follow which of the following?

A) the "Family Member" doctrine
B) the health care professionals rule
C) the American bystander rule
D) the "Good Samaritan" doctrine
Question
The existence of a legal duty is what element of a crime?

A) attendant circumstance
B) adjunct
C) concurrent
D) permissive
Question
Which type of possession is it when one has physical control of banned items?

A) constructive possession
B) actual possession
C) simple possession
D) mere possession
Question
What type of possession is required by most states before an act can be criminalized?

A) knowing
B) mere
C) constructive
D) perfunctory
Question
What term refers to the physical element of a crime?

A) mens rea
B) actus reus
C) corpus delicti
D) criminal liability
Question
If there is no criminal conduct,there's no criminal

A) possession.
B) liability.
C) omission.
D) issue.
Question
A friend of yours puts illegal drugs into your backpack without your knowledge.This is known as:

A) constructive possession of the drugs
B) knowing possession of the drugs
C) mere possession of the drugs
D) none of these answers is correct
Question
Serious crimes that include (1)a voluntary act,(2)the mental element(3)circumstantial elements,(4)causation,and (5)criminal harm are also called

A) harm crimes.
B) mens rea crimes.
C) causation crimes.
D) bad result crimes.​
Question
Which of the following refers to what we do?

A) action
B) status
C) possession
D) duty
Question
Most statutes adopt what MPC rule?​

A) one-voluntary-act-is-enough rule
B) no-voluntary-act-is-enough rule
C) any-voluntary-act-is-enough rule
D) most-voluntary-act-is-enough rule
Question
If John were the parent of one of the children,why might he be criminally liable?

A) because of a statutory responsibility
B) because of a special relationship
C) because of a contractual responsibility
D) because of a constitutional responsibility
Question
According to the general principle of actus reus,every crime has to include at least one

A) Act.
B) voluntary act.
C) involuntary act.
D) intended act.
Question
The actus reus serves which of the following purposes?

A) it helps prove criminal intent
B) it reserves the harsh sanction of criminal law for cases of actual danger
C) it helps protect individual privacy
D) actus reus serves all of these purposes
Question
Automatism is the name given to

A) unconscious bodily movements.
B) intoxicated bodily movements.
C) conscious bodily movements.
D) static bodily movements.
Question
What kind of defense would Julio's lawyer most likely use at trial?

A) a fault-based defenses.
B) an affirmative defense
C) an actus reus defense
D) a status defense
Question
Criminal omission is a failure to act when

A) there is a legal duty to act.
B) there are no police to do anything.
C) no one else will act.
D) the failure to act is reported.
Question
Voluntary acts satisfy what requirement?​

A) ​mens rea
B) ​actus reus
C) ​status
D) ​automatism
Question
Status can arise in two ways: (1)it can result from a prior voluntary act or (2)

A) it can result from bad intent.
B) it can result from passive actions.
C) it can result from no act at all,such as sex,age,sexual orientation,race,and ethnicity.
D) it can result from fantasy.
Question
In the plurality opinion in Powell v.Texas (1967),the conviction for public drun KEnness was

A) affirmed because Powell was not punished for being an alcoholic but for the act of being drunk in a public place.
B) affirmed because Powell was being punished for being afflicted with alcoholism.
C) reversed because Powell was being punished for being a chronic alcoholic.
D) reversed because Powell committed no actus reus.
Question
Which of the following is the most prominent result crime?

A) criminal homicide
B) criminal manslaughter
C) criminal rape
D) criminal voyeurism
Question
What modern phrase comes from the ancient idea of manifest criminality?

A) a bird in the hand is worth two in the bush
B) between a rock and a hard place
C) stuck in a rut
D) caught red-handed
Question
Which of the following is a status that is voluntary?

A) addiction
B) sex
C) race
D) age
Question
Bill would not be guilty of a crime in most states,because most states require

A) knowing possession
B) mere possession
C) concurrent possession
D) constructive possession
Question
Criminal liability is criminal conduct that is without

A) justification or excuse.
B) exception or justification.
C) exception or excuse.
D) reason or excuse.
Question
Bill is guilty of what kind of possession?

A) knowing possession
B) mere possession
C) concurrent possession
D) constructive possession
Question
Defenses based on creating a reasonable doubt about the prosecution's proof of a voluntary act are called

A) fault-based defenses.
B) default-based defenses.
C) non-fault-based defenses.
D) voluntary-act-based defenses.
Question
The Constitution bans pure status as a basis for

A) failure to report.
B) possession as a crime.
C) omission as crime.
D) criminal liability.
Question
Crimes requiring a criminal act triggered by criminal intent are called

A) conduct crimes.
B) result crimes.
C) possession crimes.
D) omission crimes.
Question
John is not guilty of a criminal omission based on

A) the Apprendi doctrine.
B) the Good Samaritan doctrine.
C) the American bystander rule.
D) the ban on forced intervention laws.
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Deck 3: The Criminal Act: The First Principle of Criminal Liability
1
Possession is not an action,but is a condition.
True
2
A parent-child relationship is an example of a "special relationship."
True
3
All crimes have to include a criminal act.That's why it's the first principle of criminal liability.
True
4
Failure to act can never be a crime.
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k this deck
5
The term actus reus refers to the act element of a crime.
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6
Failure to file income taxes is an example of a failure to intervene crime.
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7
The actus reus requirement reserves the harsh sanction of the criminal law for cases of actual danger.
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k this deck
8
Criminal liability is criminal conduct that is without justification or excuse,and,therefore,qualifies for criminal punishment.
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9
​If there's no criminal conduct,there's no criminal liability.
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10
Offenses that don't require a mens rea don't include an attendant circumstances element.
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11
Under the Good Samaritan doctrine,strangers have a duty to aid other strangers in danger.
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12
Omissions can satisfy the actus reusrequirement.
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13
Legal duties are created in three ways: statutes,contracts,and special relationships.
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14
The law recognizes only actual,constructive,and knowing possession.
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15
​Constructive possession means the person has the item on them.
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16
Failing to report child abuse may constitute a criminal omission.
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17
The requirement that attitudes have to turn into deeds is called manifest criminality.
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18
​The general principle of actus reus includes a voluntary act.
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19
Criminal acts are voluntary bodily movements.
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20
​In Robinson v.California,the Supreme Court stated that it would be cruel and unusual punishment to punish someone for a disease or illness.
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k this deck
21
Actus reusis the first principle of liability.
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22
​What is the name given to "conduct that unjustifiably and inexcusably inflicts or threatens substantial harm to individual or public interests?"

A) legal duty​
B) ​criminal liability
C) automatism​
D) ​criminal omission
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k this deck
23
Every crime has to include at least one voluntary act.
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k this deck
24
The majority of minor crimes against public order and morals do not include

A) mens rea.
B) the voluntary requirement.
C) actus reus.
D) a legal duty to obey.
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k this deck
25
The Constitution bans pure status as a basis for criminal liability.
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k this deck
26
The name given to all types of unconscious bodily movements is

A) automatism.
B) epileptic seizures.
C) sleep-driving.
D) diminished capacity.
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k this deck
27
Every act leading up to the completed crime must be voluntary.
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k this deck
28
We call crimes requiring a criminal act triggered by criminal intent

A) public order crimes.
B) automatism.
C) conduct crimes.
D) moral crimes.
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k this deck
29
Those crimes requiring a criminal act triggered by criminal intent are

A) result crimes.
B) conduct crimes.
C) intentional crimes.
D) felonies.
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k this deck
30
Fault-based defenses are defenses based on creating a reasonable doubt about the prosecution's proof of a voluntary act.
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k this deck
31
Affirmative defenses take place before the prosecution has proved defendant's criminal conduct.
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k this deck
32
​The idea that a crime requires action is called

A) ​manifest criminality.
B) ​a voluntary act.
C) ​mens rea.
D) ​attendant circumstance.
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k this deck
33
Crimes that include only a criminal act are rare.
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34
Actus reus is the criminal intent,the mental element in crime.
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35
Criminal conduct that qualifies for criminal punishment is the definition of

A) result liability.
B) civil liability.
C) criminal liability.
D) conduct liability.
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36
Most states follow the Good Samaritan rule.
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k this deck
37
The character or condition of a person or a thing is known as its

A) status.
B) reus.
C) manus.
D) prospectus.
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k this deck
38
Status can arise in two ways.
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39
Criminal liability is defined as criminal conduct that qualifies for criminal

A) punishment.
B) mens rea.
C) guilt.
D) actus reus.
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k this deck
40
Most offenses that don't require a mens rea do include which of the following?

A) a moral but not legal transgression
B) a lapse of good judgment but not criminal
C) a criminal omission
D) an attendant circumstances element
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41
Serious crimes that include the criminal act,criminal intent,concurrence,attendant circumstances,and a criminal harm are called

A) moral duty crimes.
B) public order crimes.
C) crimes of omission.
D) bad result crimes.
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k this deck
42
Possession is not an action,rather it is

A) a compulsion.
B) a condition.
C) a moral duty.
D) a necessity.
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k this deck
43
Some serious crimes include five elements.Which of the following is not one of those elements?

A) a voluntary act
B) the mental element
C) causation
D) omission
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k this deck
44
In Robinson v.California (1962),the Supreme Court held that Robinson's conviction must be

A) upheld because his addiction resulted from a voluntary act.
B) upheld because people addicted to narcotics are a danger to themselvesand others.
C) reversed because a person cannot be punished for a status or condition.
D) reversed because there was no showing that Robinson was dangerous.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 105 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
45
When you possess something you don't know you possess,it is called

A) constructive possession
B) actual possession
C) simple possession
D) mere possession
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k this deck
46
Legal duties can arise from:

A) statutes,contracts,and omissions
B) statutes,contracts,and special relationships
C) moral obligations that are generally recognized
D) none of these answers is correct
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
47
The concurrence element means that a criminal intent has to

A) trigger the criminal act.
B) lead directly to the harm.
C) be the legal cause of the result.
D) flow from the act.
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k this deck
48
Which doctrine imposes a legal duty to help or call for help for imperiled strangers?

A) the "Family Member" doctrine
B) the health care professionals rule
C) the American bystander rule
D) the "Good Samaritan" doctrine
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Unlock for access to all 105 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
49
Which of the following are the two kinds of criminal possession?

A) actual possession and constructive possession
B) real possession and constructive possession
C) actual possession and fictional possession
D) actual possession and factual possession
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k this deck
50
There are two kinds of criminal omission: failure to act and

A) ​failure to intervene.
B) failure to perform moral duty.
C) failure to follow the American bystander rule.
D) failure to be a good Samaritan.
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Unlock for access to all 105 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
51
A legal fiction turns what into an act,although it is really a passive state?

A) legal duty
B) omission
C) possession
D) convolution
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
52
Most states follow which of the following?

A) the "Family Member" doctrine
B) the health care professionals rule
C) the American bystander rule
D) the "Good Samaritan" doctrine
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 105 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
53
The existence of a legal duty is what element of a crime?

A) attendant circumstance
B) adjunct
C) concurrent
D) permissive
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 105 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
54
Which type of possession is it when one has physical control of banned items?

A) constructive possession
B) actual possession
C) simple possession
D) mere possession
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Unlock for access to all 105 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
55
What type of possession is required by most states before an act can be criminalized?

A) knowing
B) mere
C) constructive
D) perfunctory
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Unlock for access to all 105 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
56
What term refers to the physical element of a crime?

A) mens rea
B) actus reus
C) corpus delicti
D) criminal liability
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 105 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
57
If there is no criminal conduct,there's no criminal

A) possession.
B) liability.
C) omission.
D) issue.
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Unlock for access to all 105 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
58
A friend of yours puts illegal drugs into your backpack without your knowledge.This is known as:

A) constructive possession of the drugs
B) knowing possession of the drugs
C) mere possession of the drugs
D) none of these answers is correct
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 105 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
59
Serious crimes that include (1)a voluntary act,(2)the mental element(3)circumstantial elements,(4)causation,and (5)criminal harm are also called

A) harm crimes.
B) mens rea crimes.
C) causation crimes.
D) bad result crimes.​
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
60
Which of the following refers to what we do?

A) action
B) status
C) possession
D) duty
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
61
Most statutes adopt what MPC rule?​

A) one-voluntary-act-is-enough rule
B) no-voluntary-act-is-enough rule
C) any-voluntary-act-is-enough rule
D) most-voluntary-act-is-enough rule
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Unlock for access to all 105 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
62
If John were the parent of one of the children,why might he be criminally liable?

A) because of a statutory responsibility
B) because of a special relationship
C) because of a contractual responsibility
D) because of a constitutional responsibility
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 105 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
63
According to the general principle of actus reus,every crime has to include at least one

A) Act.
B) voluntary act.
C) involuntary act.
D) intended act.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 105 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
64
The actus reus serves which of the following purposes?

A) it helps prove criminal intent
B) it reserves the harsh sanction of criminal law for cases of actual danger
C) it helps protect individual privacy
D) actus reus serves all of these purposes
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Unlock for access to all 105 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
65
Automatism is the name given to

A) unconscious bodily movements.
B) intoxicated bodily movements.
C) conscious bodily movements.
D) static bodily movements.
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Unlock for access to all 105 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
66
What kind of defense would Julio's lawyer most likely use at trial?

A) a fault-based defenses.
B) an affirmative defense
C) an actus reus defense
D) a status defense
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 105 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
67
Criminal omission is a failure to act when

A) there is a legal duty to act.
B) there are no police to do anything.
C) no one else will act.
D) the failure to act is reported.
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Unlock for access to all 105 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
68
Voluntary acts satisfy what requirement?​

A) ​mens rea
B) ​actus reus
C) ​status
D) ​automatism
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
69
Status can arise in two ways: (1)it can result from a prior voluntary act or (2)

A) it can result from bad intent.
B) it can result from passive actions.
C) it can result from no act at all,such as sex,age,sexual orientation,race,and ethnicity.
D) it can result from fantasy.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 105 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
70
In the plurality opinion in Powell v.Texas (1967),the conviction for public drun KEnness was

A) affirmed because Powell was not punished for being an alcoholic but for the act of being drunk in a public place.
B) affirmed because Powell was being punished for being afflicted with alcoholism.
C) reversed because Powell was being punished for being a chronic alcoholic.
D) reversed because Powell committed no actus reus.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 105 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
71
Which of the following is the most prominent result crime?

A) criminal homicide
B) criminal manslaughter
C) criminal rape
D) criminal voyeurism
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72
What modern phrase comes from the ancient idea of manifest criminality?

A) a bird in the hand is worth two in the bush
B) between a rock and a hard place
C) stuck in a rut
D) caught red-handed
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73
Which of the following is a status that is voluntary?

A) addiction
B) sex
C) race
D) age
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74
Bill would not be guilty of a crime in most states,because most states require

A) knowing possession
B) mere possession
C) concurrent possession
D) constructive possession
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75
Criminal liability is criminal conduct that is without

A) justification or excuse.
B) exception or justification.
C) exception or excuse.
D) reason or excuse.
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76
Bill is guilty of what kind of possession?

A) knowing possession
B) mere possession
C) concurrent possession
D) constructive possession
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77
Defenses based on creating a reasonable doubt about the prosecution's proof of a voluntary act are called

A) fault-based defenses.
B) default-based defenses.
C) non-fault-based defenses.
D) voluntary-act-based defenses.
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78
The Constitution bans pure status as a basis for

A) failure to report.
B) possession as a crime.
C) omission as crime.
D) criminal liability.
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79
Crimes requiring a criminal act triggered by criminal intent are called

A) conduct crimes.
B) result crimes.
C) possession crimes.
D) omission crimes.
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80
John is not guilty of a criminal omission based on

A) the Apprendi doctrine.
B) the Good Samaritan doctrine.
C) the American bystander rule.
D) the ban on forced intervention laws.
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Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 105 flashcards in this deck.