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MalorieB MalorieB
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Posts: 575
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6 years ago
The primary responsibility of institutional parole staff is to prepare reports on parole eligible inmates for the parole board.
 
  a. True
  b. False



(Question #2) Because not all people can be contacted via telephone, telephone interviews are often time consuming and expensive.
 
  Indicate whether the statement is true or false



(Question #3) Were these border searches non-routine and thus Fourth Amendment violations?
 
  In 2004, Sawsaan Tabbaa and four other plaintiffs, U.S. citizens and practicing Muslims, were among an estimated 13,000 individuals from across North America who attended the Reviving the Islamic Spirit Conference (RIS Conference) at the Skydome in Toronto, Canada. She returned to the United States via the Buffalo, New York border crossing. The conference, which lasted three days, included religious and cultural activities, musical performances, a series of prominent Islamic speakers, and communal prayer three times a day. The plaintiffs had no criminal records and the government had no individualized suspicion of their being associated with terrorism. The U.S. Bureau of Customs and Border Protection (CBP) received intelligence (which was examined by the court) that persons with known terrorist ties would attend the Conference. Federal regulations give the CBP authority to enforce immigration and customs laws, secure the border, and prevent the entry of terrorists into the United States. Based on the intelligence, CBP ordered border officials to identify conference attendees, contact CBP's data center to determine if the individuals seeking entry posed a threat, and to question attendees about their activities. Fingerprinting and photographing conference attendees was permitted. When plaintiffs told CBP agents that they attended the Skydome conference, they were ordered to pull their cars into a separate area. They entered a building that included other RIS Conference attendees. Plaintiffs had to fill out several forms. They were questioned about past travels, relationships to other vehicle occupants, and why they attended and what occurred at the RIS Conference. Plaintiffs were frisked, fingerprinted, and photographed, and their cars were searched. They were not told why they were being fingerprinted and photographed, or why they were detained and inspected so thoroughly. Plaintiffs who questioned the process were told they would not be released until all of the screening measures had been completed. Regarding two of the plaintiffs, CBP officers forcibly kicked the feet open and almost knocked down some plaintiffs in order to effectuate pat-downs. Plaintiffs' hands were grabbed to take the fingerprints. Each plaintiff was detained and searched for between four and six hours, after which he or she was released into the United States. Within seven days, the government removed plaintiffs' fingerprints and photographs from its databases, but continues to hold some information about them, including the details of their 2004 detentions. The plaintiffs seek a declaratory judgment that the searches violated their Fourth Amendment rights and expungement of their records.
  What will be an ideal response?



(Question #4) The relative evidential value of laboratory test results is dependent on the way the evidence is collected and presented for examination.
 
  Indicate whether the statement is true or false.



(Question #5) The code of was created after many years of development and consideration by the IACP.
 
  What will be an ideal response?



(Question #6) Was the gun seized in the automobile admissible against Smith as lawfully seized in plain view as the product of a proper inventory search?
 
  Lancaster, PA police officers recognized Devon Smith, in the passenger seat of an automobile operated by Danny Santiago, as subject to an outstanding arrest warrant. The officers stopped the vehicle, arrested Smith, and arrested Santiago after he got into fight with an officer. Neither Smith nor Santiago claimed to own the car or know the owner and registration papers were not available. There was no one else available at the scene to take possession of the car. The officers believed that they should not leave the vehicle in a bad neighborhood where it might be damaged, vandalized, or stolen. Therefore, one officer impounded the vehicle and drove it to the police station. At the station during a routine warrantless inventory search of the vehicle, the other officer found a loaded semi-automatic handgun in its glove department. He then interrupted the search, obtained a search warrant, and resumed the search. The gun was introduced in a trial against Smith who was convicted on a charge of a felon in possession of a weapon. Testimony established that the officer conducting the inventory was exercising his discretion when he opted to impound the vehicle. The Lancaster PD had no standardized policy regarding the impoundment of vehicles and had established routines but no written policies guiding the conduct of the inventory search.
  What will be an ideal response?



(Question #7) Which of the following was not described as one of the three forms that the regulation of ethically acceptable research conduct may take?
 
  a. enforcement by state and local police
  b. codes of ethics and institutional review boards
  c. procedures imposed by the federal government
   d. legal regulation in the courts
Textbook 
Probation and Parole: Corrections in the Community

Probation and Parole: Corrections in the Community


Edition: 13th
Author:
Read 34 times
2 Replies

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Replies
wrote...
6 years ago
1)  a

2)  T

3)  NO

4)  Answer: True

5)  ethics

6)  YES

7)  A
MalorieB Author
wrote...
6 years ago
Dude, you're awesome. I wish I had you as my teacher!
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