|
1 | | As a rule, cold, sleepy, hungry, or physically uncomfortable persons prove to be |
| | A) | highly satisfactory witnesses because of the pressure the interviewer is able to put them under. |
| | B) | somewhat satisfactory witnesses. |
| | C) | unsatisfactory witnesses. |
| | D) | impossible to interview. |
|
|
|
2 | | Which constitutional guarantees are addressed in the Escobedo and Miranda cases? |
| | A) | Right-to-counsel and self-incrimination. |
| | B) | Right-to-confrontation and cross-examination. |
| | C) | Double jeopardy and trial by jury. |
| | D) | Fair trial and free press. |
|
|
|
3 | | In which U.S. Supreme Court case was the totality of the circumstances test first utilized? |
| | A) | Escobedo v. Ohio. |
| | B) | Brown v. Mississippi. |
| | C) | Manson v. Braithwaite. |
| | D) | United States v. Lee |
|
|
|
4 | | What device denotes micro variations in the audible and non-audible portions of speech? |
| | A) | Polygraph. |
| | B) | Kinesiological Brain Wave Analyzer. |
| | C) | Computer Voice Stress Analysis. |
| | D) | Neuron Voice Sensor Detector. |
|
|
|
5 | | Which U.S. Supreme Court cases set forth the requirements for the delay-in-arraignment rule? |
| | A) | McNabb – Mallory. |
| | B) | Escobedo – Miranda. |
| | C) | Mapp – Terry. |
| | D) | Both A and C are correct. |
|
|
|
6 | | The first notable incidence of Supreme Court intervention into interrogation practices came about in Brown v. Mississippi, in 1936. The major decision of the Supreme Court in this case was |
| | A) | the right of a defendant to have an attorney present during interrogation. |
| | B) | that a confession received as a result of physical brutality and violence by the police was not admissible in court. |
| | C) | the right of the defendant to be brought before a committing magistrate within 72 hours. |
| | D) | the right of the defendant to remain silent. |
|
|
|
7 | | When conducting an interrogation, the interrogator should |
| | A) | ensure that few or no objects are between them and the suspect |
| | B) | talk loudly and rudely to the suspect |
| | C) | ask leading questions to get the suspect to confess |
| | D) | All of the above should be done in an interrogation |
|
|
|
8 | | The three most common findings by a polygraph examiner are |
| | A) | Lying, truthful, and unsure |
| | B) | Deceptive, truthful and unsure |
| | C) | Deception indicated, no deception indicated and inconclusive |
| | D) | Deception indicated, truth indicated and inconclusive |
|
|