Constitutional Law And the Criminal Justice System 6th edition by Harr - Test Bank

Constitutional Law And the Criminal Justice System 6th edition by Harr - Test Bank   Instant Download - Complete Test Bank With Answers     Sample Questions Are Posted Below   The First Amendment specifically prohibits Congress from making any laws that restrict freedom of religion, speech, press, assembly, and: a. privacy. to petition the …

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Constitutional Law And the Criminal Justice System 6th edition by Harr – Test Bank

 

Instant Download – Complete Test Bank With Answers

 

 

Sample Questions Are Posted Below

 

  1. The First Amendment specifically prohibits Congress from making any laws that restrict freedom of religion, speech, press, assembly, and:
  2. a. privacy. to petition the government.
  3. c. the presumption of innocence. travel.

 

ANSWER:                            b

REFERENCES:                    121

LEARNING OBJECTIVES:  CLCJ.HAHE.14.6 – 1

 

  1. Protected forms of speech include all of the following, except:
  2. a. burning the American
  3. protesting abortion clinics.
  4. c. advocating the violent overthrow of the
  5. swearing at a law enforcement officer.

 

ANSWER:                            c

REFERENCES:                    140

LEARNING OBJECTIVES:  CLCJ.HAHE.14.36 – 1, 2, 5

 

  1. Which of the following is a permissible restriction on speech?
  2. a. Defamation. Political rhetoric
  3. c. Criticism of the government Depictions of animal cruelty

 

ANSWER:                            a

REFERENCES:                    142-143

LEARNING OBJECTIVES:  CLCJ.HAHE.15.1 – 6

 

  1. As                    , law enforcement officers’ speech is protected by the First Amendment only if it is a matter of

public concern or unrelated to employment.

  1. a. officers of the court members of the Executive branch
  2. c. public employees private citizens

 

ANSWER:                            c

REFERENCES:                    150

LEARNING OBJECTIVES:  CLCJ.HAHE.14.5 – 9

 

  1. The Supreme Court upheld prison regulations that are “reasonably related to legitimate penological interests” using

the:

  1. a. clear and present danger test rational basis test
  2. c. strict scrutiny test clear and probable danger test

 

ANSWER:                            b

REFERENCES:                    160

LEARNING OBJECTIVES:  CLCJ.HAHE.14.10 – 11

 

  1. Hamilton v. Regents of the University of California (1934), involving compulsory military training, was one of the earliest cases regarding:
  2. a. freedom of the press. freedom of religion.
  3. c. freedom of speech. freedom to assemble.

 

ANSWER:                            b

REFERENCES:                    125

LEARNING OBJECTIVES:  CLCJ.HAHE.14.20 – 3

 

  1. In Everson v. Board of Education (1947), the Supreme Court cited Thomas Jefferson, stating that the

                      was intended to erect a “wall of separation between Church and State.”

  1. a. establishment of religion clause
  2. free exercise clause
  3. c. separation of parochial and secular schools
  4. ”excessive entanglement” test

 

ANSWER:                            a

REFERENCES:                    132

LEARNING OBJECTIVES:  CLCJ.HAHE.14.37 – 1, 2, 4

 

  1. Freedom of the press protects:
  2. a. the right to publish information without governmental
  3. magazine publishers from being told they can’t print obscene material.
  4. c. the public from the publication of offensive
  5. press premises from being searched by law enforcement.

 

ANSWER:                            a

REFERENCES:                    152

LEARNING OBJECTIVES:  CLCJ.HAHE.14.17 – 10

 

  1. The Espionage Act, passed by Congress in 1917:
  2. a. empowered the President to expel “dangerous ”
  3. made it illegal to interfere with recruiting or drafting soldiers or any act that adversely affected military morale.
  4. c. made it illegal to write or speak “with the intent to defame” the
  5. made it illegal to provide material support to terrorist organizations.

 

  1. 10. The ‘Lemon’ test regarding separation of church and state required that any law challenged under the

establishment clause must meet all of the following criteria, except:

  1. a. have a primary secular
  2. have a principle effect that neither advances nor inhibits religion.
  3. c. have a principle effect that either advances or inhibits
  4. not generate excessive entanglement between government and religion.

 

ANSWER:                            c

REFERENCES:                    126

LEARNING OBJECTIVES:  CLCJ.HAHE.14.15 – 4

 

  1. 11. The right to peaceful assembly:
  2. a. permits anyone to enter private property to assert protected
  3. involves the right to assemble in public places.
  4. c. permits demonstrations on the property of private abortion
  5. cannot be restricted under any circumstances.

 

ANSWER:                            b

REFERENCES:                    157-158

LEARNING OBJECTIVES:  CLCJ.HAHE.14.38 – 1, 2

 

  1. 12. Which of the following is not subject to regulation by the state to protect societal interests under the free exercise clause?
  2. a. Performance of
  3. Requiring Boy Scouts to promise to “Love God.”
  4. c. Requiring Amish to put orange reflectors on their
  5. Ingestion of illegal drugs in religious ceremonies.

 

ANSWER:                            b

REFERENCES:                    128-129

LEARNING OBJECTIVES:  CLCJ.HAHE.14.39 – 2, 4

 

  1. 13. Control of the press during the Persian Gulf War was:
  2. a. absolute. close to 100 percent.
  3. c. fairly lax. nonexistent.

 

ANSWER:                            b

REFERENCES:                    153

LEARNING OBJECTIVES:  CLCJ.HAHE.14.17 – 10

 

  1. 14. Under the First Amendment, there is an absolute freedom to:
  2. a. speak act
  3. c. protest believe

 

ANSWER:                            d

REFERENCES:                    129

LEARNING OBJECTIVES:  CLCJ.HAHE.14.28 – 1, 2, 3

 

  1. 15. Judicial activism is:
  2. a.
  3. when judges interpret the Constitution and its amendments
  4. c. a violation of due
  5. all of the above.

 

ANSWER:                            b

REFERENCES:                    132

LEARNING OBJECTIVES:  CLCJ.HAHE.14.38 – 1, 2

 

  1. 16. The Supreme Court struck down a law banning computer­generated or “virtual” child pornography in:
  2. a. Prewitt v. State of Arizona ex rel. Eyman (1969).
  3. Procunier v. Martinez (1974).
  4. c. City of Ladue v. Gilleo (1994).
  5. Reno v. American Civil Liberties Union (1997).

 

ANSWER:                            d

REFERENCES:                    150

LEARNING OBJECTIVES:  CLCJ.HAHE.14.31 – 4, 5

 

  1. 17. The Supreme Court ruled that cities may not prohibit yard signs in:
  2. a. Prewitt v. State of Arizona ex rel. Eyman (1969).
  3. Procunier v. Martinez (1974).
  4. c. City of Ladue v. Gilleo (1994).
  5. Reno v. American Civil Liberties Union (1997).

 

ANSWER:                            c

REFERENCES:                    138-139

LEARNING OBJECTIVES:  CLCJ.HAHE.14.40 – 5, 9

 

  1. 18. The Smith Act (1940):
  2. a. banned nude
  3. made it unlawful to advocate overthrowing the government by force.
  4. c. established national standards for
  5. established the ‘clear and probable danger’ test.

 

  1. 19. In order for speech to be considered obscene, and thus not protected by the First Amendment, it must be all of the following except:
  2. a. the work arouses erotic sexual
  3. the work taken as a whole appeals to the prurient interest in sex.
  4. c. it portrays sexual conduct in a patently offensive
  5. the work taken as a whole does not have a serious literary, artistic, political or scientific value.

 

ANSWER:                            a

REFERENCES:                    146

LEARNING OBJECTIVES:  CLCJ.HAHE.15.1 – 6

 

  1. 20. Which of the following is not part of the three­part test in determining “imminent lawless action”?
  2. a. The speaker subjectively intended
  3. In context, the words used were likely to produce imminent, lawless action
  4. c. the words used by the speaker objectively encouraged and urged
  5. the words used by the speaker caused excitement.

 

ANSWER:                            d

REFERENCES:                    141

LEARNING OBJECTIVES:  CLCJ.HAHE.14.11 – 7

 

  1. 21. Religious freedom includes all of the following, except:
  2. a. the freedom to worship. freedom to print instructional material.
  3. c. freedom to train teachers. prayer conducted in public schools.

 

ANSWER:                            d

REFERENCES:                    125

LEARNING OBJECTIVES:  CLCJ.HAHE.14.20 – 3

 

  1. 22. Freedom of the press was made binding on the states through the Fourteenth Amendment in Near Minnesota

(1931), in which the Supreme Court ruled that:

  1. a. no newspaper could be banned because of its contents, regardless how
  2. obscenity is not a constitutionally protected form of speech.
  3. c. government may halt publication of books that endanger national
  4. the press has no constitutional right to disregard promises of confidentiality.

 

ANSWER:                            a

 

  1. 23. “Whether the gravity of the evil discounted by its improbability, justifies such invasion of free speech as is necessary to avoid the danger” is called the:
  2. a. clear and probable danger test clear and present danger test
  3. c. imminent lawless action test imminent probable danger test

 

ANSWER:                            a

REFERENCES:                    140

LEARNING OBJECTIVES:  CLCJ.HAHE.15.1 – 6

 

  1. 24. The Supreme Court justified the screening of inmate mail in:
  2. a. Prewitt v. State of Arizona ex rel. Eyman (1969).
  3. Procunier v. Martinez (1974).
  4. c. City of Ladue v. Gilleo (1994).
  5. Reno v. American Civil Liberties Union (1997).

 

ANSWER:                            a

REFERENCES:                    161

LEARNING OBJECTIVES:  CLCJ.HAHE.14.10 – 11

 

  1. 25. The establishment clause of the First Amendment sets forth all of the following, except:
  2. a. Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of
  3. Congress is prohibited from establishing a national church.
  4. c. Congress may establish a national church if three-fourths of the states vote to
  5. government cannot show preference to any particular religion.

 

ANSWER:                            c

REFERENCES:                    125

LEARNING OBJECTIVES:  CLCJ.HAHE.14.15 – 4

 

  1. 26. In the case of Texas v. Johnson (1989), the Supreme Court ruled: “If there is a bedrock principle underlying the First Amendment, it is that the government may not prohibit the expression of an idea simply because society finds the idea itself offensive or ” This case involved:
  2. a. child pornography flag burning
  3. c. cross burning nude dancing

 

ANSWER:                            b

REFERENCES:                    137

LEARNING OBJECTIVES:  CLCJ.HAHE.14.5 – 9

 

  1. 27. The Supreme Court placed restrictions on the censorship of inmate mail in:
  2. a. Prewitt v. State of Arizona ex rel. Eyman (1969).
  3. Procunier v. Martinez (1974).
  4. c. City of Ladue v. Gilleo (1994).
  5. Reno v. American Civil Liberties Union (1997).

 

ANSWER:                            b

REFERENCES:                    161

LEARNING OBJECTIVES:  CLCJ.HAHE.14.10 – 11

 

  1. 28. The Supreme Court held that obscenity is not a constitutionally protected form of free speech in:
  2. a. Near Minnesota. b. Cohen v. Cowles Media Company.
  3. c. Roth v. United States. the Zenger case.

 

ANSWER:                            c

REFERENCES:                    153

LEARNING OBJECTIVES:  CLCJ.HAHE.15.1 – 6

 

  1. 29. Standards to define obscenity were set forth in:
  2. a. Near Minnesota. b. the Zenger case.
  3. c. Edwards v. City of Goldsboro, NC. Miller v. California.

 

ANSWER:                            d

REFERENCES:                    153

LEARNING OBJECTIVES:  CLCJ.HAHE.14.17 – 10

 

  1. 30. The first guarantee to be made applicable to the states through incorporation was:
  2. a. freedom of religion. freedom to assemble.
  3. c. freedom of speech. freedom of the press.

 

ANSWER:                            c

REFERENCES:                    133

LEARNING OBJECTIVES:  CLCJ.HAHE.14.6 – 1

 

  1. 31. Many states apply a higher fighting words standard to law enforcement officers because they are expected to exercise a higher degree of restraint than the average
  2. a. True
  3. False

 

ANSWER:                            True

REFERENCES:                    146

LEARNING OBJECTIVES:  CLCJ.HAHE.14.11 – 7

 

  1. 32. In Virginia v. Black, the Supreme Court ruled the singular act of cross burning was not a form of free speech protected by the First
  2. a. True
  3. False

 

ANSWER:                            False

REFERENCES:                    138

LEARNING OBJECTIVES:  CLCJ.HAHE.14.5 – 9

 

  1. 33. The Supreme Court has ruled that states cannot require children to pledge allegiance to the United States each day.
  2. a. True
  3. False

 

ANSWER:                            True

REFERENCES:                    129

LEARNING OBJECTIVES:  CLCJ.HAHE.14.41 – 1, 4

 

  1. 34. The Supreme Court has ruled that Americans have a free-speech right to pass out anonymous political
  2. a. True
  3. False

 

ANSWER:                            True

REFERENCES:                    154

LEARNING OBJECTIVES:  CLCJ.HAHE.14.17 – 10

 

  1. 35. The United States has been a model of religious tolerance throughout
  2. a. True
  3. False

 

ANSWER:                            False

REFERENCES:                    124

LEARNING OBJECTIVES:  CLCJ.HAHE.14.6 – 1

 

  1. 36. Any officer who speaks in public on an employment matter is not protected by the First
  2. a. True
  3. False

 

ANSWER:                            True

REFERENCES:                    148

LEARNING OBJECTIVES:  CLCJ.HAHE.14.2 – 8

 

  1. 37. In the 1999 case of Chicago v. Morales, the Supreme Court upheld an “anti­loitering” ordinance, stating that the definition of illegal loitering as “to remain in any one place with no apparent purpose” was not unconstitutionally
  2. a. True
  3. False

 

ANSWER:                            False

REFERENCES:                    158

LEARNING OBJECTIVES:  CLCJ.HAHE.14.6 – 1

 

  1. 38. The court has no duty to protect those who come before it from undue adverse
  2. a. True
  3. False

 

ANSWER:                            False

REFERENCES:                    154

LEARNING OBJECTIVES:  CLCJ.HAHE.14.17 – 10

 

  1. 39. In Virginia v. Black (2003), the Supreme Court held that a law banning cross burning as a hate crime itself is unconstitutional because the law presumes hate is the purpose—without more evidence, cross burning is deemed a protected form of
  2. a. True
  3. False

 

ANSWER:                            True

REFERENCES:                    138

LEARNING OBJECTIVES:  CLCJ.HAHE.14.5 – 9

 

  1. 40. Government’s restriction of the press through use of prior restraint is rare in the United States and most other

democratic countries.

  1. a. True
  2. False

 

ANSWER:                            True

REFERENCES:                    152

LEARNING OBJECTIVES:  CLCJ.HAHE.14.17 – 10

 

  1. 41. The First Amendment provision that prohibits the government from creating a national church is the

                        clause.

 

ANSWER:                            establishment

REFERENCES:                    125

LEARNING OBJECTIVES:  CLCJ.HAHE.14.15 – 4

 

  1. 42. The Religious Freedom Restoration Act of 1993 was declared by the Supreme

 

ANSWER:                            unconstitutional

REFERENCES:                    129-130

LEARNING OBJECTIVES:  CLCJ.HAHE.14.10 – 11

 

  1. 43. In upholding the free speech right of anonymous pamphleteering, the Supreme Court held that “Anonymity is a shield from the tyranny of the                       .”

 

ANSWER:                            majority

REFERENCES:                    154

LEARNING OBJECTIVES:  CLCJ.HAHE.14.17 – 10

 

  1. 44. In determining when speech should not be protected, the courts replaced the clear and present danger test with the

 

ANSWER:                            imminent lawless action

REFERENCES:                    141

LEARNING OBJECTIVES:  CLCJ.HAHE.14.11 – 7

 

  1. 45. No rights are absolute, so government can regulate them when outweigh those of the

 

ANSWER:                            social interests

REFERENCES:                    123

LEARNING OBJECTIVES:  CLCJ.HAHE.14.13 – 2

 

  1. 46. The constitutionality of prison regulations that restrict prisoners’ First Amendment rights are judged by using a

                        test.

 

ANSWER:                            rational basis

REFERENCES:                    160

LEARNING OBJECTIVES:  CLCJ.HAHE.14.10 – 11

 

  1. 47. Balancing society’s need for law and order and for effective law enforcement against the                              of

individuals is known as the balancing test.

 

ANSWER:                            privacy rights

REFERENCES:                    141

LEARNING OBJECTIVES:  CLCJ.HAHE.14.11 – 7

 

  1. 48. The free exercise of religion involves both the freedom to believe and the freedom to .

 

ANSWER:                            act

REFERENCES:                    129

LEARNING OBJECTIVES:  CLCJ.HAHE.14.23 – 3, 4

 

  1. 49. Historically, freedom of the press has been attached to the general concept of .

 

ANSWER:                            censorship

REFERENCES:                    152

LEARNING OBJECTIVES:  CLCJ.HAHE.14.17 – 10

 

  1. 50. Rank the four basic freedoms guaranteed by the First Amendment in descending order of importance to you, then explain why you rank them as you

 

ANSWER:                            The four basic First Amendment freedoms addressed in this chapter include freedom of religion, freedom of speech, freedom of the press and freedom of peaceable assembly. Students’ rankings and reasons will vary.

REFERENCES:                    122

LEARNING OBJECTIVES:  CLCJ.HAHE.14.6 – 1

 

  1. 51. Discuss the delicate balance being struck by the Court in achieving the separation of church and state in

 

ANSWER:                            Made applicable to the states in Everson v. Board of Education (1947), the Court ruled in this case that no constitutional violation occurred, as the reimbursement policy applied to parochial and public school students alike. Later cases ruled that reading Bible verses and moments of silence for meditation or voluntary prayer were unconstitutional. In the Lemon case, the Court found secular and religious education so tightly intertwined that supporting one without supporting the other would be

virtually impossible, Laws requiring the posting of the Ten Commandments have been struck down, but students have been given the right to hold religious meetings in

public high schools outside class hours. The issue is a case-by-case challenge to the Court and ultimately, no clear set of rules has been defined to determine the outcomes of these types of cases.

REFERENCES:                    125-128

LEARNING OBJECTIVES:  CLCJ.HAHE.14.23 – 3, 4

 

  1. 52. Discuss the constitutionality of flag burning. Explain your feelings about this symbolic act and whether it should be constitutionally

 

 

ANSWER:

 

Although highly controversial, flag burning is not unconstitutional. Proposed constitutional amendments to ban flag desecration have been narrowly defeated several times. In its landmark Texas v. Johnson (1989) ruling, the Supreme Court held that burning an American flag as a political protest is “symbolic speech” protected by the First and Fourteenth Amendments. In response Congress passed the Flag Protection Act of 1989 which, in United States v. Eichman (1990), the Court struck down on the grounds set forth in Johnson. Students’ opinions on this issue will vary.

 

REFERENCES:                    137

LEARNING OBJECTIVES:  CLCJ.HAHE.14.5 – 9

 

  1. 53. Discuss the evolution of the “imminent lawless action”

 

ANSWER:                            Restrictions on freedom of speech began with the Alien and Sedition Acts of 1798.

There followed the Espionage Act of 1917, and the Court’s application of a “clear and present danger” test in 1925 and a “clear and probable danger” test in 1951. Brandenburg v. Ohio (1969) led to adoption of the “imminent lawless action” test, a three-part test to determine whether certain communication intentionally urges incitement and, thus, is not protected by the First Amendment. The approach has

also been called the balancing test. Such a test might be used to determine if statements or other speech were used so as to create a threat to public safety or to incite others to commit lawless acts.

REFERENCES:                    141

LEARNING OBJECTIVES:  CLCJ.HAHE.14.11 – 7

 

  1. 54. Discuss how protestors are protected and restricted by the First

 

ANSWER:                            The First Amendment protects protestors’ right to speak out about issues and to gather peacefully, on public or quasi-public property, to demonstrate their causes. It restricts their ability to infringe on others’ privacy rights, to interfere with public access to businesses, or to engage in any unlawful activity in support of their demonstration (vandalism, noise ordinances, harassment, assault, etc.; refer to Table

6.2.)

REFERENCES:                    142-143

LEARNING OBJECTIVES:  CLCJ.HAHE.14.42 – 1, 5, 6

 

  1. 55. Why is Snyder v. Phelps (2012) an important First Amendment case?

 

ANSWER:           The case shows: (1) the First Amendment to protect someone from state court liability for what they have said, (2) matters of “public concern” which are defined as those relating to issues of social, legal, or other community concerns, hold a high price in the protected speech area, and (3) how contextual free speech issues are when determining what can and cannot be restricted in reference to time, place, and manner.

REFERENCES:  143

 

  1. 56. Freedom of the press is the first right set forth in the Bill of Rights because of the suppression of newspapers in the early American
  2. a. True
  3. False

 

ANSWER:           False

REFERENCES:  124

 

  1. 57. Religious freedom includes the freedom to print instructional materials to train religious teachers and to organize religious
  2. a. True
  3. False

 

ANSWER:           True

REFERENCES:  125

 

  1. 58. Conscientious objection to military service based on religious beliefs is not a constitutional issue since everyone has a duty to serve their
  2. a. True
  3. False

 

ANSWER:           False

REFERENCES:  125

 

  1. 59. Everson v. Board of Education made the separation of church and state, as well as the Establishment Clause, applicable to the
  2. a. True
  3. False

 

ANSWER:           True

REFERENCES:  126

 

  1. 60. Van Orden v. Perry and McCreary County v. ACLU were similar cases dealing with the Establishment Clause in

2004, but yielded vastly different rulings. a. True

  1. False

 

ANSWER:           True

REFERENCES:  127

 

 

61.

 

separated.

championed the theory that government and religion need not, and in fact cannot, be completely

 

 

ANSWER:           Van Orden v. Perry

REFERENCES:  128

 

  1. 62. Lynch v. Donnelly dealt with issues involving the Clause of the United States

 

ANSWER:           Free Exercise

REFERENCES:  129

 

 

  1. 63. The Supreme Court has consistently held that

 

ANSWER:           speech

REFERENCES:  133

may not be prohibited simply because some find it

 

 

 

  1. 64. Freedom of speech is subject to the legal standard of

compelling government interest that justifies the law impacting it.

 

ANSWER:           strict scrutiny

REFERENCES:  134

in which the state must establish it has a

 

 

  1. 65. A form of speech that expresses an idea or emotion without the use of words is known as .

 

ANSWER:           symbolic speech

REFERENCES:  135

 

  1. 66. The case of Texas v. Johnson found that was protected a. burning the United States flag
  2. burning a cross
  3. c. burning a draft card shouting at a judge

 

ANSWER:           a

REFERENCES:  137

 

  1. 67. In Barnes v. Glen Theater, it was found that nude dancing a. enjoyed some First Amendment
  2. laws were subject to a strict scrutiny test. c. had no First Amendment protections.
  3. constituted obscenity.

 

ANSWER:           a

REFERENCES:  138

 

  1. 68. The Supreme Court in A.V. v. City of St. Paul found that burning a cross was a. a hate crime.
  2. subject to First Amendment protection. c. unconstitutional.
  3. none of the above.

 

ANSWER:           b

REFERENCES:  138

 

  1. 69. In the City of Ladue v. Gilleo, the Supreme Court found that involve free speech a. nude dancing
  2. campaign ads c. yard signs
  3. bumper stickers

 

ANSWER:           c

REFERENCES:  139

 

  1. 70. The “clear and present danger test”
  2. a. is used to test when speech should not be protected by the First b. has been replaced by the “imminent lawless action” test.
  3. c. involves Constitutional cases involving foreign d. demands obedience to the government.

 

ANSWER:  b

 

  1. 71. Should prisoners have the same rights under the First Amendment as law abiding citizens? Why or why not?

 

ANSWER:           Prisoners’ rights based on the First Amendment involve censorship of mail, expression within the institution, association within the institution, religion, appearance, and visitation rights. All of these have been somewhat limited by Supreme Court decisions, as long as they are reasonably related to legitimate penological interests. Students may advocate for even stricter reductions because the individual is a criminal.

REFERENCES:  160-161

 

  1. 72. You represent a famous journalist who has been incarcerated for failure to disclose a confidential source to a prosecutor working on a murder case in your town. The prosecutor insists she needs all available information to convict a loathsome murderer. How would you argue to the judge that your client should not be imprisoned?

 

ANSWER:           Freedom of the press is important for a free society, but criminals must be prosecuted. The court needs to balance the interests of the journalist with the need to support law enforcement. There is a clear tension between the constitutional right of the journalist and law enforcement desires. It is important for the student to recognize that the journalist has a right that must be respected and should not be casually infringed merely to improve the case of the prosecutor. Unless the information is relevant and crucial to the prosecution, the student should argue to the judge that the journalist has a right worth protecting under the Constitution.

REFERENCES:  152-154

 

  1. 73. A young man told a few people that he had served in Afghanistan and was awarded the Silver Star. Unfortunately, one of these people told a newspaper reporter that she suspected he was being untruthful and the young man found himself on the cover of the newspaper with the headline, “Liar!” The local prosecutor intends to prosecute your client under a law forbidding lying about military service. Everyone in town is angry about the case. This young man has come into your legal office asking you to represent him. He has been rejected by many attorneys in

Would you take the case? Why or why not?

 

ANSWER:           This scenario asks the student to step in the shoes of an attorney asked to represent a person who is being charged with a reprehensible offense.  Taking the case would certainly make the students a target for unhappy citizens and might hurt his or her standing in the community. On the other hand, the student should recognize the importance of defending an individual, especially in the circumstances. The free-speech rights of the young man are arguably at issue here and the attorney could make a good argument that the law is overreaching, since the young man has not really made any profit from it and this would not be fraud. Additionally, it could have been a bit of bragging that went a bit too far. All these arguments are possible if the student is willing to act in the best interest of the client and the justice system at large.

REFERENCES:  148

 

  1. 74. A group of women who are mothers of young children killed by handguns has decided to protest. The local police chief refuses to enforce any gun control or gun violence legislation in her county, because she feels it won’t work and infringes on the Second Amendment. The women’s group decides they will protest at an upcoming policeman’s funeral. Do you think that the protesters should be subject to arrest? Why or why not?

 

ANSWER:           This raises many questions about freedom of speech and right to peaceful assembly, so the student should be able to articulate several arguments in support of the protesters.

REFERENCES:  158

 

  1. 75. A student at a local high school insists on wearing a T-Shirt, some say advocates white supremacy ideologies, in a predominantly African-American school. Using the preferred freedoms approach, convince the school board to allow the student to wear the shirt to

 

ANSWER:           This approach stresses that civil liberties have a preferred position among other constitutional values. The burden lies on the government or school to show the clear and present danger that exists when the freedom is exercised.  Here, the student would argue that upsetting other students does not create a clear and present danger.  Wearing an offensive T-Shirt, under this approach, must be tolerated to have a democracy.

REFERENCES:  141

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