Constitutional Law for Criminal Justice
Sixteenth Edition
Home
Students
Weblinks
Downloads
Purchase
Home
›
Students
›
Chapter 7 Quiz
Chapter 7 Quiz
1.
The Fifth Amendment protects individuals against the use of statements that are:
compelled
testimonial
capable of being used against the person making the statement in a criminal proceeding
all of the above
None
2.
The Fifth Amendment affords no protection against compulsion:
to testify under a grant of immunity
to testify about a crime that the witness has already been convicted of
to furnish a handwriting specimen
to do all of the above
None
3.
The Fifth Amendment prevents the prosecutor from:
calling the defendant as a witness at trial, if he or she has decided not to testify.
cross-examining a defendant who chooses to testify at his or her trial
requiring the defendant to read from a newspaper at the trial so that the victim can make a voice comparison
all of the above
None
4.
The Fourth Amendment does not require anything beyond a lawful arrest to compel a suspect to:
participate in a lineup
furnish a handwriting sample
take a field sobriety test
all of the above
None
5.
The granting of use (including derivative use) immunity:
bars the government from prosecuting for crimes revealed during compelled testimony
is sufficient to compel testimony over a claim of privilege
must be approved by a high-ranking official within the police department
all of the above
None
6.
Miranda warnings must be administered to suspects who have been taken into custody before:
photographing and fingerprinting them
requiring them to participate in a lineup
interrogating them
doing any of the above
None
7.
Each of the following procedures yield bodily evidence, EXCEPT for:
field sobriety tests
blood tests
manual body cavity searches
X-rays
None
8.
A search warrant is NOT required before:
requiring a suspect to undergo a manual body cavity search
requiring a suspect to furnish a semen sample
rubbing a cotton swab over the suspect’s skin to remove incriminating residues
performing any of the above
None
9.
Jail intake strip searches:
require a search warrant
require reasonable suspicion that the person searched has drugs or weapons hidden under his or her clothing
may not be performed on people arrested for a traffic violation
none of the above
None
10.
The Fifth Amendment privilege against self-incrimination is violated by:
requiring the suspect to appear in a lineup
instructing jurors that they may infer guilt from the defendant’s failure to take the witness stand and deny the charge
seizing a drug dealer’s business records under a search warrant
all of the above
None
11.
The Fifth Amendment privilege against self-incrimination applies during:
parole revocation hearings
police disciplinary actions
grand jury proceedings
all of the above
None
12.
Criminal defendants have the “right to remain silent” during:
custodial interrogations
grand jury proceedings
parole revocation hearings
all of the above
None
13.
Police officers typically must obtain a search warrant in order to:
open a suspect’s mouth to prevent him or her from swallowing evidence, provided that the police officer uses only a reasonable amount of force to do so.
conduct manual body cavity searches.
both a & b
none of the above.
None
14.
A witness who invokes the Fifth Amendment is automatically immune from answering questions at trial.
TRUE
FALSE
None
15.
The Fifth Amendment privilege against self-incrimination only may be invoked in criminal cases.
TRUE
FALSE
None
16.
The natural metabolism of alcohol in the bloodstream creates exigent circumstances that automatically excuse the need for a search warrant before having blood drawn to test for intoxication.
TRUE
FALSE
None
Time’s up
←
Previous:
Chapter 6 Quiz
Next:
Chapter 8 Quiz
→