Chapter 4
100
1. The Fourth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution forbids what type of searches and seizures? a. illegal b. unsupervised c. unreasonable d. undercover
c. unreasonable
200
In which 1984 case did the Supreme Court define a search as “a governmental infringement of a legitimate expectation of privacy”? a. United States v. Ross b. United States v. Jacobsen c. Mapp v. Ohio d. Terry v. Ohio
b. United States v. Jacobsen
300
The most important limitation on searches is that they must be: a. expedient in scope. b. narrow in scope. c. broad in scope. d. prearranged by warrant.
b. narrow in scope.
400
Terry v. Ohio supported officers’ right to: a. question suspects with an attorney present. b. conduct a patdown or a frisk if they believe the person might be armed and dangerous. c. conduct a full-body cavity search of an individual who is not in custody. d. search vehicles upon probable cause to do so.
b. conduct a patdown or a frisk if they believe the person might be armed and dangerous.
500
The Chimel decision established that a search incidental to a lawful arrest must be made simultaneously with the arrest. A search incidental to arrest must be confined to the: a. arrested person’s body. b. arrested person’s body and car. c. area within the suspect’s immediate control. d. general area.
c. area within the suspect’s immediate control.
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