History of Policing
Police Agencies
Corruption/Use of force
Police and the Law
Warrants
100

The earliest known system of policing in England was the ______, a social unit of 12 people.

What is the borh?

100

The primary mission of most police agencies is

What is to enforce laws?

100

A police officer agrees to “look the other way” at illegal gambling occurring in a local bar for a kickback of the profit. This is an example of:

What is police corruption?

100

This is based on the belief that those who work in the criminal justice system pledge to upload the Constitution.

What is the rule of law?

100

A ______ warrant allows officers to forcibly enter a house without identifying themselves as law enforcement.

What is no-knock?

200

______ were precursors to sheriffs who ensured orderly conduct and pursued and apprehended criminals in early English county-like regions.

What are shire reeves?

200

______ is/are the backbone of policing

What is patrol?

200

Research indicates that the majority of use-of-force incidents involve what action?

What is grabbing, pushing, or shoving?
200

In order to conduct a legal search, officers must show that ______ exists that evidence of a crime will be found.

What is probable cause?

200

If an officer legally enters a house and sees drug paraphernalia on a coffee table, the officer can seize the items under the ______ exception.

What is plain view?

300

This person established the London’s Metropolitan Police Force at Scotland Yard.

Who is Sir Robert Peel?

300

This is a philosophy and proactive style of policing that seeks citizen input.

What is community policing?

300

______ is the practice of police officers stopping, searching, and detaining people based on skin color.

What is driving while black?

300

Protection against unreasonable researches and seizures is guaranteed by the ______ Amendment.

What is 4th?

300

Police need a warrant to search the contents of a cell phone during an arrest.

What is true?

400

These are self-appointed distributors of justice with no legal authority.

What are vigilantes?

400

When an officer responds to a 911 call-for-service, this is ______ policing.

What is reactive?

400

When an officer investigates solely based upon race, ethnicity, religion, or national origin, this is known as

What is profiling?

400

Stop and frisk is also known as a ______ stop.

What is Terry?

400

Once a person is lawfully arrested, the officer can search:

What is the suspect and the area surrounding the suspect?

500

This U.S. city created the first detective division.

What is Boston?

500

The majority of police agencies in the United States are this size.

What is small, local agencies?

500

Police corruption is considered a this type of crime.

What is white-collar?

500

A suspect must be Mirandized when:

What is taken into custody and interrogated?

500

A warrant is needed to search a person’s trash.

What is false?