Friday, August 16, 2019
Juvenile Justice Chapters 1-4 Study Guide Essay
1  Juvenile violence is generally unrelated to gang formation and presence. False  2  The actual amount of juvenile violence in the United States is unknown. True  3  Property-offender juveniles account for about 10% of all juvenile arrests annually. False  4  A policy of delaying juvenile punishments works best for juvenile rehabilitation. False  5  Juvenile courts are the same as criminal courts.  False  6  Juvenile courts have prosecutors and other court personnel.  True  7  The juvenile justice system does not resemble the criminal justice system. False  8  Usually the same criteria are used to define juvenile offenders in different state jurisdictions. False  9  Under parens patriae, the king as sovereign acts to protect children and other dependents. True  10  Juvenile justice has been substantially unaffected by alternative philosophies that differ from the rehabilitation emphasis. False  11  Juvenile courts are unknown in most other industrialized countries throughout the world. False  12  Over two million youths come into contact with the criminal justice system  annually. True  13  Once offenders are placed in corrections, they are no longer in the criminal justice system. False  14  Jurisdiction is the power of a court to hear a case.  True  15  There are about 1,000 law enforcement agencies in the United States. False  16  Almost all ordinances aimed at juveniles are status ordinances since they are not applicable for adults. True  17  Sheriffââ¬â¢s deputies and city police officers are the law enforcement officers who have the most amount of contact with juveniles. True  18  Juveniles who loiter late at night cannot be taken into custody by police officers for any reason since loitering is not prohibited per se. False  19  The stage where information is obtained about juvenile suspects, including their names, addresses, and ages, is called arraignment. False  20  Juveniles are not entitled to bail.  False  21  ROR means released on own recognizance.  True  22  Preconviction agreements between defendants and the state are known as indictments. False  23  Proceedings for establishing a trial date where a formal plea to charges is entered are alled arraignments. True  24  Exculpatory evidence is evidence that tends to show the greater guilt of a  defendant. False  25  Inculpatory evidence is favorable for defendants charged with crimes. True  26  Preliminary hearings or examinations are usually conducted for the purpose of determining probable cause. True  27  The standard of proof in juvenile proceedings is preponderance of the evidence. False  28  Beyond a reasonable doubt is only aplicable to criminal proceedings. False  29  Juveniles are not entitled in any jurisdiction to a trial by jury. False  30  Aggravating circumstances might include whether or not the youth cooperate with police to help them detect and apprehend other offenders. False  31  A mitigating circumstance might be the mental health of the defendant. True  32  Corrections is all agencies and personnel who deal with convicted offenders. True  33  Probation is part of corrections.  True  34  Reducing the number of jails is the goal of the jail removal initiative. False  35  Referrals of juveniles to juvenile court can only be made by police officers. False  36  Parole is a conditional release from incarceration.  True  37  Because of changes in the law, there are no longer any juveniles in adult jails. False  38  About half of all juvenile cases that come before the juvenile court are handled informally. True  39  Petitions are documents directing police to arrest a particular juvenile. False  40  Police officers are prohibited by law from placing juveniles in jails, even for short periods. False  41  One reason juveniles are held in jails temporarily is that it is difficult to establish their true age on the basis of their appearance. True  42  Neighbors of youths are prohibited by law from filing complaints that might bring these youths to the attention of the juvenile court. False  43  Being arrested and taken into custody are the same thing.  False  44  Intake officers can order the incarceration of any juvenile to a long-term juvenile facility if the officers believe that the juvenile is guilty of a felony. False  45  Juvenile court prosecutors have broad discretionary powers.  True  46  An adjudicatory hearing is the juvenile equivalent of a criminal trial for an adult. True  47  Intake is usually presided over by the local juvenile court judge. False  48  Intake probation officers attempt to screen the more serious juvenile offenders from the less serious ones. True  49  Intake officers consider both legal and extralegal factors in intake decision  making. True  50  A nominal punishment might be a verbal warning or reprimand. True  51  Secure confinement is most closely associated with probation. False  52  Doing what is best for the children is consistent with the parens patriae doctrine. True  53  Official documents that call for a youthââ¬â¢s subsequent appearance in juvenile court and allege carious offenses are called petitions. True  54  Juvenile court proceedings are becoming increasingly adversarial. True  55  It is often true that the greater the formality of a juvenile court proceeding, the harsher the punishment imposed by juvenile court judges. True  56  A decision about the guilt or innocence of a juvenile is called a disposition. False  57  In most jurisdictions juvenile court judges have nearly absolute discretion to determine how their particular court proceedings are conducted. True  58  Juveniles are convicted of offenses in juvenile court proceedings. False  59  An adjudication means that a juvenile will be incarcerated.  False  60  All adjudications of juveniles mean that all juveniles who are adjudicated are delinquents. False  61  Over two million juveniles com into contact with the following system annually: Criminal justice  62  Regarding decisions and discretion about juvenile offenders, intake officers  have: Considerable discretion  63  Which of the following are components of the criminal justice system? a) Law enforcement  b) Courts  c) Legislature  d) All of the above  64  The word process is sometimes used to describe the criminal justice system. This is because the criminal justice system is : a) a sequence of people-processing stages.  b) loosely coordinated.  c) fragmented.  d) all of the above.  65  The power of courts to hear particular kinds of cases is called: Jurisdiction  66  The largest component of the criminal justice system is:  Law enforcement  67  A conditional disposition would be:  Probation  68  The juvenile equivalent of an adult sentence is called a(n): Disposition  69  Juveniles may be:  a) arrested.  b) taken to shelters and group homes.  c) taken into custody.  d) all of the above.  70  When juveniles are apprehended by police for suspicion and not necessarily for any particular crime, they are: Taken into custody.  71  Obtaining oneââ¬â¢s name, address, fingerprints, photograph, and other vital  information is a part of what process? Booking  72  Detentions and secure confinement almost always follow:  a) a finding of guilt  b) intake  c) adjudications  d) none of the above  73  ROR means:  Released on own recognizance  74  Preconviction agreements involving guilty pleas ans favorable sentencing are: Plea bargains  75  Defendants who are most likely to be released on ROR are those: Who are employed, white, middle-class females  76  Sureties that are posted to guarantee oneââ¬â¢s subsequent appearance in court are called: Bailbonds  77  Evidence that is favorable to the prosecution against a violent defendant is called: Inculpatory  78  Evidence that is favorable to the defense in a criminal case is called; Exculpatory  79  Circumstances that might make the punishment imposed by a sentencing judge more severe would be: Aggravating  80  Determining that a crime was committed and that a particular person or persons probably committed the crime is: Probable cause  81  Preliminary hearings are held primarily for the purpose of establishing: Probable cause  82  The standard of proof in criminal proceedings is:  Beyond a reasonable doubt  83  Juries that determine oneââ¬â¢s guilt or innocence are called:  Grand juries  84  Circumstances that tend to lessen punishments imposed by judges during sentencing are: Mitigating  85  The assemblage of agencies and persons who supervise offenders after court proceedings might likely be called: Corrections  86  A conditional nonincarcerative alternative for a first offender convicted of a crime is: Probation  87  A mitigating circumstance might be:  a) oneââ¬â¢s youthfulness.  b) cooperating with police officers to detect other criminals c) mental illness  d) all of the above  88  An aggravating circumstance might be:  Being a gang leader  89  The jail removal initiative is aimed at:  Reducing or eliminating juvenile confinement in jails  90  Being taken into custody and being arrested are:  Different in meaning  91  Official documents filed with juvenile court that allege that a certain juvenile is delinquent are called: Petitions  92  A finding by a grand jury that a crime has been committed and that a  particular person may have committed the crime is called: True bill  93  A judgement in juvenile court is called:  Adjudication  94  When a stern reprimand is given as a sentence in a juvenile court proceeding, the juvenile has been: Adjudicated  95  A conditional diposition might be:  a) participation in group therapy  b) payment of victim compensation  c) community service  d) all of the above  96  Criminal informations are typically filed by:  Prosecutors  97  An industrial school placement of a juvenile is commensurate with what type of placement for adult offenders? Prison  98  The standard of proof in juvenile courts, where juveniles are not in jeopardy of losing their liberty, is: Preponderance of evidence  99  Common law in the United States was derived from:  England  100  Parens patriae means:  ââ¬Å"The father of the countryâ⬠  101  A standard definition of delinquency:  a) exists for all juridictions  b) is consistant throughout all states and the federal system c) limits delinquents to all those under age 18  d) none of the above  102  Offenses committed by juveniles that would not be crimes if committed by adults are called: Status offenses  103  It can be said of all juveniles delinquents that they:  Commit crimes  104  Deinstitutionalization generally means to:  Remove juveniles from custodial institutions  105  In most jurisdictions, juveniles can be charged with crimes at age: a) 18  b) 20  c) 19  d) all of the above  106  Persons under the age of 7 were presumed capable of formulating criminal intent under common law. False  107  Common law emerged in the American colonies in the 1600s.  False  108  A shire is the chief law enforcement officer of an English country. False  109  Reeves are English countries.  False  110  Chancellors were officials in England who administered the affairs fo the King in different remote areas. True  111  Transportation was a method used by England to rid itself of criminals. True  112  The Birdwell Workhouse was the first juvenile reformatory.  False  113  Poor laws were used to incarcerate debtors for indefinite periods. True  114  The poor laws targeted the socioeconomically disadvantaged.  True  115  One example of the voluntary slavery pattern is the indentured servant. True  116  The Hospital of St. Michael was the first hospital to treat juvenile diseases. False  117  The Walnut Street Jail was known for its terrible living conditions for inmates. False  118  Solitary confinement is a recent concept created during the early 1940s in U.S. prisons. False  119  Child-savers were drawn largely from the lower socioeconomic classes. False  120  Hard-core delinquents were targeted for treatment in houses of refuge. True  121  The power of the state over the family in child custody cases was illustrated in the case of Ex parte Crouse. True  122  The case of Oââ¬â¢Connell v. Turner had to do with child abuse and neglect. False  123  The founder of Hull House was Jane Addams.  True  124  Truants are persons who have run away from home and are considered untreatable. False  125  An example of voluntary servitude was the indentured servant. True  126  The first juvenile court was established in Illinois in !899. True  127  By the end of the Korean War, only ;half of all states had juvenile courts. False  128  The Compulsory School Act created childrenââ¬â¢s tribunals.  False  129  Prior to juvenile courts, juvenile affairs were administered largely by social service agencies. True  130  Juvenile courts in most jurisdictions operate the same way.  False  131  One of the most influential philanthropic organizations of the eighteenth century upon correctional practices was the Philadelphia Society for Alleviating the Miseries fo Public Persons. True  132  Small communities were known for their Gesellschaft atmosphere. False  133  Juveniles viewed as chattel meant that they were counted like so much farm property and livestock. True  134  Sweat shops exploited juvenile labor during the late 1800s and early 1900s. True  135  Throughout much of the 20th century, juveniles had little or no legal standing in U.S. courts. True  136  Efficient juvenile offender proceedings is sometimes called actuarial justice. True  137  Jurisdiction usually refers to the power of a court to hear particular kinds of cases. True  138  For a majority of the states, the upper age limit for juvenile courts is 21. False  139  Status offenders would include all juveniles who commit acts that would be  crimes if adults committed them. False  140  The power of juvenile court judges is such that juvenile delinquency may be whatever they say it is. True  141  The parens patriae doctrine has had little influence on juveniles and juvenile courts. False  142  The get-tough movement is a response to perceived escalating juvenile violence by interested citizens. True  143  In most juvenile courts, juveniles are convicted of various offenses following an adjudicatory hearing. False  144  Almost every juvenile court is a court of record.  False  145  Juvenile court jurisdiction is the same among different local and state legislative definitions of juvenile offenders. False  146  All jurisdictions have the same lower age limits for juveniles. False  147  The most common age of accountability in the U.S. is 21.  False  148  Delinquency is an act committed by a juvenile which would be a status offense if committed by an adult. False  149  Compared with runaways, curfew violators tend to be more serious offenders. True  150  Virtually all runaways are pretty much the same in terms of their social and personal characteristics. False  151  Stigmas usually result in juveniles defining themselves as deviant or  delinquent. True  152  Truants and liquor law violators are more inclined to be chronic offenders compared with runaways. True  153  Stigmatization is closely associated with labeling theory.  True  154  Staus offenders may become criminals if they violate court orders. True  155  Studies of runaway behavior show that most runaways are well adjusted youths who want to make it on their own. False  156  Decarceration means to separate juvenile delinquents from status offenders by placing them in different cells in juvenile prisons. False  157  Diversion programs are especially helpful in the cases of dependent and neglected children. True  158  Under divestiture status offenders are removed from secure institutions. False  159  One unfavorable implication of DSO is net-widening.  True  160  Recidivism is associated with the chronicity of offending.  True  161  Self-reports suggest that there is considerable career escalation from status offending to criminal offending. False  162  An important factor associated with recidivism is frequent contact with juvenile courts. True  163  Contact with juvenile courts is believed by many experts to stigmatize youths with self-definitions of delinquency. True  164  Relabeling occurs when police officers relabel innocent juvenile behaviors and interpret them as delinquent behaviors. True  165  The Uniform Crime Report typically underestimates the amount of juveniles offending. True  166  DSO has caused drastic increases in the rate of recidivism among juvenile offenders. False  167  An incident consists of multiple acts involving a single victim. False  168  A victimization is a single criminal act that affects a single victim. True  169  The National Crime Victimization Survey is a compilation of reported by all law enforcement agencies. False  170  Cleared by arrest means that someone has been arrested for a particular crime. True  171  One weakness of the UCR is that not all law enforcement agencies report crimes in the same way. True  172  Self-report information is believed to by some juvenile justice experts to be a more accurate indication of how much delinquency exists. True  173  The Sourcebook of Criminal Justice Statistics publishes no information about juvenile offenses. False  174  Self-reports are reports filed by principals detailing the amount of crime committed by students on their campuses. True  175  One problem with self-report information is that juveniles may exaggerate the amount of crime they commit. True  176  The National Youth Survey has been discounted frequently by professionals as an unreliable data source regarding juvenile offending behaviors. False  177  Self-reports of delinquency often disclose what has been termed hidden delinquency. True  178  A study of youths who reported that they smoked cigarettes frequently showed that many of these youths had not actually smoked cigarettes and had lied about this behavior. True  179  School violence has pretty much een eliminated as the result of more sophisticated surveillance systems in schools and closer student monitoring by police. False  180  Most school violence is fatal.  False  181  There is a clear pattern of career escalation among status offenders who typically graduate to juvenile delinquency. False  182  Chronic violent offenders are usually those juveniles who are arrested at least four or more times for violent offenses. True  183  The formation of gangs is a phenomenon almost exclusively confined to the large cities of Los Angeles, New York, Boston, ans Chicago. False  184  At-risk youth tend to have personality problems and exhibit poor social adjustment. True  185  Gangs usually form along racial or ethnic lines.  True  186  Juveniles who commit homicide are relatively rare.  True  187  About 50% of all youth deaths have been attributable to firearms. True  188  Pathways are developmental sequences over the course of oneââ¬â¢s adolescence. True  189  There are few, if any, differences between female and male delinquent offending patterns. False  190  Growing numbers of female juvenile are entering the juvenile justice system annually. True  191  The most common reason for females joining female gangs is for protection. True  192  Female rather than male delinquents are more likely to receive paternalistic treatment from juvenile court judges. True  193  A significant feature of early juvenile courts was their emphasis on: Confidentiality  194  Common law was established during:  Medieval England  195  Juvenile courts are courts of:  Limited Jurisdiction  196  Referring to the juvenile justice system as a ââ¬Å"systemâ⬠ is problematic for some juvenile justice professionals primarily because: The juvenile justice system components are only loosely coordinated 197  Below what age under English common law are children not held accountable for their actions? 7  198  A sheriff in early England was called a:  Reeve  199  Indentured servants often entered servitude voluntarily for the purpose of: Gaining passage to the new colonies  200  The Poor Laws were most closely associated with:  Debtorââ¬â¢s Prisons  201  Responsible for many of the jail and prison reforms in early England were the: Quakers  202  The Walnut Street Jail was innovative in that it:  a) segregated male from female inmates  b) segregated more serious offenders for less serious ones  c) created solitary confinement  d) all of the above  203  The Philadelphia Society for Alleviating the Miseries of Public Prisons was sponsored by the: Quakers  204  The Hospital of Saint Michael was a famous:  Correctional facility in Italy to punish unruly youths  205  The Hospital of Saint Michael was known for its use of:  Corporal Punishment  206  The child-saving movement sought to:  Provide shelter to wayward youths  207  Houses of refuge targeted:  Status Offenders  208  Ex parte Crouse dealt with:  Family rights relating to the control of their children  209  Truancy statutes were aimed at:  Youths who avoided attending school  210  The Uniform Crime Reports publishes information about:  a)juvenile delinquency  b)reported crime  c)felonies and misdemeanors  d) all of the above  211  According to the Uniform Crime Reports, juvenile offense patterns are: Different among most states  212  Self-reports of delinquency differ from reported delinquency in the Uniform Crime Reports in that self-reports disclose: Higher delinquency than reported  213  The federal juvenile court is called:  The federal government has no juvenile court  214  Truancy is:  A status offense  215  In our current system of juvenile justice, a six-year-old murderer is likely to be: Treated  216  A status offense for an adult offender would likely be:  Vagrancy  217  What best typifies runaway behavior?  It is difficult to explain.  218  The ââ¬Å"unsettling ageâ⬠ of runaway behavior is:  The first few days away from home  219  More inclined to become chronic offenders are:  Truants  220  Stigmas among certain juveniles result in:  Unfavorable labeling by others  221  Stigmatizing youths is believed to be one consequence of:  Frequent contact with juvenile courts  222  Deinstitutionalizing status offenders means:  Removal of status offenders from institutions  223  Labeling theory has done much to account for:q  Diversion  224  One of the most sweeping reforms in juvenile justice in recent years is: DSO  225  Undre full divestiture juvenile court judges can do what to status offenders? a) place them on probation  b) confine them to institutions  c) adjudicate them  d) none of the above  226  Whenever police officers redefine innocent juvenile behaviors as delinquent behaviors, this process is: Re-labeling  227  When certain youths are pulled into the juvenile justice system and community programs simply because those programs exist, this is known as: Net-widening  228  One major problem with the Uniform Crime Reports is that:  Not all agencies report crime regularly  229  An index offense would be:  a) arson  b) murder  c) robbery  d) all of the above  230  A crime punishable by more than one year of incarceration would be a: Felony  231  The National Crime Victimization Survey is a reflection of the amount of: a) aggravated assaults committed by juveniles  b) rapes committed by juveniles  c) murders committed by juveniles  d) none of the above  232  Crimes that are cleared by arrest usually lead to:  a) long jail terms  b) convictions  c) short jail terms  d) none of the above  233  Self-report information is:  a) potentially unreliable  b) constitutional  c) voluntary  d) all of the above  234  When a crime is committed and a single victim is involved, it is called: Victimization  235  The Uniform Crime Reports may reflect:  a) arrest statistics  b) police offender activity  c) crime trends  d) all of the above  236  The Uniform Crime Reports report:  Arrests  237  Perhaps one of the most accurate statements we can make about the Uniform Crime Reports is that they: Seriously underestimate the true amount of crime  nationally  238  The National Youth Survey is an example of the use of:  Self-reports  239  Regarding the relation between the type of juvenile offending behavior and career escalation, the results of scientific research are: Inconsistant  240  Self-reports are likely inaccurate because:  Juveniles tend to brag about cries they have not committed  241  Most school violence results in:  Nonlethal injuries  242  At-risk youths tend to be:  a) overachievers in school  b) socially well-adjusted  c) affluent  d) none of the above  243  Gangs tend to form along:  a) racial lines  b) gender lines  c) ethnic lines  d) all of the above  244  Developmental sequences over the term of oneââ¬â¢s adolescence are called: Pathways  245  Female juveniles tend to:  a) commit less violent acts  b) have prior histories of physical or sexual abuse  c) be more passive in their offending  d) all of the above  246  One myth about female juvenile offenders is that much of their offending involves: Violent offending  247  Theories have nothing to do with predicting social behaviors False  248  Theories may predict as well as explain.  True  249  It is very likely that relationships exist between theories of delinquency and various types of juvenile delinquency intervention programs. True    
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