Crimes Against Public Order and Morality MCQs

Crimes Against Public Order and Morality MCQs

Answer these 70+ Crimes Against Public Order and Morality MCQs and assess your grip on the subject of Crimes Against Public Order and Morality.
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1: Crimes against ______ are intended to ensure that individuals walking on sidewalks, traveling on the streets, or enjoying the park are free from harassment, fear, threat, and alarm.

A.   Public order and morality

B.   Public safety

C.   Public threats

D.   Property

2: The common law defines ______ is defined as acts that disturb or tend to disturb the tranquility of the citizenry.

A.   Law against noise

B.   Disorderly conduct

C.   Breach of peace

D.   Riot

3: Riot statutes typically are used when a conspiracy or accessoryship cannot be easily applied.

A.   True

B.   False

4: ______ includes offenses such as public drunkenness, vagrancy, loitering, panhandling, graffiti, and urinating and sleeping in public.

A.   Public exposure

B.   Public indecency

C.   Private indecency

D.   Status offense

5: What is the central argument of the broken windows theory?

A.   Dilapidated houses bring crime to the property.

B.   We should address the small concerns before they develop into large-scale problems.

C.   Neighborhoods should work hard to keep things looking nice.

D.   We should address the big concerns before they develop into small-scale problems.

6: The early vagrancy statutes were passing in reaction to the end of the ______ system.

A.   Feudal

B.   Delivery

C.   Justice

D.   Breach

7: Individuals are free to directly ask for money during the day as long as they do not violate the ordinance.

A.   True

B.   False

8: It is estimated that there are roughly 21,000 ______ active in the United States.

A.   Riots

B.   Homeless people

C.   Vagrants

D.   Gangs

9: Until the twentieth century, obscenity in England was punished before religious courts.

A.   True

B.   False

10: It is illegal in every state to buy, sell, exhibit, produce, advertise, distribute, or possess with the intent to distribute ______.

A.   Erotica

B.   Pornography

C.   Child pornography

D.   Prostitution

11: Crimes against morality are sometimes called victimless crimes because they do not harm anyone.

A.   True

B.   False

12: As problematic as gangs are, states are not allowed outlaw gang membership.

A.   True

B.   False

13: If a neighborhood is left in disrepair with weeds, graffiti, and abandoned homes, which theory states that the small undesirable things will start a big downward spiral leading to crime, drugs, gangs, etc.?

A.   Concentric circle theory

B.   Deterrence theory

C.   Broken windows theory

D.   Glass houses theory

14: Arrests for disorderly conduct in a given year are generally equal to the number arrested for all violent crimes combined.

A.   True

B.   False

15: A teen is standing around in front of a convenience store. He appears to not be doing anything besides just standing. If he does this for an extended period of time, of what crime may he be guilty?

A.   Homelessness

B.   Vagrancy

C.   Loitering

D.   Panhandling

16: All of the following are activities that have been criminalized in at least one jurisdiction EXCEPT ______.

A.   Sleeping in vehicles

B.   Camping in public places

C.   Lying or sitting in public

D.   Acknowledging the homeless

17: Any material that depicts actual children under the statutory age (typically 16) engaging in sexual activity is always classified as child pornography regardless of any intrinsic value.

A.   True

B.   False

18: A group of Puerto Rican immigrants gather on the sidewalk outside their Chicago apartments for a party and a barbecue. By the end of the evening several of the partygoers are intoxicated. Is this an offense?

A.   Yes, public drunkenness is a so-called quality of life crime.

B.   Yes, no violence occurred as a result of the party or the drinking.

C.   No, they were near their homes.

D.   No, such gathering and drinking is common and legal in Puerto Rico.

19: Today how many states have felony provisions in their animal cruelty laws?

A.   2 but he rest have misdemeanor provisions

B.   6 but the rest have misdemeanor provisions

C.   36

D.   48

20: What causes an unlawful assembly to be upgraded to a riot?

A.   The size of the group

B.   The objectives of the group

C.   The length of time of the gathering

D.   The commission of violence

21: Committing a crime (such as a robbery) as a member of a gang is an aggravating factor in most jurisdictions.

A.   True

B.   False

22: Some believe criminalizing private behavior actually increases rather than decreases crime.

A.   True

B.   False

23: A group of students are canoeing down a river when their canoe capsizes. Clearly frustrated by this event the begin yelling and cursing quite loudly. The river runs near several residential areas. Can the students be charged with disorderly conduct?

A.   Yes, such behavior can easily cause a disturbance to others.

B.   Yes, disorderly conduct is a strict liability offense.

C.   No, others must be in their field of view for such a crime to be charged.

D.   No, such language is protected by the First Amendment freedom of speech.

24: The crime of cruelty to animals is NOT recognized as an offense.

A.   True

B.   False

25: All of the following are parts of the test for obscenity EXCEPT ______.

A.   Appeals to prurient interests

B.   Lacks serious value

C.   Is in the public domain

D.   Patently offensive

26: _____ is known as having sexual intercourse and living with a person who is married.

A.   We should address the small concerns before they develop into large-scale problems.

B.   Adultery

C.   All of these

D.   Neighborhoods should work hard to keep things looking nice.

27: Is breach of the peace acts that disturb or tend to disturb the tranquility of citizens?

A.   False

B.   True

28: _____ is a failure to prevent and punish misdemeanor offenses causes major crimes.

A.   Abduction

B.   Broken windows theory

C.   Aggravated battery

D.   None of these

29: _____ is defined as offenses that threaten public peace, quiet, and tranquility.

A.   None of these

B.   The accused occupied an official position or exercised official duties.

C.   Crimes against public order and morality

D.   The accused wrongfully accepted, or received an item of value from a person or organization.

30: _____ is known as misdemeanor offenses that diminish the sense of safety and security in a neighborhood.

A.   None of these

B.   Fraud in the factum

C.   Reasonable resistance

D.   Crimes against the quality of life

31: Is disorderly conduct intentionally or knowingly causing or risking public inconvenience, annoyance, or alarm?

A.   True

B.   False

32: _____ is an unmarried person who has voluntary sexual intercourse with another individual.

A.   Fornication

B.   Inspection

C.   Equal protection

D.   None of these

33: _____ is defined as allow States and Victims to Fight Online Sex Trafficking Act of 2017, which includes the provisions of the Stop Enabling Sex Traffickers Act of 2017 (SESTA), directed against online sex trafficking.

A.   Commonwealth v. McCloskey (1975)

B.   FOSTA

C.   State v. Dlugash (1977)

D.   None of these

34: _____ is known as providing or obtaining the labor of another through threat of serious harm or restraint or trafficking in persons who are to be subjected to slavery or forced labor.

A.   Aggravated battery

B.   Human trafficking

C.   Abduction

D.   None of these

35: Is indecent exposure an act of public indecency?

A.   False

B.   True

36: _____ is the crime of using a building for prostitution.

A.   All of these

B.   Second-degree

C.   Keeping a place of prostitution

D.   Aggravated first-degree

37: _____ is defined as willful exposing of the genitals of one person to another in a public place for purposes of sexual arousal or gratification.

A.   All of these

B.   Safeway

C.   Vons

D.   Lewdness

38: _____ is known as being knowingly supported in whole or in substantial part by the proceeds of prostitution.

A.   Irresistible impulse test

B.   Living off prostitution

C.   Overt act

D.   All of these

39: Is loitering standing in public with no apparent purpose?

A.   False

B.   True

40: _____ is crime of stimulating the genitals of another.

A.   Masturbation for hire

B.   All of these

C.   Sexual assault

D.   Abuse

41: _____ is known as procuring a prostitute for another.

A.   Knowingly

B.   Crime where there will be no charge.

C.   None of these

D.   Pimping

42: Is promoting prostitution aiding or abetting prostitution?

A.   True

B.   False

43: _____ is soliciting or engaging in sexual activity in exchange for money or other consideration.

A.   Public order and morality

B.   Property

C.   None of these

D.   Prostitution

44: _____ is defined as public drunkenness, vagrancy, loitering, panhandling, graffiti, and urinating and sleeping in public.

A.   Purposely

B.   None of these

C.   Public indecencies

D.   Intentionally

45: _____ is known as group disorderly conduct by three or more persons.

A.   Rape

B.   Arson

C.   Riot

D.   None of these

46: Is rout three or more persons take steps toward the creation of a riot?

A.   False

B.   True

47: _____ is requesting another person to engage in an act of prostitution.

A.   Solicitation for prostitution

B.   All of these.

C.   Fiduciary relationship

D.   All of these

48: _____ is defined as a gathering of at least three individuals for the purpose of engaging or preparing to engage in conduct likely to cause public alarm.

A.   Unlawful assembly

B.   Act of anger

C.   None of these

D.   Intent to betray

49: _____ is known as wandering the street with no apparent means of earning a living.

A.   All of these

B.   Vagrancy

C.   Original jurisdiction

D.   Resist to the utmost

50: Is voyeurism obtaining sexual gratification from viewing another individual’s sex organs or sexual activities?

A.   True

B.   False