Test 3 ch 9-12
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show | Police patrol operations
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Who is the police department foremost representative to the public? | show 🗑
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show | The study failed to demonstrate that adding or taking away police patrols from an area made any difference within the community.
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show | omnipresence
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What was the Newark foot patrol study? | show 🗑
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show | Saturation patrol:
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show | Split-force patrol:
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show | Random routine patrol, Rapid response to calls by citizens to 911 , Retroactive investigation of past crimes by detectives.
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show | The study indicated that our traditional three cornerstones of policing might not be the most effective way to do police work. has caused tremendous changes in our thinking about policing.
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show | Personnel and vehicles are the most expensive part of a police department’s budget.
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Which agencies are more likely to have take-home vehicles programs? | show 🗑
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Who authored the text, Police Administration? | show 🗑
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show | control group
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show | Experimental group
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show | In differential response responses
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Departments suffering from financial difficulties that prevent them from hiring additional officers may benefit most | show 🗑
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show | HPD put more officers on the streets in different parts of the city during peak crime hours. The administrators do believe these patrols have led to a decrease in fear of crime and an increase in citizen satisfaction with the police.
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Officers patrol specific locations at specific times to address a specific crime problem. | show 🗑
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show | In an attempt to get the police closer to the public and to avoid the problems caused by the alienation of radio car officers from the community.
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show | solvability factors
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show | Is there a witness? Is a suspect named or known? Can a suspect be identified? Will the complainant cooperate in the investigation?
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show | they are depicted as detective work is glamorous, exciting, and dangerous.
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Defined as inducing an individual to commit a crime he or she did not contemplate, for the sole purpose of instituting a criminal prosecution against the offender. | show 🗑
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show | sting operations
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Plainclothes officers’ efforts to blend into an area and attempt to catch a criminal (officers dress in civilian clothes to try to blend in) | show 🗑
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The use of analytical methods to obtain pertinent information on crime patterns and trends that can then be disseminated to officers on the street. | show 🗑
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show | undercover investigation.
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show | decoy program
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show | ROPS (Repeat Offender Programs)
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show | tracks offenders without them physically followed 24 hours a day.
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What was Abscam? | show 🗑
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show | ( Managing Criminal Investigations): MCI
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show | Detective Mystique
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show | reexamine old cases that have remained unsolved.
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Who makes most of the arrest? | show 🗑
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How do sting operations work? | show 🗑
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show | 93%
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According to the Rand Study, what percentage of detectives could be replaced without negatively influencing crime clearance rates? | show 🗑
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show | in 1955; some believe that the movement grew out of the riots and civil disorders of the 1960s.
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sometimes referred to as T-groups, or encounter groups- is designed to provide participants an opportunity to learn more about themselves and their impact on others, as well as to learn to function more effectively in face-to-face situations. | show 🗑
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What has police done in the past to improve PCR | show 🗑
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show | Problems with people who are mentally ill
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are activities intended to create a favorable image of the department | show 🗑
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show | human relations
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show | community relations
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generally, do people have a great deal or little respect for the police? | show 🗑
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show | they overturned the “separate but equal” doctrine
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What % of the U.S. population are African American? | show 🗑
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show | 14.5%
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show | DARE (Drug Abuse Resistance Education)
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show | Triad
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show | police explorers
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Crime prevention programs in which community members participate and engage in a wide range of specific crime prevention activities, as well as community oriented activities. | show 🗑
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show | guardian angels
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show | McGruff
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Who wrote an article that got published in the Atlantic Monthly, the article was called “Broken Windows: The Police and Neighborhood Safety” | show 🗑
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Broken Window Theory (James Q Wilson and George L Kelling) | show 🗑
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James Q Wilson and George L Kelling argued that | show 🗑
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show | Herman Goldstein.
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forces the police to focus on the problems that cause the incidents. His central theory is that the broad types of police roles (crime, order maintenance and service) can be further broken down | show 🗑
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show | problem solving
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show | community
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show | strategic
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comprises 5 policing associations in the U.S. International Association of Chiefs of Police(IACP), National Organization of Black Law Enforcement Executives(NOBLE), National Sheriffs Association(NSA),Police Executive Research Forum(PERF),Police Foundation | show 🗑
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show | Robert C. Trajanowicz
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show | Robert c. trojanowicz
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show | in 1982, with the seminal article in the Atlantic Monthly
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show | Problem oriented or problem solving policing involves the process of scanning, analysis, response, and assessment
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officers tend to respond to similar incidents at the same location numerous times-(b/c the police have traditionally focused on the incidents-rarely have the sought to determine the underlying causes of these incidents | show 🗑
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show | Pres Clinton
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show | scanning, analysis, response and assessment
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show | citizen patrols
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police didn’t always welcome this, but citizens felt safer with this | show 🗑
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