Test 3 ch 9-12
Quiz yourself by thinking what should be in
each of the black spaces below before clicking
on it to display the answer.
Help!
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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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show | The study does not prove that foot patrols reduce crime but, rather, that foot patrols actually make citizens feel safer.
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Assigning a large number of uniformed officers to an area to deal with a particular crime problem. | show 🗑
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A method in which the patrol force is split and half respond to calls for service and the other half performs directed patrol activities. | show 🗑
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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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What is the most expensive part of the police budget? | show 🗑
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Which agencies are more likely to have take-home vehicles programs? | show 🗑
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show | O.W. Wilson
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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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show | from differential response.
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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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show | directed patrol
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Explain why the return of foot patrol to policing in the 1980s. | show 🗑
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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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show | entrapment
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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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one in which an investigator assumes a different identity to obtain information or achieve another investigatory purpose | show 🗑
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Operations in which officers dress as and play the role of potential victims in the hope of attracting and catching a criminal. | show 🗑
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enforcement efforts directed at known repeat offenders through surveillance or case enhancement. | show 🗑
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What is GPS used for in the Cjus? | show 🗑
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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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What is a cold case squad? | show 🗑
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show | patrol officers
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show | involve using various undercover methods to apprehend thieves and recover stolen property.
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According to the Rand Study, what percentage of the detective time was spend on activities that did not lead directly to solving previously reported crime. | show 🗑
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show | 1/2
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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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show | they have made sensitivity training mandatory.
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poses a significant challenge for law enforcement. These individuals are in the community and get involved in disturbances, assaults, suicide attempts, or other criminal actions. (involved with homelessness, drug abuse and many other things) | show 🗑
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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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is a full scale effort to acquaint the police and the community with each other’s problems | show 🗑
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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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show | 13%
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show | 14.5%
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show | DARE (Drug Abuse Resistance Education)
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A joint partnership between the police and senior citizens to address specific problems seniors encounter with safety and quality-of-life issues | show 🗑
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A program for young adults between the ages of 14 and 20 in which they work closely with law enforcement and explore the police career | show 🗑
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show | neighborhood watch program
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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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show | (1) disorder in neighborhoods creates fear, (2) certain neighborhoods send out “signals” that encourage crime. (3) community policing is essential .
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show | community preservation, public safety, and order maintenance (not crime fighting) should become the primary focus of police patrol.
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a law professor at the University of Wisconsin. He wrote and article calling for a new kind of policing | show 🗑
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show | Goldsteins
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(which strategy) looking at the underlying social problems that cause crime rather than responding to each incident | show 🗑
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active community partnerships to assist the police in solving crime problems | show 🗑
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show | strategic
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show | Community Policing Consortium
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founded the National Center for Community Policing in East Lansing, Michigan, in 1983 and was the director until his death in 1994. | show 🗑
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show | Robert c. trojanowicz
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When did the PCR movement began? | show 🗑
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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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What are the four elements of problem solving policing | show 🗑
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involve citizens patrolling on foot or in private cars and alerting the police to possible crimes or criminal in the area | show 🗑
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police didn’t always welcome this, but citizens felt safer with this | show 🗑
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show |
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