Crime Patterns MCQs

Crime Patterns MCQs

Our team has conducted extensive research to compile a set of Crime Patterns MCQs. We encourage you to test your Crime Patterns knowledge by answering these # multiple-choice questions provided below.
Simply scroll down to begin!

1: Because of the low participation rate by agencies, the amount of crime reported in NIBRS is about one fourth of the amount reported in the UCR.

A.   True

B.   False

2: Murder usually has the highest clearance rate, and motor vehicle theft and ______ generally have the lowest clearance rates.

A.   Burglaries

B.   Thefts

C.   Assaults

D.   Sexual assaults

3: The accomplice hypothesis suggests that males’ involvement in crime is often in the role of an accomplice.

A.   True

B.   False

4: Most of your colleges and universities, except for online colleges, are required by law to maintain and report to the public data about crime reported to the police.

A.   True

B.   False

5: The UCR considers a crime cleared by arrest if any of the following conditions are met EXCEPT ______.

A.   An offender is arrested

B.   An offender is charged with an offense

C.   An offender’s case is sent to the court for prosecution

D.   An offender is sentenced

6: Property crime rates are considerably higher than violent crime rates.

A.   True

B.   False

7: ______ point(s) to the differences in the way that boys and girls are treated by all members of society and suggest that these differences help to explain why boys and girls behave differently.

A.   Biological explanations

B.   Socialization explanations/gender roles explanations

C.   The parenting hypothesis

D.   The accomplice hypothesis

8: The ______ has the hierarchy rule (the practice of counting only the most serious offense if an offender is arrested for committing several offenses in the same incident).

A.   NCVS

B.   UCR

C.   NIBRS

9: The more crime that a particular area has, the higher the quality of life; and the less crime an area has, the lower the quality of life.

A.   True

B.   False

10: All of the following are considered Part I offenses within the UCR EXCEPT ______.

A.   Robbery

B.   Assault

C.   Arson

D.   Larceny-theft

11: Victims are more likely to report the crime if they know the offender.

A.   True

B.   False

12: The National Crime Victimization Survey collects information about crimes reported to the police.

A.   True

B.   False

13: Criminologists agree that crime is, for the most part, an older person’s game.

A.   True

B.   False

14: 13. According to the text, ______ are socialized to accept and use violence in certain types of situations, particularly in those situations where the violence is perceived to help protect one’s honor.

A.   Southerners

B.   Northerners

C.   Westerners

D.   Easterners

15: According to the text, decisions to contact the police are influenced by all of the following EXCEPT ______.

A.   Prior experiences with the justice system

B.   Time of day

C.   The victim’s perceptions of the seriousness of the offense

D.   Concerns about retaliation

16: _____ is a hypothesis explaining gender differences in crime that suggests that female involvement in crime is often in the role of an accomplice.

A.   Accomplice Hypothesis

B.   Military Commissions Act

C.   Geneva Conventions Act

D.   All of these

17: _____ is defined as offenders whose antisocial behavior is temporary and does not extend beyond adolescence.

A.   Adolescence-Limited Offenders

B.   Deterrence

C.   Rehabilitation

D.   None of these

18: _____ is known as a line graph that illustrates the percentage of crimes committed by members of different age groups.

A.   Age-Crime Curve

B.   Sam is serving time for a felony conviction.

C.   Gavin has been formerly charged with a crime and is awaiting trial.

D.   None of these

19: Is bounding the process of asking about victimization within a specific amount of time in order to reduce the likelihood of double-counting a specific instance of victimization?

A.   True

B.   False

20: _____ is a member of the small group of offenders who appear to commit the vast majority of offenses.

A.   Career Criminal

B.   Bench Trials

C.   Criminal Trials

D.   None of these

21: _____ is defined as a hypothesis explaining gender differences in crime that suggests that females and males may be treated differently by criminal justice officials, insulating females from future offending.

A.   Chivalry Hypothesis

B.   Criminal Negligence

C.   Nolo contendere

D.   All of these

22: _____ is known as the percentage of crimes that were “solved,” either by arrest or exceptional means.

A.   Clearance Rate

B.   Simple assault

C.   Involuntary manslaughter

D.   All of these

23: Is crime Clock data reported in Crime in the United States, providing a general breakdown of how frequently crime occurs?

A.   True

B.   False

24: _____ is a phrase used to describe the amount of crime that is not reported to police.

A.   Dark Figure of Crime

B.   General intent

C.   Criminal negligence

D.   None of these

25: _____ is defined as the belief that Black drivers are more likely than White drivers to be stopped by police.

A.   Driving While Black

B.   Political Debt

C.   Community Debt

D.   All of these

26: _____ is known as a hypothesis that explains gender differences in crime that suggests that different norms for the behavior of boys and girls may lead to differences in criminal behavior.

A.   Gender Role Hypothesis

B.   Entrapment

C.   Idea that one may act unethically for the greatest good for greatest number of people

D.   All of these

27: Is life-Course-Persistent Offenders offenders who continue to engage in crime throughout their life?

A.   True

B.   False

28: _____ is federally funded longitudinal survey designed to track drug abuse by juveniles.

A.   Monitoring the Future

B.   Children begin to feel empathy for others

C.   Children develop their language communication skills

D.   None of these

29: _____ is defined as a survey created in 1989 to assess victimization rates in different parts of the world.

A.   National Crime Victimization Survey

B.   State intermediate court of appeals

C.   U.S. District Court

D.   All of these

30: _____ is known as a national crime reporting system developed in the late 1980s in an effort to provide more detail about crime incidents.

A.   National Incident-Based Reporting System

B.   Civil Law

C.   Work/home

D.   None of these

31: Is parenting Hypothesis a hypothesis explaining gender differences in crime that suggests that differences in males and females result from different ways that boys and girls are treated by their parents?

A.   True

B.   False

32: _____ is criminal homicide, forcible rape, robbery, aggravated assault, burglary, larceny-theft, motor vehicle theft, and arson.

A.   Part I Offenses

B.   Trial courts of general jurisdiction

C.   U.S. Circuit Courts

D.   None of these

33: _____ is defined as offenses that are technically less serious than Part I offenses.

A.   Part II Offense

B.   Ad litem

C.   Tabula rasa

D.   All of these

34: _____ is known as a phrase used to characterize the higher crime rate in the South, suggesting that southerners are socialized to accept, and use, violence in certain situations.

A.   Southern Subculture of Violence

B.   Parent of his country

C.   Both

D.   None of these

35: Is telescoping situations in which respondents indirectly identify the timing of past events?

A.   True

B.   False

36: _____ is a program administered by the FBI as a strategy to collect data about crimes that are reported to the police.

A.   Uniform Crime Reports

B.   Pretrial release

C.   Drug courts

D.   None of these