Lieutenant Test Flashcards

1
Q

What does Car Brakes stand for?

A

Criminal sex act. aggregated sex abuse. rape. burglary. robbery any degree. arson. kidnapping. escape first or second degree. sex abuse first degree. underlying felonies in which a 14-15 year old can be charged as a juvenile offender for felony murder.

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2
Q

When can a 13 yr old be charged as a juvenile defender?

A

when they commit intentional murder second or a depraved mind murder

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3
Q

When can a 14 or 15 yr old be charged as a juvenile defender?

A

when they commit intentional murder second a depraved mind murder or a felony murder.

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4
Q

When can they (14-15 yr old) be charged for a felony murder?

A

When they’ve committed car brakes acts.

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5
Q

When is a 14-15 yr old criminally responsible?

A

when they commit one of the following:MARK AW ABRAMS

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6
Q

What does MARK AW ABRAMS stand for?

A

murder second. intentional depraved mind felony murder. arson first or second. robbery first or second sub two. kidnapping in the first. aggravated sex abuse first. weapons gun on school grounds. assault first degree sub one or two division. burglary first or second sub one. rape first sub one or two. attempted murder or kidnapping first degree. man slaughter first degree sub division one or two. sex act first degree sub one or two.

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7
Q

14-15 yr old can only be treated as a juvenile defender on a felony murder if?

A

the offense falls between car brakes or MARK AW ABRAMS

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8
Q

Criminal action is defined as

A

the filing of an accusatory instrument against a defendant.

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9
Q

Commencement of a criminal action is defined as

A

the first accusatory instrument being filed.

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10
Q

Criminal proceeding is defined as

A

any proceeding which constitutes part of a criminal action or occurs in a criminal court and is related to a pending or completed criminal action

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11
Q

which of the following is not a defined term in the CPL?

A

criminal prosecution

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12
Q

Roger is arrested for felony on Monday. he is arraigned on felony complaint Tuesday. Indicted by grand jury on Thursday. when is the criminal prosecution commenced?

A
  • a felony can not be prosecuted until filing of indictment
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13
Q

Criminal prosecution of a felony is done when?

A

upon filing of indictment or filing of a superior court information.

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14
Q

what are the 2 superior court accusatories?

A

inditement or superior court information

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15
Q

What are the differences between information and complaint?

A

An information contains non hear-say allegations.

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16
Q

A crime is committed in a car. where is the jurisdiction of the offense?

A

any county the car drove through on continuous trip.

17
Q

what are the jurisdictional distances between counties?

A

500 yards either county can take the case. not both. between town 100 yards.

18
Q

Roger commits robbery in ct and flees to ny and is involved in fatal accident. can he be charged in criminal murder?

A

yes

19
Q

stolen credit card prosecution. where can a stolen credit card be prosecuted?

A

county where order is placed. where stored. where delivered.

20
Q

where can identity theft be prosecuted?

A

where part of offense took place, victim resided at time of offense, where person or entity suffering financial loss resided.

21
Q

what is the statue of limitations?

A

a felony - 5 years, a misdemeanor - 2 years, petty offense - 1 year

22
Q

what is max that statue of limitations can be extended?

A

5 years