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Peterson's - Law Enforcement (Page 138)

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Peterson's - Law Enforcement
132 L
AW
E
NFORCEMENT
E
XAMS
33. (D)
The paragraph tells us that the payroll
department complies with IRS regulations in
withholding taxes from salaries and wages.
The IRS determines the tax, not the salaries.
34. (A)
The most important thing is to get medi-
cal help for the child.
35. (C)
The rule states that the first question
must relate to the sex of the missing person.
The fact that the woman referred to the baby as
"she" is no guarantee that the baby is a girl.
Confusion of pronouns is very common among
people for whom English is not the primary
language, especially in time of stress.
36. (C)
37. (C)
38. (B)
At this moment, police cars in the area
would need as much information as possible
about the offending car. Details about the car
that was hit, aside from color, are not relevant
to pursuit. Choices (A) and (C) give incom-
plete descriptions; choice (D) has the state of
registration wrong.
39. (D)
40. (B)
41. (B)
If no part of the training of a law officer is
more important or more valuable (sentence 2),
then clearly the most useful and essential single
factor in the training of a law officer is proper
firearms training. Choice (A) is incorrect be-
cause the first sentence says only that firearms
training cannot be ignored not that it is ignored.
Choice (D) is an overstatement; lives often de-
pend directly on weapons skills, but not always.
42. (D)
In describing standing posture, stance
refers specifically to placement of feet.
43. (B)
The fact that no shots were fired should be
an important feature of this report. Neither (A)
nor (C) mentions it. In addition, these choices fail
to adequately identify and locate the liquor store.
(D) confuses the names of the participants.
44. (A)
Just as agreement of testimony is no
proof of dependability, agreement of testi-
mony also is no proof of undependability; they
can all make the same mistake either way.
45. (B)
The paragraph lists some of the special-
ized courses in the police driving curriculum.
46. (B)
The suspect in choice (A) has larger
eyes; the suspect in choice (C) has different
ears; the suspect in choice (D) has a fuller face.
47. (B)
The suspect in choice (A) has a smaller
nose; the suspect in choice (C) has a fuller face
and fuller lips; the suspect in choice (D) has
lighter eyes and thinner lips.
48. (D)
The suspect in choice (A) has a different
nose; the suspect in choice (B) has different
ears; the suspect in choice (C) has an entirely
different head and face shape.
49. (C)
The suspect in choice (A) has a much
finer nose; the suspect in choice (B) has a
narrower jaw structure; the suspect in choice
(D) has different ears.
50. (B)
The suspect in choice (A) has a smaller
nose; the suspect in choice (C) has lighter eyes
and a wider mouth; the suspect in choice (D)
has a fuller face and thinner lips.

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