internship ppt on smartinternz platform as salesforce developer
1. at the time that rebecca machetti is sentenced, georgia has been
1. 1. At the time that Rebecca Machetti is sentenced, Georgia has
been wrestling with death penalty law. On page 215, two
precedent cases are mentioned:
Furman v. Georgia
, and
Gregg v. Georgia
. Which of the two is anti-death penalty, and which is pro?
A. Furman is pro death penalty, and Gregg is anti
B. Gregg is pro death penalty and Furman is anti
C. They are both pro death penalty decisions
D. They are both anti death penalty decisions
Question 2
Another precedent case,
Taylor v. Louisiana
, is described on pages 216-17. What was Louisiana arguing in
this case?
A. that "the fair cross-section requirement of the Sixth
Amendment was violated by the exclusion of women"
B. that excluding women from juries "served the state's interest
in maintaining stable family life"
C. that women should be able to "opt out" of being on a death
penalty case
D. All of the above
2. Question 3
Why was Louisiana's argument refuted?
A. Because it no longer represented society, since most women
now work outside the home
B. Because the things that influence women's decisions are the
same as the things that influence men's C. decisions
D. Because the Sixth Amendment doesn't guarantee that a jury
will mirror the community, only that the jury pool must be fair
E. All of the above
Question 4
On pages 221-22, the only judge who wanted to give John Eldon
Smith a new trial wrote in dissent. Why was this judge upset by
the outcome of the situation?
A. Because John Maree, the triggerman, will live and be eligible
for parole
B. Because Rebecca Machetti, the mastermind of the murder,
had a second trial and got off death row
C. Because John Eldon Smith's lawyers didn't raise his Sixth
Amendment issue in time to get him a new trial
D. All of the above
Question 5
3. In
Coy v. Iowa
, the two young victims of sexual abuse were able to testify
against the accused by being separated from the defendant, John
Coy, who was on the other side of a one-way glass screen. What
outcome did this lead to?
A. Coy was able to have his conviction reversed by the Supreme
Court
B. Coy wasn't able to see his accusers
C. The accusers weren't able to see Coy
D. Answers A and C only
Question 6
Justice O'Connor wrote a concurring opinion on
Coy v. Iowa
, cited on pages 239-40. Justice Scalia wrote a dissenting
opinion on a later Sixth Amendment case on pages 241-42.
What are the differences between their views?
A. Justice O'Connor felt that Coy should have been convicted,
but Scalia felt that children can too easily be persuaded to
create "false memories" and testify against innocent people
B. O'Connor felt that children should have the right to confront
accusers face to face, just as adults have, but Scalia felt that
parents deserve more rights than children
C. O'Connor felt that Iowa's decision hadn't shown specifically
that these girls were traumatized and needed the screen;
however, it could be possible to protect witnesses from seeing
4. the accused in a Constitutional way. Scalia felt that it was never
acceptable to shield the witness from the defendant.
D. Answers A and B only
Question 7
What historical sources did the Supreme Court cite in its
Coy v. Iowa
decision?
A. President Eisenhower, William Shakespeare and the Roman
governor Festus
B. William Shakespeare and the Bible
C. The Bible and Justice O'Connor
D. The Roman governor Festus and William Shakespeare
Question 8
The main difference between the Iowa Supreme Court's
interpretation of the Sixth Amendment's Right To Confront and
the U.S. Supreme Court's interpretati on was that the U.S.
Supreme Court felt that Coy's lawyers had not had a fair chance
to cross-examine Kathy Brown and Linda Thompson.
A. True
B. False
5. Question 9
In the Sixth Amendment case
In re Myron Farber
, the right to compulsory process is explained, the rights which
an accused person has to obtain witnesses and evidence in his or
her defense. In this case, which of the other amendments we've
read about also plays a major role?
A. The First Amendment
B. The Second Amendment
C. The Fourth Amendment
D. The Fifth Amendment
Question 10
In the
In re Myron Farber
case, what was the reason that Farber refused to turn over the
evidence that might have helped convict "Dr. X" of murder?
A. He didn't want to put himself at risk
B. He didn't think the evidence was that important
C. He had collected the evidence in confidence
D. All of the above
Question 11
How did the Myron Farber case differ from the precedent case
Branzburg v. Hayes
6. ?
A. The Branzburg case didn't involve murder
B. Myron Farber's sources were not doing anything illegal
C. Farber was not being called before a Grand Jury, as the
reporter in Branzburg was
D.All of the above
Flag question: Question 12
Question 122
pts
In the end, Myron Farber had to go to jail for contempt of court,
and Dr. Jascalevich was convicted of murder.
A. True
B. False
Question 13
In United States v. Cronic, accused check-kiter Harrison Cronic
is appointed attorney Chris Colston to present his case. What is
the main line of defense that Colston argues?
A. That Cronic never meant to write bad checks or commit fraud
B. That all the responsibility lay with Carolyn Cummings,
7. whose signature was on all the checks
C. That the bank in Oklahoma had never lost any money due to
the bad checks Cronic sent
D. All of the above
Question 14
Although the specific words aren't in the Constitution, what
idea is understood to be conveyed by the Sixth Amendment?
A. The idea that the "counsel" provided must be good
B. The idea that the trial process will be adversarial
C. The concept of a fair trial for the accused
D. All of the above
Question 15
Although there was always an acceptance of the right to
counsel, there had long been a question of how to judge the
effectiveness of the counsel.
A. True
B. False
Question 16
8. The Supreme Court sent Cronic's case back to Judge Eubanks
for a hearing under the new Strickland standard. What two
things did the Strickland standard require to be proven in order
to show that counsel was ineffective?
A. That the counsel had made omissions in the trial, and that the
counsel was prejudiced and adversarial, leading to an unfair
trial
B. That the counsel undermined the process and prejudiced the
defense, leading to an unfair trial
C. That the counsel did or omitted things that showed
incompetence, and that these errors prejudiced the defense,
leading to an unfair trial
D. All of the above