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Author Question: Information provided by a suspect that leads to the seizure of incriminating evidence is permissible ... (Read 27 times)

LaDunn

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Information provided by a suspect that leads to the seizure of incriminating evidence is permissible if the evidence would have been obtained anyway by other means or sources. This is referred to as:
 
  a. the public safety doctrine.
  b. the plain view doctrine.
  c. the Miranda evidence discovery rule.
  d. the inevitable discovery rule.

Question 2

Discuss Lemert's concept of primary and secondary deviance. Why does secondary deviance transform one's identity whereas primary deviance does not?
 
  What will be an ideal response?



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yuyiding

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Answer to Question 1

d

Answer to Question 2

Primary deviance involves norm violations or crimes that have little influence on the actor and can be quickly forgotten. These behaviors have little influence on a person's future behaviors. Secondary deviance, however, occurs when a deviant comes to the attention of others who apply a negative label. The label then causes the actor to reformulate his or her self-view into a deviant role.




LaDunn

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Reply 2 on: Aug 13, 2018
Wow, this really help


dyrone

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Reply 3 on: Yesterday
Gracias!

 

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