1. In the case of government employees, courts generally hold that the employee has no ________ of privacy in a computer used in that employment. a. legitimate expectation b. constitutional right c. personal expectation d. legitimate inference 2. One of the most hated practices of English officers in colonial times in the United States was the ________. a. all encompassing warrant b. extradition warrant c. interrogation warrant d. general warrant 3. A search warrant must be issued by ________ who determines that probable cause exists. a. the arresting officer b. a neutral and detached judge or magistrate c. a personally motivated judge or magistrate d. a neutral and detached law officer 4. Most states and the federal government have statutes requiring that search warrants be ________. a. served and executed during daylight hours b. served and executed at the defendants place of employment c. provided for defense inspection first d. served and executed only at a private residence. 5. ________ can solve the particular problems related to illegal drug evidence presented to law enforcement officers. a. Pre-planned search warrants b. Warrants of anticipations c. Drug evidence search warrants d. Anticipatory search warrants 6. The Privacy Protection Act of 1980 gives special protection to ________. a. private citizens b. documentary material c. educational institutions d. law officers 7. Prior to 1968 the United States did not have any laws governing ________. a. civil liberties b. taped conversations c. listening devices and hidden cameras d. wiretapping and electronic surveillance 8. The primary techniques of ________ available to law enforcement agencies are pen, registers, trap and trace devices and content interception. a. under-cover surveillance b. electronic surveillance c. evidence collection d. evidence discovery 9. Following the terrorist attacks of 9/11, Congress passed the ________. a. USA Patriot Act b. Domestic Terrorism Act c. Civil Rights Act d. Defenders of Freedom Act 10. ________ allows secret taping as long as one of the parties to a conversation knows about it. a. International law b. All state's law c. Federal law d. Constitutional law 11. Using a cooperative witness, law officers can ask the person to telephone a suspect in a ________. a. confrontational telephone call b. secretly taped telephone call c. conventional telephone call d. solicitation call 12. Electronic surveillance and wiretapping is governed by ________. a. the USA Patriot Act b. the U.S. Constitution c. Domestic Terrorism Act d. Title III of the 1968 Omnibus Crime Control and Safe Streets Act 13. No exception in federal law permits electronic surveillance or wiretapping by ________. a. law enforcement officers b. one neighbor on another c. one family member on another d. one family member on a neighbor 14. To be considered a ________ by the courts, an informant must not be involved in the criminal environment. a. concerned citizen informant b. under-cover informant c. concerned reliable informant d. good citizen 15. An FBI Law Enforcement Bulletin article observes that drug detection dogs have ________. a. bitten most of their suspects b. proven highly effective and reliable in detecting narcotics c. proven unreliable in detecting narcotics d. proven effective and reliable in detecting illegal aliens 16. When evidence is obtained without a search warrant the burden is upon the defense to show that the evidence was obtained under one of the well delineated exceptions to search warrant requirements. True False 17. The search warrant must particularly describe the place to be searched and the persons or things to be seized. True False 18. The Federal Wiretapping and Electronic Surveillance Act was enacted by Congress in 1968. True False 19. Law Enforcement officers are permitted to use mechanical or electronic listening devices that are intrusive and violate personal privacy without a court order. True False 20. Suspects and other people do not have a right of privacy in police vehicles, jails, or police or sheriff stations. True False