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Criminal Justice
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Policing
Quiz 14: Computers, Technology, and Criminalistics in Policing
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Question 61
True/False
It is impossible to change one's fingerprints.
Question 62
True/False
Police officers with in-car data access technology make more than eight times as many inquiries on driving records, vehicle registrations, and wanted persons or property per eight-hour shift than do officers without in-car computers.
Question 63
True/False
Age-progression photographs are prepared by forensic artists rather than computers.
Question 64
Essay
Discuss the advantages and disadvantages of less-than-lethal weapons in policing.
Question 65
True/False
Because computer-aided investigation systems have not proven to be very effective in the criminal investigation process, they are being abandoned by many police departments in the United States.
Question 66
Essay
Discuss the latest innovations in the examination of fingerprints.
Question 67
True/False
The latest in night vision technology includes infrared (IR) technology and thermal imaging (TI). This technology requires no light at all to see objects in total darkness.
Question 68
True/False
The Violent Criminal Apprehension Program (ViCAP) is maintained by DHS.
Question 69
True/False
Automated fingerprint identification systems began to be developed in the 1980s.
Question 70
Essay
Discuss the many ways in which the computer is revolutionizing police work.
Question 71
True/False
PCR-STR procedures for the analysis of DNA evidence allow samples that have degraded or broken down to be analyzed.
Question 72
True/False
ViCAP contains information on all unsolved crimes in the United States.
Question 73
True/False
Mitochondrial DNA is more useful for identification than nuclear DNA.
Question 74
True/False
Lasers can be used to lift fingerprints from surfaces that often defy traditional powder or chemical techniques, including glass, paper, cardboard, rubber, wood, plastic, leather, and even human skin.