AverageTutoring wrote:Are you the same Natural Lawyer as on the Canadian law student's forums? Anyways...
D is wrong because if we say that flight from police is not in itself a criminal act that still leaves the door open to the possibility that flight from police could create reasonable suspicion of a criminal act.
So while flight might not be a criminal act, flight could create reasonable suspicion and the cops could then use any evidence obtained in that pursuit against the alleged criminal.
Lets use an analogy.
Say someone in a Ford Mustang GT is going 10 km/h under the speed limit on the highway. While this may not in itself be illegal (just like flight from police might not be illegal) it might create a reasonable suspicion that the cops have a reason to stop/search the driver. I mean who goes 10 km/h under the speed limit on the highway in a Ford Mustang GT?? No one!
By the way, this analogy actually happened on an episode of Cops or some other cop/chase show that I saw. The driver/passenger ended up being drug dealers and there was a big chase involved. Just because they went a few km under the speed limit!
I'm not quite sure how this answers my question which was just why (D) does not help to justify the judge's answer.
Suppose that (D) is false and that the flight from the police
should itself be considered a criminal act.
(1) Then, there would be reasonable suspicion of a criminal act.
(2) If it is true that a reasonable suspicion of a criminal act would make the chase legal, then it seems that the chase was not illegal afterall.)
(3) Evidence collected during an illegal chase is inadmissible. But in this case the chase was not illegal.
(4) So the evidence in the case is not necessarily inadmissible.
(5) So (D) if false, would weaken the judge's argument since then the evidence in the case could be admissible.
(6) So (D) if true, would help justify the judge's argument.
Now that I have thought more deeply about it, I think I see why (C) must be true. The main reason is because of (3) above. The missing link in the judge's argument occurs in the step from
(I) The flight does not create a reasonable suspicion of a criminal act
TO:
(II) Evidence gathered from an illegal chase is inadmissible.
The missing link that connects (I) and (II) is provided by the correct answer:
(C), which states that: "Police can legally give chase to a person only when the person's actions have created a reasonable suspicion of a criminal act."
(And no I'm not from the Canadian Law student forum. But thanks for the reply. Perhaps I did not fully understand your answer... Feel free to straighten me out!)