Answer:
In that particular case Dale would have none of these defenses because:
- <u>He cannot allege duress</u> because his life was not threatened in any situation, he has a safe way to escape and avoid the crime.
- <u>He cannot allege mistake</u> because even when Phil (undercover agent assigned) was thinking that he (Dale) was breaking the FCPA laws, the crime was not commited yet. Dale effectively commited a violation knowing the laws and consequences.
- He cannot allege entrapment because he was not pushed or encouraged by Phil (FBI undercover agent) to do the crime, Dale commited the violation without the influence of any law officer.
The correct option will be option "D".
Answer:
Reversibility
Explanation:
In simple words, Because it represents the commencement of reasoned or practical reasoning, Piaget believed the tangible stage to be a crucial turning point in a preschooler 's cognitive growth. The kid has reached the age where logical reasoning or procedures (i.e. principles) may be applied, but only to tangible things (thus concrete operational).
The correct answer would be option D. When you are trying to decide between renting two apartments and you really prefer one over the other, but can't really say why, this is your emotional brain at work. If you can enumerate the reasons of which you should choose, then that would be the rational brain.
Answer:
by making sure prisoners are not denied access to basic need such as food, warmth, or exercise
Explanation:
Created by the U.S. Supreme Court, the "identifiable human needs" standard requires prison officials to comply with the Eighth Amendment by <u>making sure prisoners are not denied access to basic need such as food, warmth, or exercise.
</u>
The Supreme Court has created two standards to be used by the courts in determining whether a prisoner's Eighth Amendment protections against cruel and unusual punishment have been violated. The standards are; the "deliberate indifference" standard, and the "identifiable human needs" standard, under the identifiable human needs standards prison officials must ensure prisoners are not denied access to basic need such as food, warmth, or exercise.