Reading Comprehension
Passage Breakdown
Some scholars say a defense lawyer’s only job is to give the best defense and not judge whether a client is guilty. The passage argues that lawyers also owe duties to the court and society, so they must not knowingly lie or pretend a clearly guilty client is innocent. Instead, lawyers should study the facts carefully, present any honest defenses or mitigating circumstances, and try to prove innocence only when they genuinely think it’s possible. Lawyers shouldn’t take every case or just repeat a client’s claims—the best defense is honest, careful advocacy.
Logic Breakdown
Locate the author's explicit statements about when a lawyer should attempt to prove a client's innocence—the passage directly says under what epistemic condition (sincere belief of possible innocence) a lawyer should try to prove innocence; use those sentences to eliminate choices that contradict them.
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage6.It can be inferred from the passage that the author holds that a defense attorney who argues in court that a client is innocent
Correct Answer
A
The passage states directly: "In cases where it is uncertain whether the client is guilty but the lawyer sincerely believes the client may well be innocent, the lawyer should of course try to prove that the client is innocent." Thus the author holds that an attorney who argues innocence should sincerely believe the client may be innocent.
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