Reading Comprehension
Passage Breakdown
Both passages explain why authorities sometimes choose not to enforce rules strictly to avoid bad outcomes. Passage A says laws are often written too broadly and could punish people lawmakers didn’t mean to punish, so police and prosecutors may decline to prosecute some violations to prevent unfair harm, and lawmakers’ oversight usually limits abuse of that discretion. Passage B reports a city planning to cut water to a few wealthy late-payers to make an example, but critics say the city could instead put a claim on owners’ property so the debt is paid at sale—except a law now forbids such claims for non-tax debts, so changing the law would be a smarter, less harsh fix.
Logic Breakdown
Locate the final sentence of Passage A that discusses 'capricious enforcement' and paraphrase it: the passage says 'legislative oversight assures that the agency does not stray too far from the intended, as distinct from the enacted, regulation being enforced.' Thus the phrase refers to enforcement that departs from the legislature's intent.
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage27.Passage A suggests that an instance of "capricious enforcement" (last sentence of passage A) most likely involves
Correct Answer
E
The passage explicitly contrasts 'intended' regulation with the 'enacted' regulation and says legislative oversight prevents agencies from 'stray[ing] too far from the intended' rule. An instance of 'capricious enforcement' therefore would be enforcement that fails to follow the legislature's intent — exactly what E states.
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