Library/PT 153/Sec 1/Reading Comp
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Reading Comprehension

Passage Breakdown

Courts often rely on testimony from accomplices (people who helped commit a crime) and jailhouse informants (inmates who say someone confessed). Those witnesses are frequently offered shorter sentences or other rewards, which gives them a strong reason to lie—studies show lying informants are rarely punished. Courts say lawyers can question these witnesses and juries can consider their motives, but that protection can fail when deals are only hinted at and not revealed to jurors. Research also shows jurors give too much weight to confessions and tend to assume confessions mean guilt, so they may not notice how incentives can lead witnesses to lie.

Logic Breakdown

Scan for an explicit statement about how often cooperating witnesses who lie are prosecuted. The passage states that 'one recent study concluded that lying informants are rarely prosecuted and therefore have much to gain and little to lose by testifying falsely,' which directly bears on option D.

Passage Stimulus

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16.

Which one of the following questions is explicitly addressed in the passage?

Correct Answer
D
The passage explicitly reports a study finding that 'lying informants are rarely prosecuted and therefore have much to gain and little to lose by testifying falsely.' That directly answers the question of how common prosecution of cooperating witnesses who knowingly provide false testimony is (rare).
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