2026 2027 VERIFIED ANSWERS ACTUAL
UPDATED PRACTICE QUESTIONS HIGH-
YIELD STUDY GUIDE EXAM PREP MATERIAL
LATEST VERSION REAL EXAM QUESTIONS
AND ANSWERS GRADED A+ SUCCESS PACK
REVIEW EDITION
1. Define a victim: A "Victim" is any person who suffered direct physical or
emotional harm as a result of a sexual violent offense.
2. Define victimology: The "scientific study" of victimization including the
relationships between victims and offenders, the interactions between victims
and the criminal justice system, and the connections between victims and other
social groups and institutions such as the media businesses, and social
movements.
3. What is consent?: IAW Article 120(g)(7), UCMJ
The term "consent" means freely given agreement to the conduct at issue by a
competent person.
Be aware of the following-
An expression of lack of consent through words or conduct means there is no
consent
Lack of verbal or physical resistance or submission resulting from the use of
force, threat of force, or placing another person in fear does not constitute
consent A current or previous dating or social or sexual relationship by itself, or
the manner of dress of the person involved with the accused in the conduct at
issue, does not constitute consent
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ACTUAL EXAM 150+
ANSWERS WITH
A sleeping, unconscious, or incompetent person cannot consent
All the surrounding circumstances are to be considered in determining whether a
person gave consent
4. List the physical responses to trauma?: Aches and pains
Sudden sweating/heart palpitations
Changes in sleep, appetite, or interest in sex
Constipation or diarrhea easily
startled
Susceptible to colds and illness
Increased use of alcohol/food/drugs
5. What are the three offender motivations?: Power-motivated offender (only use
enough force to achieve the assault) (most common) power reassurance power
assertive
Anger-motivated offender (uses sex to discharge emotions, victims are normally
beaten before the assault)
Sadistic offender (least common)
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6. List some characteristics of sex offenders: Hostility towards women
Casual attitudes about sex
Frequent sexual encounters
Unaware of remifications of behavior
Careful planning associated with multiple offenses in undetected convicted
offender sample
Hyper-masculinity
Endorses rape myths
Deviant aggressive sexual fantasy for a subgroup of offenders
Adversarial beliefs about relationships between men and women
7. Describe the Just World Hypothesis: The individual wants to believe that the
world is a safe, just place where people get what they deserve and deserve what
they get
8. Describe the invulnerability theory: No one likes to think they could lose
control over their body of life
By deciding a rape victim did something concrete to deserve the sexual assault,
the observer creates a false sense of safety
If they can avoid doing that particular thing or action then they create the illusion
of invulnerability for themselves 9. Myth or Fact
Most victims do not report due to a number of reasons: self-blame, denial,
loss of privacy, fear of being disbelieved: Fact 10. Myth or Fact
Stangers commit most sexual assaults: Myth
11. Myth or Fact
Sexual assault by someone you know is far more traumatic than being
assaulted by a stranger: Fact 12. Myth or Fact
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ACTUAL EXAM 150+ QUESTIONS AND CORRECT DETAILED
ANSWERS WITH (VERIFIED ANSWERS) | ALREADY GRADED A
You cannot blame a person is they are drunk and things get out of hand; it
was just a miscommunication: Myth
13. Myth or Fact
Most misunderstood type of assault is marital sexual assault; some people
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