Any Voluntary Bad Act Is Enough
This trap appears as a wrong-answer choice in 1 active question. Spotting how it is built is the repair: read each example's “why it's attractive” before the “why it's wrong.”
Subject distribution
- Criminal Law1
Example wrong choices
14645_advent_sidewalk · CRIMINAL_LAW · Choice ANo, because Peter’s claim that the officers mistreated him is valid.
Why it's attractive
Police treatment feels unfair and factually vivid.
Why it's wrong
Mistreatment answers an adjacent police-conduct question, not the conviction element.
Spot it next time
Ask which statutory element fails.
14645_advent_sidewalk · CRIMINAL_LAW · Choice CYes, because Peter voluntarily became intoxicated.
Why it's attractive
The defendant did voluntarily become intoxicated.
Why it's wrong
Voluntary intoxication proves a satisfied element, not voluntary public appearance.
Spot it next time
Circle the statutory words and mark intoxication as already satisfied.
14645_advent_sidewalk · CRIMINAL_LAW · Choice DYes, because Peter voluntarily acted in an obstreperous manner.
Why it's attractive
The defendant did voluntarily act obstreperously; this is the dominant wrong-element trap.
Why it's wrong
Voluntary loud conduct proves a satisfied element, not voluntary public appearance.
Spot it next time
Return to the public-place appearance fact: who put him there?
Practice the questions that use this trap as a distractor and get full Wrong Answer Forensics on submit.
Practice questions using this trap →