- Sat Sep 09, 2017 4:48 pm
#39500
If eyewitness reports are the most common cause for conviction, that strengthens the idea that they are a common cause of mistaken convictions simply because the numbers become slightly more persuasive. It doesn't prove the hypothesis, not by a long shot, but it at least helps a little bit. To see this, imagine what impact the opposite claim might have - what if eyewitness reports very rarely led to any convictions? Then you would have good reason to doubt that they contribute to many mistaken convictions, right?
For a strengthen question, including a strengthen-Except question, the strengthen answers don't have to have a big impact, angel. All they have to do is help, even if only a little. For this question, answer D is better because it doesn't help at all, and might even hurt a little bit.
I hope that helps, even if just a little!
Adam M. Tyson
PowerScore LSAT, GRE, ACT and SAT Instructor
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