- Tue Jul 31, 2018 1:05 pm
#49007
Thanks for the question, Rosaline! Here's the judge's argument from the stimulus, broken down step by step:
1. The suspect ran from the police
2. Running from the police does not, by itself, create a reasonable suspicion of a crime
3. Evidence gathered as a result of an illegal chase is inadmissible
4. The weapon gathered as a result of the chase was therefore inadmissible
There's a missing link in this chain of reasoning, and that link is between steps 2 and 3 above, where I boldfaced two concepts. How did we get from this chase not raising a reasonable suspicion to the chase being illegal? In order to strengthen the argument, we need to bridge that gap. We do that by prephrasing "if there is no reasonable suspicion for chasing someone, then that chase is illegal". Answer choice C gives us the contrapositive of that prephrase - if a chase is legal, there was reasonable suspicion of a crime.
Answer choice B fails to close that gap in the reasoning because it makes no mention of "reasonable suspicion". It doesn't give us any reason to accept the reasoning that this chase was illegal. Maybe the person fleeing was committing a crime, so their flight was illegal, so maybe the chase was okay? Or maybe they weren't committing a crime, so their flight was legal, so...maybe the chase was illegal or maybe not? We just can't be sure here whether the chase was legal or illegal, not without knowing more.
Answer choice D tells us that running isn't a crime, but does that mean chasing in this case is illegal? Again, this makes no connection between "reasonable suspicion" and "illegal chase", and so it doesn't help the argument any. Okay, running wasn't a crime, but could it still be legal for the police to give chase? I can't tell from this claim, so this doesn't help.
Watch for gaps in arguments all over the LSAT, as that is where the answers will often lie. Gaps can be described in Flaw in the Reasoning answers, Assumption answers, Strengthen or Justify answers, even Weaken answers (which would take advantage of the gap - here, that would be something like "a chase can still be legal even if the person's flight doesn't raise a reasonable suspicion of a criminal act"). Mind the gap!
Adam M. Tyson
PowerScore LSAT, GRE, ACT and SAT Instructor
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