- Mon May 30, 2016 9:51 pm
#25799
Hi,
The key to differentiating between answer choices (B) and (E) lies in the stimulus, as it always does. The principle dictates that the penalty for fraudulent activity should completely offset any profit that resulted from that activity. That way, I don't benefit at all from the crime I committed. Let's say I stole $100 from you and bought a share in a company that later increased in value 1000 times. Well, according to the principle in the stimulus, my penalty for stealing 100 bucks should be $100,000.
This is precisely what answer choice (E) suggests: the convicted criminal should not benefit from the proceeds of the book he wrote describing the details of his crime: any proceeds should be donated to a charity chosen by a third party. That way, the criminal doesn't even get the benefit of choosing the recipient of his donation, nor does he get to keep the money he would have made thanks to the crime he committed. The underlying logic is the same: the penalty should completely negate any benefit that the criminal might have obtained as a result of the committed crime.
Answer choice (B) simply requires that the factory be brought into compliance with the pollution laws it violated. That's not what we are looking for. For answer choice (B) to be correct, the factory should be required not only to make whatever expenditures necessary to bring it into compliance, but also repay all the benefits it reaped from violating the pollution laws in the first place. The point is, the penalty paid should completely offset any profit made as a direct result of the violation. This is not the argument made in answer choice (B), making it incorrect.
Hope this helps! Let me know.
Thanks,
Nikki Siclunov
PowerScore Test Preparation