- Thu Jan 21, 2016 12:00 am
#35200
Complete Question Explanation
(See the complete passage discussion here: lsat/viewtopic.php?t=14213)
The correct answer choice is (A)
This question asks for the answer choice that provides a statement that’s true of Canadian and U.S.
law, but not true of Classical Roman law.
Answer choice (A): This is the correct answer choice. This is the blackmail paradox that is
presented in the first paragraph of the first passage; the two acts that are legal separately are those
of seeking money, and of disclosing information, an act that is legal based on our guarantee of free
speech. Classical Roman law did not guarantee free speech, and did not consider truth to constitute
legal privilege.
Answer choice (B): The transaction is characterized by a triangular structure in both contexts, so this
cannot be the right answer.
Answer choice (C): This is an Opposite Answer, because the author of the first passage mentions that
laws are written broadly, relying on prosecutors not to enforce statutes precisely as written.
Answer choice (D): This is not a statement that is true only of common law, so this choice can be
safely ruled out of contention.
Answer choice (E): This is an Opposite Answer; U.S. and Canadian laws broadly prohibit blackmail,
while it was Classical Roman law that had no special category for the crime of blackmail.
(See the complete passage discussion here: lsat/viewtopic.php?t=14213)
The correct answer choice is (A)
This question asks for the answer choice that provides a statement that’s true of Canadian and U.S.
law, but not true of Classical Roman law.
Answer choice (A): This is the correct answer choice. This is the blackmail paradox that is
presented in the first paragraph of the first passage; the two acts that are legal separately are those
of seeking money, and of disclosing information, an act that is legal based on our guarantee of free
speech. Classical Roman law did not guarantee free speech, and did not consider truth to constitute
legal privilege.
Answer choice (B): The transaction is characterized by a triangular structure in both contexts, so this
cannot be the right answer.
Answer choice (C): This is an Opposite Answer, because the author of the first passage mentions that
laws are written broadly, relying on prosecutors not to enforce statutes precisely as written.
Answer choice (D): This is not a statement that is true only of common law, so this choice can be
safely ruled out of contention.
Answer choice (E): This is an Opposite Answer; U.S. and Canadian laws broadly prohibit blackmail,
while it was Classical Roman law that had no special category for the crime of blackmail.