- Wed Mar 20, 2019 5:07 pm
#63540
Hi Emily,
The stimulus is written in such a way as to imply that because rich and famous convicts receive disproportionately lenient sentences for convictions for similar crimes, the principle of equality before the law is being violated or at least not applied. ("Principle" being the key word here). There is no conclusion given; we are being asked to infer this, as this is a Most Strongly Supported question, so it will be used as my Prephrase when testing the answer choices. With those question types, always take a little extra time to make sure you have the best possible Prephrase, as it will help you immensely when it comes to the answer choices.
(B) fails in that it uses the term "number," which means literally raw number, not proportion. By commonsense assumption, we can say that there probably are far fewer rich and famous defendants than those that aren't, so having "equal numbers" sentenced to any specific penalty would still be disproportionate (unless the number were zero). Raw number versus ratio is a common idea on the LSAT, so always be wary of specific language used whenever dealing with those two concepts.
(D) comes very close to the Prephrase I mentioned above, including the idea of the violation of the principle of equality before the law. None of the other answer choices capture the same meaning as the Prephrase, thus this is the correct answer choice.
Hope this clears things up!