Read this passage before anwering the questions below: Patrolman Myron Friedman was aproached by Beatrice Brown on the 400 block of Cedar Road. Ms. Brown was quite agitated and said, "There's been a murder my building."Ms. Brown led Patrolman riedman to apartment 6B of 421 Cedar Road, where the lifeless body of Claude LeClair lay facedown on the floor with a aping gunshot wound at the back of the head. On the wall was a floor plan of the Haitian embassy and beside it a map low-up showing all the streets and alleys surrounding the embassy. In a green wooden box in one comer of the room was... Show more Read this passage before anwering the questions below: Patrolman Myron Friedman was aproached by Beatrice Brown on the 400 block of Cedar Road. Ms. Brown was quite agitated and said, "There's been a murder my building."Ms. Brown led Patrolman riedman to apartment 6B of 421 Cedar Road, where the lifeless body of Claude LeClair lay facedown on the floor with a aping gunshot wound at the back of the head. On the wall was a floor plan of the Haitian embassy and beside it a map low-up showing all the streets and alleys surrounding the embassy. In a green wooden box in one comer of the room was small arsenal of pistols, revolvers, and submachine guns. Containers of gasoline and black powder sat tightly closed on the kitchen counter. During the course of the investigation, the following statements were made.(1) Beatrice Brown said that she is the occupant of apartment 6A at 421 Cedar Road and that she did not know Claude LeClair.(2) Hector Jones, manager of 421 Cedar Road, said that LeClair was a Haitian immigrant who had lived with two other men in apartment 6B for eight months and who always paid his rent on time.(3) Matilda DePaso of apartment 5B said that there were often late-night meetings in 6B with lots of stomping around and loud talk in a foreign language that she assumed to be French.(4) Beatrice Brown said that she did not really know that a murder had been committed but assumed there had been one since she had heard a shot and had seen a man with a gun running down the stairs.(5) Luis Sanchez, the Secret Service Special Agent who was called into the case because of the apparent threat to the Haitian embassy, said that Claude LeClair had been a known opponent of the Haitian regime.(6) Robert Levasseur, one of LeClair's roommates in apartment 6B, said that although LeClair was opposed to the Haitian regime, he was far less inclined toward violence than were some of his friends.(7) From an album of pictures of Haitians in the area who were considered by the Secret Service to be potential troublemakers, Hubert Horan of apartment 1D identified either Alphonse St. Jacque or Pierre Monet as the man with the gun who had run past his windows.(8) Pierre Monet's employer, William Bell, produced Monet's time card to show that Monet had been at work at the Mavis Tire Center at the time of the murder.(9) Alphonse St. Jacque's wife, Monique, said that St. Jacque was ill at home on the day of the murder.(10) Robert Levasseur said that both St. Jacque and Monet were among the group that often met with LeClair in his apartment. Show less
Read this passage before anwering the questions below:
Patrolman Myron Friedman was aproached by Beatrice Brown on the 400 block of Cedar Road. Ms. Brown was quite agitated and said, "There's been a murder my building."Ms. Brown led Patrolman riedman to apartment 6B of 421 Cedar Road, where the lifeless body of Claude LeClair lay facedown on the floor with a aping gunshot wound at the back of the head. On the wall was a floor plan of the Haitian embassy and beside it a map low-up showing all the streets and alleys surrounding the embassy. In a green wooden box in one comer of the room was small arsenal of pistols, revolvers, and submachine guns. Containers of gasoline and black powder sat tightly closed on the kitchen counter. During the course of the investigation, the following statements were made.(1) Beatrice Brown said that she is the occupant of apartment 6A at 421 Cedar Road and that she did not know Claude LeClair.(2) Hector Jones, manager of 421 Cedar Road, said that LeClair was a Haitian immigrant who had lived with two other men in apartment 6B for eight months and who always paid his rent on time.(3) Matilda DePaso of apartment 5B said that there were often late-night meetings in 6B with lots of stomping around and loud talk in a foreign language that she assumed to be French.(4) Beatrice Brown said that she did not really know that a murder had been committed but assumed there had been one since she had heard a shot and had seen a man with a gun running down the stairs.(5) Luis Sanchez, the Secret Service Special Agent who was called into the case because of the apparent threat to the Haitian embassy, said that Claude LeClair had been a known opponent of the Haitian regime.(6) Robert Levasseur, one of LeClair's roommates in apartment 6B, said that although LeClair was opposed to the Haitian regime, he was far less inclined toward violence than were some of his friends.(7) From an album of pictures of Haitians in the area who were considered by the Secret Service to be potential troublemakers, Hubert Horan of apartment 1D identified either Alphonse St. Jacque or Pierre Monet as the man with the gun who had run past his windows.(8) Pierre Monet's employer, William Bell, produced Monet's time card to show that Monet had been at work at the Mavis Tire Center at the time of the murder.(9) Alphonse St. Jacque's wife, Monique, said that St. Jacque was ill at home on the day of the murder.(10) Robert Levasseur said that both St. Jacque and Monet were among the group that often met with LeClair in his apartment.
Join 4M+ learners. Unlock unlimited quizzes, wrong-answer tracking, flashcards + reminders, study guides, and 1-on-1 challenges.