Reading ComprehensionDifficulty: Easy

PT135 S3 P3 Q14 Explanation

Blackmail Laws

A free, expert breakdown of this official LSAT Reading Comprehension question.

TopicsMain PointLaw

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Passage

The following passages are adapted from articles recently published in North review journals.

Passage A In Canadian and United States common law, blackmail is unique among major crimes: no one has yet adequately explained why it ought to be illegal. The heart of the problem—known as the blackmail paradox—is that two acts, each of which is legally permissible separately, become illegal when combined. If I I have a legal right to seek money. So why is it illegal to combine them?

The lack of a successful theory of blackmail has damaging consequences: drawing a clear line between legal and illegal acts has proved impossible without one. Consequently, most blackmail statutes broadly prohibit behavior that no one really believes is criminal and not to enforce relevant statutes precisely as written.

It is possible, however, to articulate a coherent theory of blackmail. The key to the wrongness of the blackmail transaction is its triangular structure. The blackmailer obtains what he wants by using a supplementary leverage, leverage that depends upon a third party. The blackmail victim pays to avoid being harmed by persons criminal because it involves the misuse of a third party for the blackmailer’s own benefit.

Passage B Classical Roman law had no special category for blackmail; it was not necessary. Roman jurists began their evaluation of specific categories of actions by considering whether the action caused or illegality of the action itself.

Their assumption—true enough, it seems—was that a victim of blackmail would be harmed if shameful but private information were revealed to the world. And if the shame would cause harm to the person’s status or reputation, then prima facie the threatened act of revelation was unlawful. The burden of proof shifted to had to show positive cause for the privilege of revealing the information.

In short, assertion of the truth of the shameful fact being revealed was not, in itself, sufficient to constitute a legal privilege. Granted, truth was not wholly irrelevant; false disclosures were granted even less protection than true ones. But even if it were true, the revelation of shameful information was protected only something shameful happened to be true did not mean it was lawful to reveal it.

What this question is testing

Main Point

Your task

Capture the passage's overall primary point — the claim everything else supports.

Common trap

Answers that are true but too narrow (a single paragraph) or too broad (beyond the passage's scope).

Winning move

Summarize the whole passage in one sentence first, then match it to a choice.

Reading along? Open the full official question in LawHub — we show a fragment here and keep the reasoning in our own words.

The question
14.

Which one of the following is the central topic of

Answer choices

  1. Trap1% picked this

    why triangular transactions are

  2. Trap1% picked this

    the role of the right to free speech in a given

  3. Correct88% picked this

    how blackmail has been handled in a given

    Why this is right

    Answer C is correct.

    Skill tested: Main Point · how this choice captures the passage's function is the move to repeat next time.

  4. Trap6% picked this

    the history of blackmail as a

  5. Trap5% picked this

    why no good explanation of the illegality of

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