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Questões de Concursos Polícia Militar SP

Resolva questões de Polícia Militar SP comentadas com gabarito, online ou em PDF, revisando rapidamente e fixando o conteúdo de forma prática.


701Q722454 | Conhecimentos Gerais e Atualidades, Guerras, Soldado, Polícia Militar SP, VUNESP

Em setembro de 2012, protestos contra um filme anti-islâmico, representando o profeta Maomé de maneira desrespeitosa, espalharam-se pelo Oriente Médio e demais países islâmicos. Entre os casos mais violentos, estão os ataques às embaixadas do país onde foi feito o filme no Egito, no Iêmen e na Líbia, o mais grave, que culminou na morte de um embaixador e de três auxiliares. Manifestações também foram registradas em Bangladesh, Iraque, Marrocos, Sudão, Tunísia e na Faixa de Gaza. Assinale a alternativa que identifica o país de origem do filme e alvo dos ataques islâmicos.
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702Q200001 | Inglês, Aluno Oficial CFO, Polícia Militar SP, VUNESP

Texto associado.

Leia o texto para responder às questões:


The Right to a “Custody Hearing” under International Law

by Maria Laura Canineu
February 3, 2014

        A person who is arrested has a right to be brought promptly before a judge. This is a longstanding and fundamental principle of international law, crucial for ensuring that the person’s arrest, treatment, and any ongoing detention are lawful.
        Yet, until now, Brazil has not respected this right. Detainees often go months before seeing a judge. For instance, in São Paulo state, which houses 37 percent of Brazil’s total prison population, most detainees are not brought before a judge for at least three months. The risk of ill-treatment is often highest during the initial stages of detention, when police are questioning a suspect. The delay makes detainees more vulnerable to torture and other serious forms of mistreatment by abusive police officers.
        In 2012, the UN Subcommittee on Prevention of Torture and Other Cruel, Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment reported that it had received “repeated and consistent accounts of torture and ill-treatment” in São Paulo and other Brazilian states, “committed by, in particular, the military and civil police.” The torture had allegedly occurred in police custody or at the moment of arrest, on the street, inside private homes, or in hidden outdoor areas, and was described as “gratuitous violence, as a form of punishment, to extract confessions, and as a means of extortion.”
        In addition to violating the rights of detainees, these abusive practices make it more difficult for the police to establish the kind of public trust that is often crucial for effective crime control. These practices undermine legitimate efforts to promote public security and curb violent crime, and thus have a negative impact on Brazilian society as a whole.
        The right to be brought before a judge without unnecessary delay is enshrined in treaties long ago ratified by Brazil, including the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR) and the American Convention on Human Rights. The United Nations Human Rights Committee, which is responsible for interpreting the ICCPR, has determined that the delay between the arrest of an accused and the time before he is brought before a judicial authority “should not exceed a few days,” even during states of emergency.
        Other countries in Latin America have incorporated this right into their domestic law. For instance, in Argentina, the federal Criminal Procedure Code requires that in cases of arrest without a judicial order, the detainee must be brought to a competent judicial authority within six hours.
        In contrast, Brazil’s criminal procedure code requires that when an adult is arrested in flagrante and held in police custody, only the police files of the case need to be presented to the judge within 24 hours, not the actual detainee. Judges evaluate the legality of the arrest and make the decision about whether to order continued detention or other precautionary measures based solely on the written documents provided by the police.
        The code establishes a maximum of 60 days for the first judicial hearing with the detainee, but does not explicitly say when this period begins. In practice, this often means that police in Brazil can keep people detained, with formal judicial authorization, for several months, without giving the detainee a chance to actually see a judge.
        According to the code, the only circumstance in which police need to bring a person before the judge immediately applies to cases of crimes not subject to bail in which arresting officer was not able to exhibit the arrest order to the person arrested at the time of arrest. Otherwise, the detainee may also not see a judge for several months.

                                         (www.hrw.org. Editado e adaptado)

The UN Subcommittee on Prevention of Torture and Other Cruel, Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment stated that

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703Q194923 | Inglês, Aluno Oficial CFO, Polícia Militar SP, VUNESP

Texto associado.

Leia o texto para responder às questões de números 65 a 70.

What is organized crime?

Organized crime was characterised by the United Nations, in 1994, as: " group organization to commit crime; hierarchical links or personal relationships which permit leaders to control the group: violence, intimidation and corruption used to earn profits or control territories or markets; laundering of illicit proceeds both in furtherance of criminal activity and to infiltrate the legitimate economy; the potential for expansion into any new activities and beyond national borders; and cooperation with other organized transnational criminal groups." It is increasingly global. Although links between, for example, mafia groups in Italy and the USA have existed for decades, new and rapid means of communication have facilitated the development of international networks. Some build on shared linguistic or cultural ties, such as a network trafficking drugs and human organs, which links criminal gangs in Mozambique, Portugal, Brazil, Pakistan, Dubai and South Africa. Others bring together much less likely groups, such as those trafficking arms, drugs and people between South Africa, Nigeria, Pakistan and Russia, or those linking the Russian mafia with Colombian cocaine cartels or North American criminal gangs with the Japanese Yakuza. Trafficked commodities may pass from group to group along the supply chain; for instance heroin in Italy has traditionally been produced in Afghanistan, transported by Turks, distributed by Albanians, and sold by Italians. Organized crime exploits profit opportunities wherever they arise. Globalization of financial markets, with free movement of goods and capital, has facilitated smuggling of counterfeit goods (in part a reflection of the creation of global brands), internet fraud, and money-laundering. On the other hand, organized crime also takes advantage of the barriers to free movement of people across national borders and the laws against non-medicinal use of narcotics: accordingly it earns vast profits in smuggling migrants and psychoactive drugs. Briquet and Favarel have identified deregulation and the " rolling back of the state" in some countries as creating lacunae that have been occupied by profiteers. The political changes in Europe in the late 1980s fuelled the growth in criminal networks, often involving former law enforcement officers. Failed states, such as the Democratic Republic of Congo or Sierra Leone, have provided further opportunities as criminal gangs smuggle arms in and commodities out, for example diamonds, gold, and rare earth metals, often generating violence against those involved in the trade and in the surrounding communities. Finally, there are a few states, such as the Democratic Republic of Korea and Burma and Guinea-Bissau (once described as a narco-state) where politicians have been alleged to have played an active role in international crime. Organized criminal gangs have strong incentives. Compared with legitimate producers, they have lower costs of production due to the ability to disregard quality and safety standards, tax obligations, minimum wages or employee benefits. Once established, they may threaten or use violence to eliminate competitors, and can obtain favourable treatment by regulatory authorities either through bribes or threats.

(www.globalizationandhealth.com. Adaptado)

No trecho do segundo parágrafo Trafficked commodities may pass from group to group along the supply chain; for instance heroin in Italy has traditionally been produced in Afghanistan, transported by Turks, distributed by Albanians, and sold by Italians. a expressão for instance pode ser substituída, sem alteração de sentido, por

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704Q334731 | Matemática, Soldado, Polícia Militar SP, VUNESP

No escritório de uma empresa, há uma garrafa térmica cheia de chá. Sabe-se que 10 copinhos (todos com a mesma quantidade de chá) equivalem a 4/5 da capacidade da garrafa e ao serem consumidos deixam a garrafa com 350 mL de chá. Então a quantidade de chá de cada copinho, em mL, é de
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705Q195010 | Inglês, Aluno Oficial CFO, Polícia Militar SP, VUNESP

Texto associado.

Leia o texto para responder às questões:


The Right to a “Custody Hearing” under International Law

by Maria Laura Canineu
February 3, 2014

        A person who is arrested has a right to be brought promptly before a judge. This is a longstanding and fundamental principle of international law, crucial for ensuring that the person’s arrest, treatment, and any ongoing detention are lawful.
        Yet, until now, Brazil has not respected this right. Detainees often go months before seeing a judge. For instance, in São Paulo state, which houses 37 percent of Brazil’s total prison population, most detainees are not brought before a judge for at least three months. The risk of ill-treatment is often highest during the initial stages of detention, when police are questioning a suspect. The delay makes detainees more vulnerable to torture and other serious forms of mistreatment by abusive police officers.
        In 2012, the UN Subcommittee on Prevention of Torture and Other Cruel, Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment reported that it had received “repeated and consistent accounts of torture and ill-treatment” in São Paulo and other Brazilian states, “committed by, in particular, the military and civil police.” The torture had allegedly occurred in police custody or at the moment of arrest, on the street, inside private homes, or in hidden outdoor areas, and was described as “gratuitous violence, as a form of punishment, to extract confessions, and as a means of extortion.”
        In addition to violating the rights of detainees, these abusive practices make it more difficult for the police to establish the kind of public trust that is often crucial for effective crime control. These practices undermine legitimate efforts to promote public security and curb violent crime, and thus have a negative impact on Brazilian society as a whole.
        The right to be brought before a judge without unnecessary delay is enshrined in treaties long ago ratified by Brazil, including the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR) and the American Convention on Human Rights. The United Nations Human Rights Committee, which is responsible for interpreting the ICCPR, has determined that the delay between the arrest of an accused and the time before he is brought before a judicial authority “should not exceed a few days,” even during states of emergency.
        Other countries in Latin America have incorporated this right into their domestic law. For instance, in Argentina, the federal Criminal Procedure Code requires that in cases of arrest without a judicial order, the detainee must be brought to a competent judicial authority within six hours.
        In contrast, Brazil’s criminal procedure code requires that when an adult is arrested in flagrante and held in police custody, only the police files of the case need to be presented to the judge within 24 hours, not the actual detainee. Judges evaluate the legality of the arrest and make the decision about whether to order continued detention or other precautionary measures based solely on the written documents provided by the police.
        The code establishes a maximum of 60 days for the first judicial hearing with the detainee, but does not explicitly say when this period begins. In practice, this often means that police in Brazil can keep people detained, with formal judicial authorization, for several months, without giving the detainee a chance to actually see a judge.
        According to the code, the only circumstance in which police need to bring a person before the judge immediately applies to cases of crimes not subject to bail in which arresting officer was not able to exhibit the arrest order to the person arrested at the time of arrest. Otherwise, the detainee may also not see a judge for several months.

                                         (www.hrw.org. Editado e adaptado)

No trecho final do último parágrafo – Otherwise, the detainee may also not see a judge for several months. –, o termo otherwise equivale, em português, a

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706Q196463 | História, Aluno Oficial CFO, Polícia Militar SP, VUNESP

O aperto de mãos de Hitler e Chamberlain: em 22 de setembro de 1938, Adolf Hitler encontrou o Primeiro Ministro britânico Neville Chamberlain na Alemanha. Oito dias depois, de volta à Inglaterra, Chamberlain sugeriu paz com o ditador alemão. O objetivo do encontro entre os dois era debater a tomada da região dos Sudetos, na Tchecoslováquia, pela Alemanha Nazista. Chamberlain acreditava que Hitler estava preocupado apenas com os Sudetos, e achava que a guerra poderia ser evitada.

(Real Clear Politics, 8 Handshakes That Changed History. 22.05.2012. Adaptado)

O episódio descrito é característico da chamada

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707Q657798 | Não definido, Cabo da Polícia Militar, Polícia Militar SP, VUNESP, 2020

Assinale a alternativa correta em relação às disposições da Lei Federal no 11.340/06:
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708Q197617 | Inglês, Aluno Oficial CFO, Polícia Militar SP, VUNESP

Texto associado.

Leia o texto para responder às questões:


The Right to a “Custody Hearing” under International Law

by Maria Laura Canineu
February 3, 2014

        A person who is arrested has a right to be brought promptly before a judge. This is a longstanding and fundamental principle of international law, crucial for ensuring that the person’s arrest, treatment, and any ongoing detention are lawful.
        Yet, until now, Brazil has not respected this right. Detainees often go months before seeing a judge. For instance, in São Paulo state, which houses 37 percent of Brazil’s total prison population, most detainees are not brought before a judge for at least three months. The risk of ill-treatment is often highest during the initial stages of detention, when police are questioning a suspect. The delay makes detainees more vulnerable to torture and other serious forms of mistreatment by abusive police officers.
        In 2012, the UN Subcommittee on Prevention of Torture and Other Cruel, Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment reported that it had received “repeated and consistent accounts of torture and ill-treatment” in São Paulo and other Brazilian states, “committed by, in particular, the military and civil police.” The torture had allegedly occurred in police custody or at the moment of arrest, on the street, inside private homes, or in hidden outdoor areas, and was described as “gratuitous violence, as a form of punishment, to extract confessions, and as a means of extortion.”
        In addition to violating the rights of detainees, these abusive practices make it more difficult for the police to establish the kind of public trust that is often crucial for effective crime control. These practices undermine legitimate efforts to promote public security and curb violent crime, and thus have a negative impact on Brazilian society as a whole.
        The right to be brought before a judge without unnecessary delay is enshrined in treaties long ago ratified by Brazil, including the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR) and the American Convention on Human Rights. The United Nations Human Rights Committee, which is responsible for interpreting the ICCPR, has determined that the delay between the arrest of an accused and the time before he is brought before a judicial authority “should not exceed a few days,” even during states of emergency.
        Other countries in Latin America have incorporated this right into their domestic law. For instance, in Argentina, the federal Criminal Procedure Code requires that in cases of arrest without a judicial order, the detainee must be brought to a competent judicial authority within six hours.
        In contrast, Brazil’s criminal procedure code requires that when an adult is arrested in flagrante and held in police custody, only the police files of the case need to be presented to the judge within 24 hours, not the actual detainee. Judges evaluate the legality of the arrest and make the decision about whether to order continued detention or other precautionary measures based solely on the written documents provided by the police.
        The code establishes a maximum of 60 days for the first judicial hearing with the detainee, but does not explicitly say when this period begins. In practice, this often means that police in Brazil can keep people detained, with formal judicial authorization, for several months, without giving the detainee a chance to actually see a judge.
        According to the code, the only circumstance in which police need to bring a person before the judge immediately applies to cases of crimes not subject to bail in which arresting officer was not able to exhibit the arrest order to the person arrested at the time of arrest. Otherwise, the detainee may also not see a judge for several months.

                                         (www.hrw.org. Editado e adaptado)

No início do segundo parágrafo, o termo yet indica uma ideia de

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709Q596549 | Português, Morfologia, Aluno Oficial PM, Polícia Militar SP, VUNESP, 2019

Texto associado.
Os antigos
Os antigos invocavam as Musas.
Nós invocamo-nos a nós mesmos.
Não sei se as Musas apareciam –
Seria sem dúvida conforme o invocado e a invocação. –
Mas sei que nós não aparecemos.
Quantas vezes me tenho debruçado
Sobre o poço que me suponho
E balido “Ah!” para ouvir um eco,
E não tenho ouvido mais que o visto –
O vago alvor escuro com que a água resplandece
Lá na inutilidade do fundo…
Nenhum eco para mim…
Só vagamente uma cara,
Que deve ser a minha, por não poder ser de outro.
E uma coisa quase invisível,
Exceto como luminosamente vejo
Lá no fundo…
No silêncio e na luz falsa do fundo…
(Fernando Pessoa. Poemas de Álvaro de Campos. São Paulo, Saraiva, 2013, p. 156)
Assinale a alternativa correta no que se refere à linguagem empregada no poema.
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710Q658530 | Não definido, Cabo da Polícia Militar, Polícia Militar SP, VUNESP, 2020

Assinale a alternativa correta, de acordo com os dispositivos expressamente previstos na Constituição Federal.
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711Q670612 | Direito Penal, Estupro 361 Crimes contra a Liberdade Sexual, Cabo da Polícia Militar, Polícia Militar SP, VUNESP, 2020

Quanto aos chamados crimes contra a liberdade sexual, assinale a alternativa correta.
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712Q657608 | Não definido, Cabo da Polícia Militar, Polícia Militar SP, VUNESP, 2020

Com relação à Declaração dos Direitos do Homem (ONU, 1948), é correto afirmar:
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713Q373604 | Português, Interpretação de Texto, Aluno Oficial, Polícia Militar SP, VUNESP

“Aqui, portanto, está a complexidade, o fascínio e a tragédia de toda vida política. A política é composta de dois elementos – utopia e realidade – pertencentes a dois planos diferentes que jamais se encontram. Não há barreira maior ao pensamento político claro do que o fracasso em distinguir entre ideais, que são utopia, e instituições, que são realidade. O comunista, que lançava o comunismo contra a democracia, pensava normalmente no comunismo como um ideal puro de igualdade e fraternidade, e na democracia como uma instituição que existia na Grã-Bretanha, França ou Estados Unidos, e que apresentava os interesses escusos, as desigualdades e a opressão inerentes a todas as instituições políticas. O democrata, que fazia a mesma comparação, estava de fato comparando um padrão ideal de democracia existente no céu, com o comunismo, como uma instituição existente na Rússia Soviética, com suas divisões de classes, suas caças aos hereges e seus campos de concentração. A comparação, feita, em ambos os casos, entre um ideal e uma instituição, é irrelevante e não faz sentido. O ideal, uma vez incorporado numa instituição, deixa de ser um ideal e torna-se a expressão de um interesse egoístico, que deve ser destruído em nome de um novo ideal. Esta constante interação de forças irreconciliáveis é a substância da política. Toda situação política contém elementos mutuamente incompatíveis de utopia e realidade, de moral e poder.”

(E. H. Carr, Vinte Anos de Crise: 1919-1939. Uma Introdução ao Estudo das Relações Internacionais. Editora Universidade de Brasília, 2001)

Nesse texto, o historiador, jornalista e teórico das relações internacionais britânico E. H. Carr reflete sobre a complexidade da política. Segundo o texto,

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714Q596079 | Geografia, Aluno Oficial PM, Polícia Militar SP, VUNESP, 2019

Texto associado.
Leia o texto que descreve a organização de parte do espaço brasileiro nas décadas de 1970 e 1980.
No imaginário coletivo de novos investimentos e empresários do Centro-Sul, vislumbrava-se a perspectiva de novos investimentos e a expansão de suas atividades. No horizonte camponês, as vítimas da seca do sertão nordestino e os expropriados pelo então recente processo de mecanização das lavouras do Sul – avistavam um pedaço de terra e o recomeço da vida. O movimento migratório rumo ao “Eldorado” atinge proporções consideráveis e faz brotar cidades no “meio do nada”. (Daniel Monteiro Huertas, in http://www.teses.usp.br/ Acesso em 25.04.2019. Adaptado)
O texto descreve 
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715Q195052 | Português, Aluno Oficial CFO, Polícia Militar SP, VUNESP

Texto associado.

Considerando-se o contexto em que está inserido o verso - Nem por isso trocara o abrigo terno -, a forma verbal destacada poderia ser substituída, sem prejuízo de sentido e em conformidade com a norma-padrão da língua portuguesa, por

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716Q657445 | Não definido, Cabo da Polícia Militar, Polícia Militar SP, VUNESP, 2020

Considere o seguinte caso hipotético: 20 (vinte) policiais militares inativos e desarmados e 4 (quatro) Sd PM da ativa, armados de pistola, resolvem assumir o Comando da 99a Cia da PM do Município de Ituroró. Ocupam a OPM, retirando o Cmt Cia de sua sala, recebendo, nesse momento, ordem para deixar imediatamente o Quartel. A ordem foi recusada e os policiais, utilizando de equipamentos de telefonia celular, passaram a transmitir via internet, pelas redes sociais, ao vivo, que acabaram de assumir o Comando da Subunidade.
Diante dessa situação, é correto afirmar com relação à conduta de todos os militares que ocuparam a OPM:
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717Q195374 | História, Aluno Oficial CFO, Polícia Militar SP, VUNESP

Certa vez, um velho Tupinambá me perguntou: “Por que vocês, mairs [franceses] e perós [portugueses], vêm de tão longe para buscar lenha? Por acaso não existem árvores na sua terra?” Respondi que sim, que tínhamos muitas, mas não daquela qualidade, e que não as queimávamos, como ele supunha, mas dela extraíamos tinta para tingir. “E precisam de tanta assim?”, retrucou o velho Tupinambá. “Sim”, respondi, “pois no nosso país existem negociantes que possuem mais panos, facas, tesouras, espelhos e outras mercadorias do que se possa imaginar, e um só deles compra todo o pau-brasil que possamos carregar.” “Ah!”, tornou a retrucar o selvagem. “Você me conta maravilhas. Mas me diga: esse homem tão rico de quem você me fala, não morre?” “Sim”, disse eu, “morre como os outros”. Aqueles selva- gens são grandes debatedores e gostam de ir ao fim em qualquer assunto. Por isso, o velho indígena me inquiriu outra vez: “E quando morrem os ricos, para quem fica o que deixam?” “Para seus filhos, se os têm”, respondi. “Na falta destes, para os irmãos e parentes próximos.” “Bem vejo agora que vocês, mairs, são mesmo uns grandes tolos. Sofrem tanto para cruzar o mar, suportando todas as privações e incômodos dos quais sempre falam quando aqui chegam, e trabalham dessa maneira apenas para amontoar riquezas para seus filhos ou para aqueles que vão sucedê-los? A terra que os alimenta não será por acaso suficiente para alimentar a eles? Nós também temos filhos a quem ama- mos. Mas estamos certos de que, depois da nossa morte, a terra que nos nutriu nutrirá também a eles. Por isso, descansamos sem maiores preocupações.”

(BUENO, Eduardo. Pau Brasil. São Paulo: Axis Mundi, 2002)

O diálogo entre o pastor calvinista Jean de Léry (1534-1611) e o velho Tupinambá, travado em algum momento da estada de Léry no Rio de Janeiro, entre março de 1557 e janeiro de 1558, é revelador

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718Q196931 | Inglês, Aluno Oficial CFO, Polícia Militar SP, VUNESP

Texto associado.

Leia o texto para responder às questões:


The Right to a “Custody Hearing” under International Law

by Maria Laura Canineu
February 3, 2014

        A person who is arrested has a right to be brought promptly before a judge. This is a longstanding and fundamental principle of international law, crucial for ensuring that the person’s arrest, treatment, and any ongoing detention are lawful.
        Yet, until now, Brazil has not respected this right. Detainees often go months before seeing a judge. For instance, in São Paulo state, which houses 37 percent of Brazil’s total prison population, most detainees are not brought before a judge for at least three months. The risk of ill-treatment is often highest during the initial stages of detention, when police are questioning a suspect. The delay makes detainees more vulnerable to torture and other serious forms of mistreatment by abusive police officers.
        In 2012, the UN Subcommittee on Prevention of Torture and Other Cruel, Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment reported that it had received “repeated and consistent accounts of torture and ill-treatment” in São Paulo and other Brazilian states, “committed by, in particular, the military and civil police.” The torture had allegedly occurred in police custody or at the moment of arrest, on the street, inside private homes, or in hidden outdoor areas, and was described as “gratuitous violence, as a form of punishment, to extract confessions, and as a means of extortion.”
        In addition to violating the rights of detainees, these abusive practices make it more difficult for the police to establish the kind of public trust that is often crucial for effective crime control. These practices undermine legitimate efforts to promote public security and curb violent crime, and thus have a negative impact on Brazilian society as a whole.
        The right to be brought before a judge without unnecessary delay is enshrined in treaties long ago ratified by Brazil, including the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR) and the American Convention on Human Rights. The United Nations Human Rights Committee, which is responsible for interpreting the ICCPR, has determined that the delay between the arrest of an accused and the time before he is brought before a judicial authority “should not exceed a few days,” even during states of emergency.
        Other countries in Latin America have incorporated this right into their domestic law. For instance, in Argentina, the federal Criminal Procedure Code requires that in cases of arrest without a judicial order, the detainee must be brought to a competent judicial authority within six hours.
        In contrast, Brazil’s criminal procedure code requires that when an adult is arrested in flagrante and held in police custody, only the police files of the case need to be presented to the judge within 24 hours, not the actual detainee. Judges evaluate the legality of the arrest and make the decision about whether to order continued detention or other precautionary measures based solely on the written documents provided by the police.
        The code establishes a maximum of 60 days for the first judicial hearing with the detainee, but does not explicitly say when this period begins. In practice, this often means that police in Brazil can keep people detained, with formal judicial authorization, for several months, without giving the detainee a chance to actually see a judge.
        According to the code, the only circumstance in which police need to bring a person before the judge immediately applies to cases of crimes not subject to bail in which arresting officer was not able to exhibit the arrest order to the person arrested at the time of arrest. Otherwise, the detainee may also not see a judge for several months.

                                         (www.hrw.org. Editado e adaptado)

No trecho do sexto parágrafo – …the detainee must be brought to a competent judicial authority within six hours. –, o termo must pode ser substituído, sem alteração de sentido, por

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719Q375407 | Português, Cabo da Polícia Militar, Polícia Militar SP, VUNESP, 2020

Leia o texto para responder à questão.
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720Q701919 | Português, Morfologia, Soldado, Polícia Militar SP, VUNESP, 2019

Assinale a alternativa em que a colocação pronominal atende à norma-padrão.
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