A) He wasn't wrong. It is illegal to serve pregnant women alcohol.
B) He was right to refuse her alcohol, but he should have calmly offered her another drink instead.
C) He did not ask if she had a doctor's approval to drink alcohol while pregnant.
D) It is not illegal to serve pregnant women alcohol, and refusing to do so is considered discriminatory.
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Multiple Choice
A) Criminal liability holds people responsible for committing crimes while civil liability holds people responsible for paying damages. Both can apply to drinking establishments.
B) Criminal liability only holds people responsible for payment of damages, but civil liability goes a step further by holding them responsible for committing crimes as well. Civil liability can apply to drinking establishments.
C) Criminal liability refers to holding people responsible for both committing crimes and paying damages, while civil liability means the person can be charged with either one or the other. Neither applies to drinking establishments since only individual employees can be charged with crimes or ordered to pay damages.
D) Criminal liability means a restaurant can be held liable if it employs known wanted criminals. Civil liability means that civilians are legally obligated to obey liquor laws.
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Multiple Choice
A) Yes. The bartender/server should always check the IDs of anyone he or she suspects of being a minor.
B) No. If any minor is accidentally served, the responsibility falls on the person checking IDs at the door.
C) Yes. The bartender/server is legally required to check the ID of everyone who asks for an alcoholic drink, regardless of their age or whether or not the ID was checked at the door.
D) No. Establishments that check IDs at the door always use bracelets or stamps to identify people of legal drinking age.
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Multiple Choice
A) Allowing the sale of drugs on the property and/or selling them yourself
B) Verbally insulting a customer for any reason
C) Refusing to wear a supervisor-approved uniform
D) Not using clean glassware to serve alcohol in
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Multiple Choice
A) Yes. Ultimately the parent is responsible under these circumstances.
B) Yes. The law says that as long as it is the parents ordering for their child, the establishment will not get in trouble for serving a minor.
C) No. This is a bit of a gray area, but in most states it is still illegal for minors to drink on alcohol-selling premises even if a parent is present.
D) No. The legal drinking age is strictly reinforced on a national scale.
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Multiple Choice
A) Of course not. Most restaurants have been using BYOB policies for years.
B) No. As long as the restaurant is not serving its own alcohol, a BYOB policy is fine.
C) Yes. There's no such thing as a legal BYOB policy.
D) Yes. In most cases a license is still needed to allow guests to bring in their own alcohol.
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Multiple Choice
A) It doesn't apply at all, since the establishment can be sued at any time.
B) It applies only when a victim of an alcohol-related incident is looking to sue for an amount over $100,000.
C) Victims of an alcohol-related incident cannot file suit until at least one year after the incident.
D) Depending on the location of the alcohol-related incident, victims may no longer be able to file suit once a certain period of time has passed.
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Multiple Choice
A) No. The law only covers what a bartender/server can visually observe.
B) No. The only person who can be considered responsible is the driver.
C) Yes. Brandon is still responsible because he should have been monitoring how many drinks the customer had consumed rather than just how drunk he seemed.
D) No. In this case it is Brandon's supervisor who bears the responsibility.
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Multiple Choice
A) Yes. The U.S. government views the refusal to serve pregnant women as gender discrimination.
B) No. It is illegal to serve pregnant women anyway.
C) No. She can only sue you, not the establishment.
D) She can technically file suit, but she is unlikely to win since you cut her off because she seemed to be getting intoxicated, not because she was pregnant.
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Multiple Choice
A) The condition of the intoxicated person(s) at the time of the incident
B) Whether or not the employee serving them should have seen that they were already "visibly intoxicated"
C) Whether the intoxicated person should have been denied alcohol service while still at the establishment
D) All of the above
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Multiple Choice
A) A fine of $50,000 or more
B) A jail sentence of no longer than a year
C) A probation sentence of at least 12 months
D) A prison sentence of five years or more
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Multiple Choice
A) Serving alcohol to a minor.
B) Discriminating against a patron's age, race, gender, or sexual orientation.
C) Refusing to serve a person certain kinds of drinks.
D) Serving alcohol to an already intoxicated person.
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True/False
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Multiple Choice
A) All bartenders must be licensed with the state, but servers only need their employer's approval.
B) There is no such thing as a national "bartending license" or an individual alcohol service license for servers, but certain states may require certification or a "license to pour."
C) Bartenders must go to bartending school and pass a high-grade state licensing test, while other employees can apply directly to the state for a low-grade alcohol service license.
D) Both bartenders and servers need to apply for a license with the local liquor authority, and this license expires after 14 months.
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Multiple Choice
A) The legal age to drink and/or enter the establishment
B) How many hours an individual bartender is allowed to work
C) The legal age for employees to serve alcohol and/or work at the establishment
D) What kinds of drink promotions can be offered and when
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True/False
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Multiple Choice
A) It lowered the national drinking age from 25 to 21.
B) It made the drinking age the same in every state, raising it in many from 18 to 21.
C) For the first time ever, it made checking IDs before serving alcohol a legal requirement.
D) It allowed states to start choosing their own minimum legal drinking ages.
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Multiple Choice
A) "Dram shop" laws allow people injured by intoxicated individuals to sue the establishment where they were served, the owner of the establishment, and the bartender who served them.
B) Local (municipal) liquor laws can often be stricter than the liquor laws of the state the municipality is in.
C) Jail time can sometimes be required for establishments and individuals involved in criminal liability cases.
D) An establishment can only lose its liquor license after the third violation of local or state liquor laws.
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Multiple Choice
A) Ignore them and continue working. They are probably just there to observe.
B) Ask any intoxicated patrons to leave as discreetly as possible and stop all alcohol service until further notice.
C) Talk to the liquor authorities and let them know that she has not been serving minors.
D) Notify the manager and continue working as usual unless told otherwise.
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Multiple Choice
A) The server/bartender has committed repeated offenses.
B) A person was killed or seriously injured as a result of the minor consuming alcohol.
C) The server/bartender was deliberately indifferent to the wellbeing of the minor.
D) All of the above.
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