Do we have jurors kind of freelancing, making their own decisions, not willing to be a part of the deliberative process anymore? |
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There is no basis for any criticism of these jurors, nor for the jury as a whole. |
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Our tort system is dominated by vague standards and enforced by dispersed tribunals of inexpert jurors. |
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No one suggests the jurors could be sued for negligence because they made a wrong decision. |
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The jury had been deliberating for more than eight hours when the majority verdict of 11 jurors was taken. |
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A majority of the jurors were members of a political party that owned the company which had published the alleged libel. |
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Current grand jury secrecy rules apply only to jurors, prosecutors and courtroom staff. |
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If jurors you think are sympathetic to you get on the jury and bad jurors for you get off, you're happy. |
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At the outset, most of the jurors are eager to render a guilty verdict and go home. |
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Like members of the public at large, the judge does not instruct jurors in a criminal case on what to think. |
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This placement reflects the impartiality of the jurors who must decide guilt or innocence. |
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There was a closed-door session for about an hour, and then one of the jurors was late for court. |
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Experts would make jurors and trial judges overly skeptical and inclined to reject the testimony of eyewitnesses. |
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Your fellow potential jurors will be chosen at random from the pool available, and then slimmed down to just 12 in court, again at random. |
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Challenges of racial discrimination in the pool of available jurors must show systematic and unreasonable bias, according to the court. |
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That may or may not say something about English pleaders, English advocates, and English jurors. |
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His research results didn't give him confidence in the ability of jurors to digest and apply complex legal formulas. |
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Nine of the twelve jurors voted to acquit them, and the judge declared a hung jury. |
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I wait to hear the first panel of potential jurors being called to a courtroom. |
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Do you think X-generationers are making up an ever-increasing number of people who are making up panels of jurors? |
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Typically a panel of potential jurors is drawn from the jury room randomly. |
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The panel of anonymous jurors deliberated for 13 days over a four-week period. |
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Defence Counsel may challenge two jury candidates and jurors will be asked if they have any connection with case or defendant. |
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Her decision not to testify had left a bad impression on the jurors, despite the judge specifically ordering them not to read anything into it. |
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There is no limit as to how many jurors can be removed under this cause, but peremptory challenges has a definite number that a lawyer may use. |
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Almost immediately two of the jurors began to cry and were left obviously distressed by what they were asked to study. |
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After being indicted, he pulled together lists of prospective jurors in his case, then a list of the 14 people empaneled to hear his case. |
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But again, if the subject is sensitive, the colloquy among the attorneys, prospective jurors, and judge can be held privately at the bench. |
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She did not speak, but nodded her head when told by the clerk that she could object to any of the jurors before they were sworn in. |
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A neighbours' squabble over late-night noise ended in court before a circuit judge, 12 jurors and two barristers. |
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Goux apologised to the 180 candidate jurors for the slow selection process. |
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These are juried awards, which means two or three jurors are given all of the books submitted by publishers within one category. |
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Peremptory challenges allow a lawyer to dismiss a small number of potential jurors from the jury pool without giving a reason. |
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And on Wednesday, we had one of the brouhahas with the jurors, and we replaced it and put in a new juror. |
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But it is much harder to nobble 12 independent jurors than it is to bribe or intimidate one judge. |
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British courts are less corruptible than their European counterparts because it is easier to nobble one judge than 12 jurors. |
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The jurisprudence of capital punishment imposes a tremendous burden on jurors. |
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The Court's attitude seems to have been that defense counsel should've done a better job questioning the jurors during voire dire. |
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It allows jurors to vote against the law if they consider the law unfair or whatever. |
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An indictment is valid even if the grand jurors have no knowledge, in voting to indict, that evidence exists that would exculpate the defendant. |
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On Monday, senators took their oaths as jurors before the Supreme Court's chief justice for Brown's impeachment trial. |
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One of the jurors was extremely upset when she watched a video of a forceable rape. |
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After filling in the verdict, the jury foreman would then sign the issue paper on behalf of all the jurors. |
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And of course, one of my favorites on the appellate grounds is removal of the two jurors, including the foreperson in this case. |
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If a person is determined to be a principal in a crime, the jurors had wanted to know, is that person guilty of the crime? |
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Some people feel that it is a bad idea for jurors to discuss their deliberations. |
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The three men thanked jurors individually as the 11 women and one man left the court building, then they went off to celebrate. |
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Were the jurors who looked over this degrading garment imagining one of their own children being forced to wear it? |
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Juries at the assizes were then chosen from this panel of potential jurors. |
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The couple went on a break to Paris in September 2002, but split up within a fortnight of their return, jurors heard. |
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Stage a banner action outside your local federal courthouse while jurors are coming in. |
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Most jurors like to believe that they can really figure this whole puzzle out a little better than the lawyers can. |
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Besides identifying malefactors, grand jurors were to discern problems of public order. |
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Again, absent the use of a gun, knife or poison, jurors rarely accepted arguments for murderous intent. |
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And jurors are never accused of acting like vigilantes when they convict a defendant, no matter how weak the evidence. |
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Perhaps jurors minds were perverted by the words of some pretty crafty lawyers? |
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Court officials hope to have 12 jurors and two alternates in place by Friday. |
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I was shocked and still am to a degree although I understand it better now that I've heard the jurors speak about their thinking on it. |
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Three hours later, the nine jurors returned deadlocked, and half an hour later, Mohammed ordered the retrial. |
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Tonight, there's a report that several more jurors are saying they're going to turn their trial experience into a tell-all book. |
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Once these jurors were excused and their replacements seated in the jury box, the whole tenor of the day changed. |
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Accordingly we ordered that affidavits should be taken from each of the 12 jurors and from the two bailiffs looking after them at the hotel. |
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Many acquittals are obtained in cases where the defense cannot offer jurors an alternative suspect for the crime. |
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There were 14 jurors empanelled, one of whom was discharged under the provisions of the Juries Act before the trial commenced. |
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A judge declared a hung jury after jurors said they were hopelessly deadlocked. |
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This is a case where the jury that was empanelled were 15 jurors to hear the evidence. |
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The judge exempted all the jurors from jury service for five years because it had been a difficult case. |
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It is clear from the papers that the two jurors identified in this letter were themselves members of ethnic minority communities. |
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Half an hour later four of the nine absent jurors arrived to the news that they'd been fined. |
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You know, what he is doing is preconditioning the potential jurors, or in really simple English, he's tainting the jury pool. |
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Before the jurors leave, the judge instructs them to not discuss the case, as their opinion should not be formed before all testimony is heard. |
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With his strong voice, he impressed the jurors, took the audience by storm and grabbed the title. |
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Six jurors believed, like the coroner, that it was acute cocaine intoxication. |
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But you know, I think your point is that I think maybe some of the jurors are sort of rooting for him secretly. |
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Before I could finish casting unwarranted aspersions on all fourteen of my fellow jurors, I was distracted by the actual oath. |
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And generally what happens is when people seek the death penalty, jurors tend to want more evidence if they're going to put somebody to death than otherwise. |
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And jurors would be able to evaluate the evidence on both sides of the case and render a reasoned verdict. |
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Before the swearing of any of the jurors, 15 the defendant or prosecutor in England and Ireland could challenge the array of jurors compiled by the sheriff. |
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The seven female and five male jurors will continue deliberating verdicts today in the retrial at Hull Crown Court after being sent home last night. |
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The jurors of our sovereign lord and lady present that he hath wickedly and feloniously used certain detestable arts, called witchcraft and sorceries. |
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It is also not uncommon in medium to long cases, for jurors on the panel from which the final random selection will be made, to be asked to answer a short questionnaire. |
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But without proof, jurors may be uncomfortable relying on something as theoretical as recovered memory. |
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Two of the jurors with whom I served had taken in foster children. |
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The randomness of the jury which s.80 of the Constitution contemplates is randomness at the point of creation of the panel of jurors from whom the ultimate jury is chosen. |
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After deliberating for just under four hours, the jurors informed the judge that they were unable to reach a verdict. |
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Six female jurors sitting at Seminole County Criminal Justice Center in Sanford took more than 16 hours to decide their verdict. |
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They were jurors, reeves and lessees, and in demanding freedom and economic opportunity, they were simply claiming what they regarded as their own. |
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Perhaps it's just that the jurors are taking their mission very seriously and are reviewing every syllable of every bit of the testimony several times over. |
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A group of jurors who wanted to convict deposed the forewoman. |
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They could have asked that jurors consider a lesser charge, such as manslaughter, in addition to murder, but opted for an all-or-nothing strategy. |
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The jurors were thus dually protected when the government called a former figure from New York med to the stand on Monday. |
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Responsibility for identifying jurors was thus taken from the constables and given to churchwardens and local overseers of every parish or township in each county. |
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Our covey of jurors were all handed a 27-page questionnaire. |
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She points also to the middle classes, serving as vestrymen and jurors, who progressively lost faith in the informers and the gin acts they were enforcing. |
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It is materially different in relation to a reserve system of jurors. |
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As the video began to play, the jurors leaned forward to watch it on a big screen in front of the jury box. |
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Both trials ended in mistrials, with all of the white jurors voting to convict and all of the black jurors voting to acquit. |
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When an attorney exercises peremptory challenges, she uses her discretion to reject potential jurors who are not, objectively speaking, objectionable. |
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Trial attorneys know that some jurors are more empathetic than others. |
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We have no hesitation in finding that the judge was not only entitled under common law to refuse to discharge these jurors, but would have been wrong had he done so. |
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Young people usually serve as jurors and may also fill the roles of prosecuting attorney, defense attorney, judge, bailiff, or other officers of the court. |
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For instance, jurors in Connecticut, New York and other northeastern states are much more reluctant than jurors in other parts of the country to impose the death penalty. |
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Tim Gunn and jurors Isabel Toledo and Ruben Toledo will also attend the luncheon. |
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During a visitation on August 14, a caustic and angry Casey reared her head and jurors were seen taking notes. |
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At the request of the defence, jurors considered a murder charge only. |
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Instead, he barely pushed the jurors to charge the cop and allowed the unprecedented step of letting the officer testify. |
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A challenge to the array involved a party objecting to the composition of the panel of potential jurors from which the trial jury would be selected. |
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The tedious process of choosing a panel of 12 jurors was enlivened yesterday when it emerged the Jackson team planned to call a host of Hollywood celebrities in his defence. |
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A jury is formed, then, of the remaining prospective jurors in the order that their names were originally chosen. |
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From 1972 onward, paramilitaries were tried in juryless Diplock courts to avoid intimidation of jurors. |
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No indictment or presentment can be made except by concurrence of at least twelve of the jurors. |
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On any given day, 10,000 jurors sit in jury boxes throughout Los Angeles County. |
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A MAN was found not guilty of the possession of a silencer for a machine gun by jurors after just five minutes. |
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But it apparently persuaded two jurors at his second trial, which ended in March with a hung jury. |
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Instead, jurors were recruited from the locality of the dispute and were expected to know the facts before coming to court. |
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In these cases 6 out of 9 jurors must find against the defendant, and may not be overruled in cases of acquittal. |
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Legal Aid and Defender said that other circuit courts in Michigan collect demographic statistics on prospective jurors on a voluntary basis. |
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Although I enjoy my somewhat reluctant status as a nonjuror, I hope the system looks at itself to create a more equal selection of future jurors. |
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Covering his head with a folded blanket at the Oleaster mental health unit contributed to the tragedy, jurors ruled. |
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Lane County swears in two sets of grand juries every four weeks, with an oath that requires jurors to keep all proceedings secret. |
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Save hifalutin vocabulary for other lawyers, if you must, and speak to the jurors in plain English, she recommends. |
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If jurors find that a preponderance of evidence supports Hamilton's legal claims, she will be entitled to monetary damages. |
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The jurors discussed the evidence and made their decision thereupon. |
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Scots juries, sitting in criminal cases, consist of fifteen jurors, which is three more than is typical in many countries. |
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The return for each Hundred was sworn to by 12 local jurors, half of them English and half of them Norman. |
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The minimum age for jurors was also raised to 25 in order to ensure a more experienced jury pool. |
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For example, Justices of the Peace could replace suspect jurors in accordance with the 1495 act preventing the corruption of juries. |
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The Crown Court and a county court may sit in the same building and use the same jurors. |
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While jurors voted on oath or affirmation, a Lord could vote upon his honour. |
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In 1973 one of the Swiss jurors made a great show of presenting his votes with flamboyant gestures. |
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Note that the above does not include any mention of Jury Nullification, a right of jurors. |
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Shortly afterwards, one of the jurors sent a note to the judge and was discharged. |
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There was hardly anyone in Scotland who was disinterested but some jurors did resist bringing in a verdict of guilty. |
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Shortly before arriving at the field, jurors were shown a hairpin bend on the Coates to Huntington road a few hundred yards away. |
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Old courthouses with the two jury boxes necessary to accommodate the 24 jurors of a grand jury can still be seen. |
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A grand jury is traditionally larger than and distinguishable from the petit jury used during a trial, usually with 12 jurors. |
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The foreperson may be selected by the judge or by vote of the jurors, depending on the jurisdiction. |
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In Connecticut, alternate jurors are dismissed before the panel of sworn jurors begin deliberation. |
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Sheriffs prepared cases for trial and found jurors with relevant knowledge and testimony. |
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In Scotland, a jury in a criminal trial consists of 15 jurors, which is thought to be the largest in the world. |
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Trials in the Republic of Ireland which are scheduled to last over 2 months can, but do not have to, have 15 jurors. |
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The interviewed jurors clearly recognized that the experts were selected within an adversary process. |
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The sentence is delivered by a majority of the 12 jurors and the 3 professional judges. |
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Seven jurors vote in secret to decide whether the defendant is guilty or not, and decisions are taken by majority. |
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Prospective jurors may only be asked certain questions, selected for direct pertinence to impartiality or other relevant matters. |
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The trial judge has the discretion to direct that one or two alternate jurors also be appointed. |
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Three professional judges sit alongside six jurors in first instance proceedings or nine in appeal proceedings. |
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Before 2012, there were nine or twelve jurors, but this was reduced to cut spending. |
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During these procedures, judges and jurors have equal positions on questions of fact, while judges decide on questions of procedure. |
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Nevertheless, the Jury Ordinance requires that a jury in any proceedings should be composed of at least 5 jurors. |
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Where more than twelve jurors are present, twelve will be chosen by lot to retire and consider the verdict. |
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The jury consists of 10 people, and has to reach a majority verdict consisting of seven or more of the jurors. |
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Prospective jurors are sent a summons and are obligated to appear in a specified jury pool room on a specified date. |
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Often jurisdictions pay token amounts for jury duty and many issue stipends to cover transportation expenses for jurors. |
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Each side in the trial is allotted a certain number of challenges to remove prospective jurors from consideration. |
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The judge calls out the names of the anonymously challenged prospective jurors and those return to the pool for consideration in other trials. |
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During their sequestration, jurors were not allowed to speak to reporters. |
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Groups tend to exert buffering effects that allow jurors to disregard their initial personal biases when forming a credible group decision. |
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Rule 47 provides for the selection of jurors and rule 48 governs the number of jurors in a civil case. |
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However, the discussions among jurors cannot be made public except in extraordinary circumstances. |
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Several jurors in the back row leaned forward to take a good look. |
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There are several drive days across Europe including the UK which are staged for all the European jurors to take the narrowest of toothcombs over the short-listed cars. |
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Koh rejected Apple's argument that jurors erred by finding Apple's trade dress, or how a product looks, for the iPad and iPad 2 wasn't protectable. |
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Any prospective jurors not thus impaneled return to the jury pool room. |
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Evidence has shown that jurors typically take their roles very seriously. |
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The Board of Selectmen approved Massachusetts's first women jurors. |
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Several of the techiest potential jurors were excluded from the panel, including an Apple employee, another from Google, and a man with over 120 patents. |
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Superior Court Judge Susan Garsh told jurors after a short session Wednesday morning that they may have noticed another empty seat in the jury box. |
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Also, judges no longer moved on circuits becoming fixed to their jurisdictions, and jurors were nominated by parties to the legal dispute rather than by the sheriff. |
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Historically, the rules of evidence reflected a marked distrust of jurors. |
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A jury in a criminal trial is initially composed of 12 jurors. |
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Moreover, the research shows that in deliberations jurors combine their individual perspectives on the evidence and debate its relative merits before arriving at a verdict. |
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In 1276 the jurors of Brushford manor made a complaint about John de Camera in the Court of Exchequer in which he was described as forester of Exmoor. |
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Detailed interviews with jurors after they rendered verdicts in trials involving complex expert testimony have demonstrated careful and critical analysis. |
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In juries of the Justices in Eyre, the bailiff of the hundred would choose 4 electors who in turn chose 12 others from their hundred, and from these were selected 12 jurors. |
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Since there is always the possibility of jurors not completing a trial for health or other reasons, often one or more alternate jurors are selected. |
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In civil cases many trials require fewer than twelve jurors. |
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Unlike professional judges, lay judges are not legally trained, but unlike jurors, lay judges are usually volunteers and may be politically appointed. |
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The first step will typically be to find out the initial feeling or reaction of the jurors to the case, which may be by a show of hands, or via secret ballot. |
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He ordered a census be taken, which forced a reduction in the grain dole, and decreed that jurors could only come from the Senate or the equestrian ranks. |
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If jurors accept Roeder's defense, he could be convicted of voluntary manslaughter, a crime that carries a sentence of up to five years in prison. |
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In the United States jurors for grand juries are selected from jury pools. |
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Selection of jurors from a jury pool occurs when a trial is announced and juror names are randomly selected and called out by the jury pool clerk. |
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Once the list of prospective jurors has assembled in the courtroom the court clerk assigns them seats in the order their names were originally drawn. |
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The list is usually written up and clearly visible to assist nervous prospective jurors and may include several questions uniquely pertinent to the particular trial. |
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There are several driving days across Europe which are staged for all the European jurors to take the finest of toothcombs over the short-listed cars. |
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