After three days of courtroom arguments, the 12 men of the jury retire to decide if the boy is guilty beyond reasonable doubt. |
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Sadly, while Franklin sows seeds of reasonable doubt in the early going, before long the answers are agonizingly clear. |
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Until the evidentiary threshold of proof beyond a reasonable doubt is reached, the judge and the Constitution order the jury to acquit. |
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I think we can safely say that the intentionality behind the ethnic cleansing of 750,000 is established beyond reasonable doubt. |
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Is there a way in which the accomplishments of these players can be proved beyond a reasonable doubt? |
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If his hair and Natalee's hair is on it, yes it'll be very damning evidence and possibly proof beyond a reasonable doubt. |
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Then if I am ever implicated in a crime that I didn't commit, I can prove my exact whereabouts beyond any reasonable doubt. |
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It must survive rejection or disbelief to either be accepted or at least raise a reasonable doubt. |
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The Crown continues to have the burden of proof of proving an offence beyond a reasonable doubt. |
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And I think it will require a Herculean effort, on the part of the defense, to create a reasonable doubt on all of the counts in this case. |
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Is it enough for the defence to raise a reasonable doubt that the plan might have miscarried for some reason? |
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A scintilla of reasonable doubt might be expected about the efficacy and justice of a punishment now rejected by 71 countries. |
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Without witnesses testifying to the event, there would be reasonable doubt for an acquittal. |
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It's thick stuff, and in a legal sense, it's enough to sow reasonable doubt. |
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He believed the complainant, disbelieved the appellant saying his evidence did not raise a reasonable doubt. |
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When they think someone is double-crossing them they don't have to apply judge's rules and prove it beyond reasonable doubt. |
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And a number of them just simply found this notion of beyond reasonable doubt impossible to comprehend. |
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As in most child abuse cases, it is impossible to prove guilt beyond a reasonable doubt. |
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Both sides are equipped for this war, and the jury will have to piece this evidence together to see whether or not this case, they can prove it beyond a reasonable doubt. |
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Proof of probable or likely guilt is not proof of guilt beyond a reasonable doubt. |
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It is the job of the Crown to prove its case beyond reasonable doubt, and, as in all criminal trials in Scotland, no crime can be proved without corroboration. |
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But for all other articles, including most knives, the onus is on the prosecution to prove beyond reasonable doubt that the possessor intends to use it to cause injury. |
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The State can incur responsibility only when the existence of genocide has been established beyond all reasonable doubt. |
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In order to convict the accused, the Court must be convinced of the guilt of the accused beyond reasonable doubt. |
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The focus is on the blameworthiness of the accused.38 As such, the standard of proof in a criminal proceeding is proof beyond a reasonable doubt. |
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If you are satisfied beyond a reasonable doubt that the unlawful act was dangerous, you must go on to the next question. |
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Traditionally, that body of law demands evidence beyond all reasonable doubt. |
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If the judge has a reasonable doubt about the necessity of detaining the accused, the release is granted, with or without conditions. |
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The jury has the heavy responsibility of deciding whether the accused committed the crimes alleged beyond any reasonable doubt. |
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I'm above a reasonable doubt convinced this is a nerve agent that they developed, either improvised, one, or they may have developed actually sarin in some form to use. |
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Consequently, if the judge has a reasonable doubt as to the guilt of the accused, she has to acquit. |
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The net effect is the same however: the evidential onus on the accused is simply to raise a reasonable doubt. |
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The defence lawyer only has to raise a reasonable doubt to obtain an acquittal for his client. |
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If you are satisfied beyond a reasonable doubt that NOA intentionally applied force to NOC, you must go on to the next question. |
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Yes, in the sense that the accused would raise the defence on a balance of probabilities, the Crown would seek to negative that beyond reasonable doubt. |
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Applied to 1915, this produces a verdict of guilt, beyond reasonable doubt. |
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Preliminary analysis indicates possibility of proof to the level of proof beyond reasonable doubt or balance of probabilities. |
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The efficacy of male circumcision in reducing female to male transmission of HIV has been proven beyond reasonable doubt. |
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Generally, the prosecution must prove the accused's guilt beyond reasonable doubt. |
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No guilt can be presumed until the charge has been proved beyond reasonable doubt. |
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When there is conclusive evidence beyond reasonable doubt for attributing the adverse reaction to the blood or blood component. |
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The accusations against the person do not have to be proven beyond a reasonable doubt, as they would in a criminal court. |
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This standard of proof in all cases is greater than a mere balance of probability but less than proof beyond a reasonable doubt. |
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This standard of proof is greater than balance of probabilities but less than proof beyond a reasonable doubt. |
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Compensation granted by the courts is decided in accordance with the law and subject to satisfaction of the court beyond a reasonable doubt. |
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The result is that the prosecution is not required to prove such a motive beyond a reasonable doubt. |
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They must decide if the guilt of the accused was proven beyond a reasonable doubt. |
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The requirement for proof beyond a reasonable doubt is a basic principle in criminal law. |
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There is no dispute that, in this case, this mental element of aggravated assault has been proven beyond a reasonable doubt. |
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The Crown did not prove beyond a reasonable doubt that the alteration was harmful. |
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Could taser discharges used to kill people be detected beyond a reasonable doubt during autopsies? |
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Well, I think there's enough reasonable doubt to fill a truck. |
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In a criminal case you need to have proof beyond a reasonable doubt. |
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To do that, your Honours, it would have to be established, in my respectful submission, beyond reasonable doubt, that the man Rocky was dealing in drugs. |
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One of those principles is that it is not necessary for the trier of fact to believe or accept the defence evidence for there to be a reasonable doubt. |
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When it became clear no one was going to budge, some in the majority undertook to challenge the minority on their understanding of reasonable doubt. |
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What her interview with Lauer proves beyond all reasonable doubt is that she is actually just another celebrity. |
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The DA still has to determine he can prove the charges beyond a reasonable doubt. |
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The juries were properly instructed that in a case such as this reasonable doubt was relevant, and they rendered a verdict. |
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The punishment, as I noted, flows from the actual commission of a specific crime, the requisite elements of which have been proved beyond a reasonable doubt. |
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Mr Thomas shows beyond reasonable doubt that, as attorney general, Kennedy instigated plots to kill Fidel Castro that involved the sort of mobsters who wear dark glasses and pinkie rings. |
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The court reversed itself in 1993 in R. v. Freng where it concluded that, properly interpreted, sections 450 and 452 required the Crown to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that the accused knew the money was counterfeit. |
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There was a high burden of proof giving way to reasonable doubt. |
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And when a defendant claims to have been acting in self-defense, the burden of proof remains on the state, which must prove beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendant was not doing so. |
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In order to establish this offence, it must be proved by the prosecution beyond a reasonable doubt that the accused did something or failed to do something that they had a legal duty to do. |
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Several players believe that there is more than a reasonable doubt to support the theory that observation activities in their feeding grounds in the St. Lawrence harm the cetacean. |
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This process has proven beyond reasonable doubt that democracy and good governance have been entrenched in Namibia, not only as a system of government, but as a way of life. |
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If we could, they would be brought before a court, bail would be set and eventually they could defend themselves, plead not guilty and have the right to a reasonable doubt. |
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However, in case of reasonable doubt regarding the identity of the applicant, the diplomatic mission or consular post shall collect fingerprints within the period specified above. |
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How can we possibly be satisfied with a simple level of proof like reasonable doubt when the physical survival of people-including arbitrary imprisonment and detention under very difficult conditions-is at stake? |
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We know that the various theisms are baseless prescientific mythologies, inherited from antiquity, and that their falsehood is a certainty beyond all reasonable doubt. |
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It is therefore justified to keep the option open to disband any expert or other body at a point in the future where it has been ascertained beyond reasonable doubt that this is safe to do. |
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Unless you are satisfied beyond a reasonable doubt that the Crown has proved all these essential elements, you must find NOA not guilty of aggravated assault. |
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The proof required under the act is not one of beyond reasonable doubt. |
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At common law the accepted view was that this presumption could only be rebutted by evidence establishing beyond reasonable doubt that the husband could not be the father. |
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Then the jurors meet by themselves in a room outside the courtroom to decide, in a criminal case, whether the prosecutor has proven beyond a reasonable doubt that the accused is guilty. |
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The existence of the policy itself is collateral to the determination to be made before the courts, that is, whether the guilt of the accused of the offence charged has been proven beyond a reasonable doubt. |
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These claims should in principle be honoured in cases where the innocence or bona fides of the party concerned is likely or beyond reasonable doubt. |
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This offence must be proved beyond reasonable doubt. |
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I definitely think there is reasonable doubt. |
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Science has still not proven beyond reasonable doubt that there is a direct link between these chemical substances and changes in human hormone levels. |
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The perpetuation of this unjust, absurd situation confirms beyond a reasonable doubt that this blockade is aimed at collectively punishing and debilitating the population, young and old. |
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The prosecutor thought he lost the case, not due to the creation of reasonable doubt, but due to jury nullification. |
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Whilst assuring that the ex-detainees are treated with dignity we have to ensure that they are innocent beyond reasonable doubt before taking any decisions. |
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If an accused bears the burden of disproving on a balance of probabilities an essential element of an offence, it would be possib le for a conviction to occur despite the existence of a reasonable doubt. |
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The judge is convinced beyond a reasonable doubt that the accused committed the assault, but she has doubts regarding whether a weapon was used during the assault. |
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To guard against the possibility of convicting an innocent person, the Crown must also convince the jury that the accused is guilty beyond a reasonable doubt. |
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Young persons are given the same rights and protections as adults, such as the presumption of innocence and the onus on the prosecution to prove its case beyond a reasonable doubt. |
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And after he got caught he, along with his attorney, chose the strategy of putting the victim on trial. He said, she said. It was reasonable doubt. |
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The judge gave them antideadlock instructions, reminding them of the reasonable doubt standard that the State must satisfy and encouraging them to try to arrive at a verdict. |
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And four, the jury was not instructed that Nanavati's defence had to be proved, to the extent that there is no reasonable doubt in the mind of a reasonable person. |
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He was found not guilty because there was a reasonable doubt. |
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The standard of proof in the United States is typically preponderance of the evidence as opposed to clear and convincing or beyond a reasonable doubt. |
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