I wonder if those of us prosecuted for refusing to carry one will be offered trial by jury? |
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They have legislated to expand trial by jury, devolve powers to local councils and ban the police from entering universities. |
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Civilians enjoyed the rights to counsel and trial by jury and the privilege of a habeas corpus writ to test the legality of government detention. |
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From the point of view of the individual, trial by jury is a good thing for many reasons. |
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Nullification is a byproduct of the robust right of criminal defendants to a trial by jury. |
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And it has just struck a blow for liberty by refusing to pass Government plans to curb trial by jury. |
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Two years later, the Supreme Judicial Court struck it down on points that involved self-incrimination and trial by jury. |
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The original constitution restricted the right to vote by property but outlawed hereditary titles and added trial by jury in criminal cases. |
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In the US where there is trial by jury, the presiding judge can rule a mistrial, leading to the trial beginning anew. |
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The Anglo-Saxon preference for compurgation, as proof of guilt or innocence, persisted and only gradually gave way to trial by jury. |
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Its success depends on the role of trial by jury and the impartiality of judges. |
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It has some utility, but it wouldn't ever substitute for trial by jury. |
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Milligan, as a consequence, had been deprived of his constitutional right to trial by jury and was freed after 18 months in jail. |
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The settlers were outraged that the arrest did not require a warrant, a statement of charges, or trial by jury. |
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They reorganized the judicial system, including key legislation on trial by jury. |
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The process of establishing the institution of trial by jury has largely been completed in the Russian Federation. |
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You understand and agree that arbitration shall be in lieu of any court proceedings or trial by jury. |
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It is always up to the judge to decide the sentence, even in a trial by jury. |
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In substance, a statutorily protected foreman self-selected by the jury is not a trial by jury of equals, is not a trial by jury of persons randomly selected. |
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If the examining judge decides there is a valid case against a suspect, the accused is sent for adversarial trial by jury. |
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The plaintiffs are requesting trial by jury. |
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The trial by jury, your Lordship knows, is so antient a privilege belonging to mankind, that its origin cannot properly be traced. |
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The act, a forerunner to trial by jury, started the abolition of trial by combat and trial by ordeal. |
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By 1300, the wager of combat had all but died out in favor of trial by jury. |
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So on his lawyer's advice, he will plead not guilty, choose trial by jury, and ask for a preliminary hearing in order to drag out the proceedings as long as possible. |
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Thus, inadvertently, trial by jury and indictment by grand jury were introduced, but only for these subsidiary courts. |
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Those of us who come from countries with a custom of common law believe our rights to trial by jury, the presumption of innocence before guilt and habeas corpus to be absolutely essential. |
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I will begin with the briefest possible summary of the tragic events, which clearly demonstrate that the process which has just come to the end of one important stage, trial by jury, must be pursued further. |
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Peers of the Realm were formerly entitled to a trial in the House of Lords, just as commoners were entitled to trial by jury. |
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Modern democracies owe a debt to Greek beliefs in government by the people, trial by jury, and equality under the law. |
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There was no trial by jury, and evidence standards were weaker than in criminal courts. |
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Article Three also protects the right to trial by jury in all criminal cases, and defines the crime of treason. |
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The same year, trial by jury became a fairly explicit right in one of the most influential clauses of Magna Carta, signed by King John. |
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Constitution extended the rights to trial by jury to both criminal and civil matters, and a grand jury for serious cases. |
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At the close of discovery, the parties may either pick a jury and then have a trial by jury or the case may proceed as a bench trial. |
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Constitution from Rhode Island Quakers, trial by jury, equal rights for men and women, and public education. |
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Certain rights, such as the right to be presumed innocent or to trial by jury, for example, are appropriate only in criminal proceedings while others, such as fair hearing, have a more general application. |
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The forthcoming introduction of trial by jury throughout the Russian Federation would make it possible, in theory, to repeal the Constitutional Court's ban on the handing down of death sentences. |
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In this situation, defence tends to elect trial by jury. |
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In August 2009, his Government had consequently instructed the Governor of the Turks and Caicos Islands to suspend the government and legislature and automatic right to trial by jury. |
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In 1999, the Constitutional Court prohibited the handing down of death sentences pending the introduction of trial by jury throughout the country. |
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They include rights of property, freedom of expression and dissent, marriage, equal protection of the law, freedom of contract, trial by jury, etc. |
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On 21 April 2008, Mr. Dufour's lawyer asked for a trial by jury. |
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It expressed admiration for the achievements made by China to expand the implementation of justice in society through guaranteeing the right to defence, system of people's courts and the trial by jury. |
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The colonists drew on English law books, leading them to an anachronistic interpretation of Magna Carta, believing that it guaranteed trial by jury and habeas corpus. |
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Rules 38 and 39 deal with the parties' right to a trial by jury and the procedure for requesting a jury trial instead of a bench trial and trials by an advisory jury. |
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The amendment thus does not guarantee trial by jury in cases under maritime law, in lawsuits against the government itself, and for many parts of patent claims. |
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Trial by jury is the most fundamental of our civil liberties and eroding it is wholly unjustified. |
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Trial by jury does not mean that by jury in the first instance and trial by judges in the Court of Appeal in the second. |
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Trial by jury was abolished in 1970 so that judicial decisions would rest entirely in the hands of appointed judges. |
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Sullivan was enthusiastic, and Trial by Jury was composed in a matter of weeks. |
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These were Trial by Jury, Pinafore, Pirates, Patience, Iolanthe, The Mikado, Ruddigore, Yeomen and The Gondoliers. |
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Gilbert and composer Arthur Sullivan, nurtured their collaboration, and had their first success with Trial by Jury. |
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After the success of Trial by Jury, there were discussions towards reviving Thespis, but Gilbert and Sullivan were not able to agree on terms with Carte and his backers. |
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