Posted on 03/12/2003 7:27:40 AM PST by The FRugitive
I just got called for jury duty for the first time.
I'm curious about jury nullification in case I get picked and get a consensual "criminal" case (tax evasion, drug posession, gun law violation, etc.). What would I need to know?
This could be my chance to stick it to the man. ;)
(Of course if I were to get a case of force or fraud I would follow the standing law.)
Sadly that could be said about any number of subjects. :^}
So where is the killer? Why isn't he behind bars?
Had the prosecution offered a more likely scenario than the *OJ did it all by himself, but using two different knives* theory to which the jury found a reasonable doubt, that question might well have been answered, along with the question of who the otherkiller was.
It would not however have answered questions as to who murdered the other waiter from the Mezzaluna Restaurant where Ron Goldman was employed, who murdered Judge Ito's bailiff, or who shot the private detective investigating the DNA evidence to death. Nor several other deaths from the same time period that may well have been linked.
The jury smelled a rat, particularly after Judge Ito's wife Margaret York had testified. And when the prosecution and court appear to be running a railroad, that is indeed grounds for a juror to have reasonable doubt. -archy-/-
That is what the government would have you think
BAHAHAHAHAHAHA!!!! OJ kills two people and it's the prosecution's fault. Only in California can you find a jury that can see enough evidence to convict a man but ignore it in favor of "ineptness".
Face it, the jury didn't want to convict OJ PERIOD. It was jury nullification.
You have offered nothing but your opinion,
offering nothing legally factual to back it up
... you obviously failed social studies spelling in grade school.
Go back to civics, look up double jeapardy, look up jury nullification.. A mistrial is not nullification, nor is a hung jury.
Still no authoritative definition. Opinion only.
Movies? That's like watching football on TV.
I always cry when Retiarius looses....
-archy-/-
Please don't cry old fella, it's just the internet.
OJ kills two people and it's the prosecution's fault.
I never said it was the prosecutions fault that OJ murdered two people. Where do you get this stuff?
Only in California can you find a jury that can see enough evidence to convict a man but ignore it in favor of "ineptness".
The prosecution made many mistakes, but the one that showed their ineptness the most and sealed their fate was their moronic, PC inspired decision to move the venue to LA proper. It made jury nullification a much more likely outcome.
Face it, the jury didn't want to convict OJ PERIOD. It was jury nullification.
I agree, who are you debating?
The jury decided it was more important to protect the public against what they perceived as an illegal (as opposed to unlawful) and out of control prosecution, than to protect the public against one killer.
That's the essence of jury nullification, that a jury is willing to let a murderer (or thief, rapist, drug user, or whatever) go free in order to restrain the government.
Whether you agree with that or not isn't the issue. You were misrepresenting what jury nullification is. That was my point, not whether I thought the Simpson jury did good or bad.
Fine.... I took your philosophy and ran with it to its reasonable outcome. I can't state it any better than I have for you.
I give up. You will only continue to miss the point, as is your right.
Your interpretation of "reasonable" is suspect. It's kinda like you guessing what the founders hoped for. (Democrats do that all the time too, which is neither here nor there)
I give up.
Excellent choice. But a retreat ought to be graceful, not hurling insults as you run for the hills. :^}
Please present some.
I don't like that rule, and I choose to ignore it because it pleases me.
Strawman. You keep bringing up this irrelevant point, as if someone other than you ever brought it up. Amazing persistence in pursuing fantasy.
Oh please. If this had been some street kid, he'd still be doing time.
I admire your sense of humor.
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