Are you following all of this, John?But once delivered it can't be changed unless a new trial occurs through appeal. . Yes Judge can have closing comments but they are by no means binding.
Are you following all of this, John?But once delivered it can't be changed unless a new trial occurs through appeal. . Yes Judge can have closing comments but they are by no means binding.
Some of the AFF'ers as wellIt’s rather interesting seeing what cheeses-off some of our AFFers.
Because, you could be exactly the person they are looking for!Oh OK. Must remember that @Pushka said I cannot think for myself and must not judge and must do what everyone tells me.
P.S. I can judge who I want when I want and no one can stop me. Please excuse me from jury duty as I've already made up my mind. Simple request. Why would anyone try to fight it?
I really really hope that society does not go down the path of forcing people to think alike and not question. Welcome to the Borg where all are equal. Where all are the same.
What I am trying to say is there are people out there who have already made up their mind and are not fit to be on any jury. That is fact. Not speculation. We should not be forcing them to be on a jury. They should be excused.Sorry if pointing out the facts disturbs you.
Good god. Evaluating the strength of the evidence forces you to think for yourself. Exactly the opposite of your mindset expressed above. Dont judge the person, judge the evidence. I guess this concept just doesn't exist in any simulation.
A jury verdict is just a finding of a fact - the guilt or innocence of a defendant. And the trial judge can also direct a jury to deliver a not guilty verdict. (Doney vs Queen).But once delivered it can't be changed unless a new trial occurs through appeal
A jury verdict is just a finding of a fact - the guilt or innocence of a defendant. And the trial judge can also direct a jury to deliver a not guilty verdict. (Doney vs Queen).
With that finding of fact, the Judge, not the Jury, then hands down the Judgement/decision.
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Exactly. The Jury does not deliver or write the Judgement. They just find the fact of G or NG to the judge. The Judge then sits in Judgement and either convicts or acquits the defendant.Unless you are simply playing on words in which case
No. A judge simply cannot acquit someone who has just been declared guilty by the jury. That is wrong. The judges ONLY role on finding of guilt is determining penalty. It's all there in the SA Law Handbook on which law is based. Once the foreman says Guilty it's declared as such and conviction recorded.Exactly. The Jury does not deliver or write the Judgement. They just find the fact of G or NG to the judge. The Judge then sits in Judgement and either convicts or acquits the defendant.
Yes, but Quickstatus was making the interesting point that the jury may not even get to decide. Before they get the chance,the judge can direct them to return a ‘not guilty’. Although that would be a question of whether or not there was enough evidence in the first place to support a conviction. It’s a question of law rather than evidence, so fairly rare!No. A judge simply cannot acquit someone who has just been declared guilty by the jury. That is wrong. The judges ONLY role on finding of guilt is determining penalty. It's all there in the SA Law Handbook on which law is based. Once the foreman says Guilty it's declared as such and conviction recorded.
I'm trying to follow.Are you following all of this, John?
Because, you could be exactly the person they are looking for!
But problem with a voluntary jury is that you’re not necessarily going to get a cross-section of peers.I'm trying to follow.
At the end of the day being on a jury should be something someone wants to do not forced into it. And yes by all means pay them better. I do not see serving on a jury as my right nor my responsibility. I have enough in life to worry about. I don't need distractions.
You make a good point but I'm not convinced.
Yes that's possible where the evidence is flawed for a multitude of reasons and a direction made. But this relates back to ensuring a trial is fair and adhering to legal principles in the presentation of evidence. Which was referred to earlier. Just as they can also declare a mistrial if the jurors act against proceedings. Just as happened in one recent case.Yes, but Quickstatus was making the interesting point that the jury may not even get to decide. Before they get the chance,the judge can direct them to return a ‘not guilty’. Although that would be a question of whether or not there was enough evidence in the first place to support a conviction. It’s a question of law rather than evidence, so fairly rare!