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by jxcole
1435 days ago
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Having been on a jury in the US one time (attempted murder), the purpose of this system is probably not at all obvious. The idea is to put 12 people in a room and force them to agree to the same thing. You can deliberate almost any amount of time you want. If you try to tell the judge after a single day of delibrations that you are a hung jury, the judge will force you to stay longer. Only in extreme cases where the jury has been hung for a very long time does the judge allow a mistrial. So the idea is to force 12 people to convince each other of one idea or the other. |
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The jury is evenly split, and Athena adds a final vote for innocence, calling it her precedent.
It is unfortunate that the United States did not follow this ancient judicial custom EDIT: to acquit if half the jury refuses to convict.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oresteia#The_Eumenides
(I live in a midsize U.S. town that happens to have the oldest community theater that performs Greek plays in mask every year.)