|
|
|
|
|
by rprasad
4905 days ago
|
|
As a former defense attorney, I would have loved it if jury nullification was intentionally designed into the system. Unfortunately, it's not. It's just a great side effect of the right to a trial by jury. In the American legal system, the modification of laws is left to the legislature. A jury can express its displeasure with a law by nullifying, but this has no legal import, since a different jury could easily convict. Thus, the primary method of expressing displeasure in a law...is to express displeasure in a law (by calling your local legislator). |
|
Jury nullification is part of law. Design is the part that dictates that you, as a defense attorney, cannot inform juries of their power. The prosecutors certainly won't.
Every American jury has the power* to ignore the law and make their own verdict if they decide that's how justice would be served.
Last year, it became part of New Hampshire law to protect the right of the defense to inform juries of their power:
http://reason.com/blog/2012/06/29/new-hampshire-adopts-jury-...
*edit: changed "right" to "power"