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  • # The Law You Won't Be Told

  • On a Jury you know your options: guilty, or not. But there's another choice that neither

  • the judge nor the lawyers will tell you -- often because they're not allowed to and also it

  • might better if you *don't* know.

  • This video will tell you that third choice, but be warned: simply *watching* may prevent

  • you from ever serving on a jury -- so this is your last chance to hit the pause button

  • before you learn about...

  • Jury nullification: when the defendant is 100% beyond-a-reasonable-doubt guilty *but*

  • the jurors *also* think he shouldn't be punished. The jury can nullify the law and let him go

  • free.

  • But before your on your next jury and yell 'Null! Booya!' at the judge you should know

  • that just talking about jury nullification in the wrong circumstances can get you arrested.

  • Though a video such as this one, simply acknowledging the *existence* of jury nullification and

  • in *no way advocating* it is totally OK. And, while we're at it:

  • *(CGP Grey is not a lawyer, this is not legal advice it is meant for entertainment purposes

  • only. Seriously, guy, don't do anything in a court of law based on what an Internet Video

  • told you. No joke.)*

  • So why can't you do this? It's because nullification isn't *in* the law †, but exists as a logical

  • consequence of two other laws:

  • First: that juries can't be punished for a 'wrong' decision -- no matter the witnesses,

  • DNA, or video proof show. That's the point of a jury: to be the decider.

  • and

  • Second: when a defendant is found not-guilty, that defendant can't be tried again for the

  • same crime ‡.

  • So there *are* only two stated options: guilty or not, it's just that jury nullification

  • is when the words of the jurors don't match their thoughts -- for which they can't be

  • punished and their not-guilty decision can't be changed.

  • These laws are necessary for juries to exist within a fair system, but the logical consequence

  • is... contentious -- lawyers and judges argue about jury nullification like physicists argue

  • about quantum mechanics. Both are difficult to observe and the interpretation of both

  • has a huge philosophical ramification for the subject as a whole.

  • Is nullification the righteous will of the people or an anarchy of twelve or just how

  • citizens judge their laws?

  • The go-to example in favor of nullification is the fugitive slave law: when Northern juries

  • refused to convict escaped slaves and set them free.

  • Can't argue with that.

  • But the anarchy side is Southern juries refusing to convict white lynch mobs. Not humanity

  • at its best.

  • But both of these are juries nullifying the law.

  • Also juries have *two* options where their thoughts may differ from their words. Jury

  • nullification usually refers to the non-guilty version but juries can convict without evidence

  • just as easily as they can acquit in spite of it.

  • This is jury nullification too and the jurors are protected by the first rule, though the

  • second doesn't apply and judges have the power to overrule a guilty verdict if they think

  • the jurors arent the best. And, of course, a guilty defendant can appeal, at least for

  • a little while. Which makes the guilty form of jury nullification weaker than the not-guilty

  • kind. Cold comfort, though.

  • Given the possibility of jurors who might ignore the law as written, it's not surprising

  • when picking jurors for a trial, lawyers -- whose existence is dependent on an orderly society

  • -- will ask about nullification, usually in the slightly roundabout way:

  • "Do you have any beliefs that might prevent you from making a decision based strictly

  • on the law?"

  • If after learning about jury nullification you think it's a good idea: answer 'yes' and

  • you'll be rejected, but answer 'no' with the intent to get on the jury to nullify and you've

  • just committed perjury -- technically a federal crime -- which makes the optimal strategy

  • once on a jury to zip it.

  • But This introduces a problem for jurors who intend to nullify: telling the other 11 angry

  • men about your position is risky, which makes nullification as a tool for fixing unjust

  • laws nation wide problematic.

  • (Not to mention about 95% of criminal charges in the United States never make it to trial

  • and rather end in a plea bargain, but that's a story for another time.)

  • The only question about jury nullification that may matter is if jurors should be *told*

  • about it and the courts are near universalin their decision: 'no way'.

  • Which might seem self-interested -- again, courts depend on the law -- but there's evidence

  • that telling jurors about nullification changes the way they vote by making evidence less

  • relevant -- which isn't surprising: that's what nullification *is*. But mock trials also

  • show sympathetic defendants get more non-guilty verdicts and unsympathetic defendants get

  • more *guilty* verdicts in front of jurors who were explicitly told about nullification

  • compared to those who weren't.

  • Which sounds bad, but it also isn't difficult to imagine situations where jurors blindly

  • following the law would be terribly unjust -- which is the heart of nullification: juries

  • judge the law, not solely evidence.

  • In the end righteous will of the people, or anarchy, or citizen lawmaking -- the system

  • leaves you to decide -- but as long as courts are fair they require these rules, so jury

  • nullification will always be with us.

# The Law You Won't Be Told

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