Nullification in a sentence as a noun

Thus the calls for jury nullification, to ignore a law which they find unjust.

That's what the power of jury nullification is for.

Can you add "jury nullification" to the mass emails also?

This is called jury nullification and is an honored part of the jury system.

How do you provide checks and balances for the nullification power?

If I'm a writer handing out a leaflet about the history of jury nullification, then that's free speech.

Ooh, I got kicked off a grand jury a couple years ago for telling my fellow jurors about jury nullification.

I mean, it's not even halfway through the article:"There have been unfortunate instances of nullification.

If you think that using jury nullification is a possibility for you, keep your mouth shut and just do it otherwise you'll be excused.

The way our courts work, acquittals are expensive and actively discouraged, and there is almost no chance of jury nullification.

That said, I don't know whether in practice Oregon courts do any better about not censuring jury nullification.

Cynicalkane is making a claim about why nullification exists.

But nullification is like any other democratic power; some people may try to misuse it, but that does not mean it should be taken away from everyone else.

I think my state does want to legalize, and my reading of the Constitution indicates that we should have the right to, so in the mean time, nullification seems like a perfect fit here.

That states rights and nullification have sometimes been used for bad purposes doesn't mean that any use of states rights and nullification is automatically bad.

Even though I think ********* should be legal, and I know all about nullification, I would never use it there at this time, simply because the system has NOT broken down in this area.

A completely obvious check on jury nullification that you've somehow overlooked is jury selection.

"In other words, jury nullification is not a defense against injustice, but a side effect of having trials by an independent jury of ordinary citizens.

Racist juries in the South, for example, refused to convict people who committed violent acts against civil-rights activists, and nullification has been used in cases involving the use of excessive force by the police.

" Unspoken answer: "Yes, I have the ability to do so, and in general a belief in jury nullification means I want to decide based on the facts of the case as well as the law, which the constitution of my state specifically gives juries the power to do.

Courts hold a dim opinion of jury nullification, going so far as to legally sanction mentions of it in a courtroom, and to provide "instructions" to the jury that try to expressly prohibit them from considering anything other than whether the facts of the case meet the law as explained to them.

However, because jury nullification has its greatest historical significance in the United States when it was used to persecute blacks, legal doctrines which support jury nullification are, by association, not very popular, while legal tactics which allow prosecutors to make their case in the face of potential jury nullification are considered acceptable.

Nullification definitions

noun

the states'-rights doctrine that a state can refuse to recognize or to enforce a federal law passed by the United States Congress

noun

the act of nullifying; making null and void; counteracting or overriding the effect or force of something

See also: override