UK Politics
General Discussion for politics in the UK.
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!ukpolitics@lemm.ee appears to have vanished! We can still see cached content from this link, but goodbye I guess! :'(
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I didn't realize they had an equivalent in the uk
Jury nullification isn't a real thing. It's not a law in any country, it's a "loophole" that springs out from some simple concepts.
Both of those things are important to avoid tyranny in the judicial system.
What that means is that if, for any reason, the jury decides to find you "not guilty" even against their "jury instructions" or the law itself, you're off the hook forever. This concept is called "jury nullification" but it's not a law or "feature" of the justice system. In fact most of the time it's been used for very unjust outcomes, for example juries often refused to find people who perpetrated lynchings guilty because a "jury of your peers" in many states was racist AF!
That being said I LOVE to see it used to refuse unjust laws!
Thanks, that makes sense. The internet creates a skewed perspective on shit like this.