Reading ComprehensionDifficulty: Easy

PT146 S4 P1 Q6 Explanation

Jury Nullification

A free, expert breakdown of this official LSAT Reading Comprehension question.

TopicsMethodLaw

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Passage

Passage A Jury nullification occurs when the jury acquits the defendant in a criminal case in disregard of the judge’s instructions and contrary to the jury’s findings of fact. Sometimes a jury’s nullification decision is based on mercy for the defendant, sometimes on dislike for the victim. Juries have also sometimes nullified probably few, the problems created by the jury’s power to nullify are great.

First, we do not know how the power is used. Because juries are not required to and typically do not explain their verdicts, it is impossible to say how often nullification occurs. This means that we also do not for evil ends rather than for good ones.

Second, juries often have insufficient evidence to make a reasoned nullification decision. Evidence that might inform such a decision, such as a defendant’s past brushes with the law, usually is not admitted at trial technical question of guilt or innocence.

Third, jurors are not legislators. We have an elected legislature to pass laws and elected or appointed judges to interpret them. The jury is unelected, is unaccountable, and has no obligation acquittal will have on others.

Reasonable people can disagree on the proper reach of the criminal laws. Nevertheless, the place for them to disagree is in public, where the reasons for be scrutinized and debated.

Passage B Police and prosecutors have discretion to decide which violations of the law to pursue and which to overlook. Even with such discretion, however, these officials can sometimes be overzealous. In such cases, the jury can act as a safety valve and use its own discretion to decide, for example, too extenuating for the case to result in a conviction.

When a jury nullifies because it does not believe a law should be applied to a particular defendant, the jury can also be viewed as assisting the legislature. Legislatures create general laws both because they cannot foresee every variation that may arise, and because legislators often have competing views about what for broad language if any laws are to be passed.

Similarly, when a jury nullifies because it believes a law is unjust, it also performs a useful function vis-à-vis the legislature, namely indicating to the legislature that with the law in question.

It may happen that a jury will be persuaded to nullify by factors they should ignore, but such instances of nullification are likely to be uncommon. For a jury to agree to nullify means that the case for nullification must be so compelling that all twelve of nevertheless agree that nullification is the appropriate course of action.

What this question is testing

Method

Your task

Describe how the argument proceeds — the technique it uses to reach its conclusion.

Common trap

Answers that describe a method the argument doesn't actually use.

Winning move

Track the role each statement plays, then match that to the choice describing the same moves.

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The question
6.

Which one of the following most accurately characterizes the relationship between the

Answer choices

  1. Correct97% picked this

    Passage A offers a critique of a power possessed by juries, while passage B argues in

    Why this is right

    Answer A is correct.

    Skill tested: Method · how this choice captures the passage's function is the move to repeat next time.

  2. Trap0% picked this

    Passage A denounces a judicial custom, while passage B proposes improvements

  3. Trap1% picked this

    Passage A surveys a range of evidence about jury behavior, while passage B suggests a hypothesis

  4. Trap0% picked this

    Passage A argues that a problem facing legal systems is intractable, while passage B presents a

  5. Trap1% picked this

    Passage A raises a question concerning a legal procedure, while passage B attempts to

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