Difference between revisions of "Trial"
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(An unfair Roman trial sentenced Jesus to death to appease the crowd, which had been whipped into a frenzy against Jesus by liberal Pharisees.) |
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A '''trial''' is a judicial examination of [[issue]]s between parties to an action. In the [[U.S.]], trials are often decided by a [[jury]], while a judge presides over procedural and evidentiary issues, while in the rest of the world trials are nearly always entirely by a judge. [[England]] used to have many jury trials, but less so today. | A '''trial''' is a judicial examination of [[issue]]s between parties to an action. In the [[U.S.]], trials are often decided by a [[jury]], while a judge presides over procedural and evidentiary issues, while in the rest of the world trials are nearly always entirely by a judge. [[England]] used to have many jury trials, but less so today. | ||
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+ | An unfair [[Roman]] trial sentenced [[Jesus]] to death to appease the crowd, which had been whipped into a frenzy against Jesus by [[liberal]] [[Pharisees]]. | ||
[[Category:Law]] | [[Category:Law]] |
Latest revision as of 20:56, April 13, 2024
A trial is a judicial examination of issues between parties to an action. In the U.S., trials are often decided by a jury, while a judge presides over procedural and evidentiary issues, while in the rest of the world trials are nearly always entirely by a judge. England used to have many jury trials, but less so today.
An unfair Roman trial sentenced Jesus to death to appease the crowd, which had been whipped into a frenzy against Jesus by liberal Pharisees.