Show pageBack to top This page is read only. You can view the source, but not change it. Ask your administrator if you think this is wrong. ====== Juror Misconduct: The Ultimate Guide to a Fair Trial's Biggest Threat ====== **LEGAL DISCLAIMER:** This article provides general, informational content for educational purposes only. It is not a substitute for professional legal advice from a qualified attorney. Always consult with a lawyer for guidance on your specific legal situation. ===== What is Juror Misconduct? A 30-Second Summary ===== Imagine you're watching the Super Bowl, but one of the referees has secretly placed a massive bet on the outcome. During the game, they make questionable calls, ignore obvious penalties, and seem to favor one team. Even if the "right" team still wins, the integrity of the game is destroyed. You can no longer trust the result because the rules weren't followed. **Juror misconduct** is the legal equivalent of that corrupt referee. It's any action a juror takes that violates their oath and the court's instructions, threatening the fundamental right of every American to a fair trial by an impartial jury. A juror's job is sacred: they must decide a case based *only* on the evidence presented in the courtroom and the legal instructions given by the judge. When a juror steps outside these boundaries—by Googling a defendant, visiting a crime scene on their own, or talking about the case with a friend—they are introducing unauthorized information or bias into the process. This contamination can poison the deliberations and lead to an unjust verdict. The entire [[adversarial_system]] of justice depends on the jury being a neutral and unbiased fact-finder, and juror misconduct shatters that foundation, potentially leading to a `[[mistrial]]` or the overturning of a verdict on `[[appeal]]`. * **Key Takeaways At-a-Glance:** * **The Core Principle:** **Juror misconduct** is any improper action by a juror that violates their oath to be impartial and to base their decision solely on the evidence presented in court, threatening the `[[sixth_amendment]]` right to a fair trial. * **The Impact on You:** If **juror misconduct** occurs in your case, it could mean that your verdict—whether you win or lose—is invalid, potentially forcing a costly and emotionally draining new trial. * **The Critical Action:** If you or your attorney suspect **juror misconduct**, it must be reported to the court immediately; waiting until after the verdict is often too late to fix the problem. ===== Part 1: The Legal Foundations of Juror Misconduct ===== ==== The Story of Juror Misconduct: A Historical Journey ==== The idea of a trial by one's peers is a cornerstone of American democracy, a right so fundamental that its roots stretch back nearly a millennium to the `[[magna_carta]]` of 1215. This ancient charter first established the principle that a free man could not be imprisoned or punished except by the "lawful judgment of his peers." However, the concept of what makes a jury "impartial" and what constitutes misconduct has been a long, evolving story. In early English `[[common_law]]`, juries were often composed of people who *knew* the parties and the facts of the case. They were expected to bring their outside knowledge into the deliberations. This is the polar opposite of our modern system. The shift began as legal systems grew more sophisticated, recognizing that personal knowledge often translated to personal bias. The trial needed to be a controlled environment where both sides had an equal opportunity to present their case and challenge the other's evidence. The framers of the U.S. Constitution enshrined this modern ideal in the `[[sixth_amendment]]`, which guarantees the accused in a criminal prosecution the right to a "speedy and public trial, by an **impartial jury**." This simple phrase is the constitutional bedrock upon which all rules against juror misconduct are built. But what does "impartial" truly mean? Throughout the 19th and 20th centuries, courts wrestled with this question. Early cases focused on overt bribery and intimidation, known as `[[jury_tampering]]`. But as society became more complex and information more accessible, the definition of misconduct expanded. The rise of newspapers and sensationalized "trial of the century" reporting created new challenges. Courts had to develop rules for sequestering juries—isolating them from outside contact—to prevent media coverage from tainting their judgment. The latter half of the 20th century saw courts focusing on more subtle forms of misconduct, such as racial prejudice in the jury room and jurors who concealed biases during the selection process known as `[[voir_dire]]`. The digital revolution of the 21st century has thrown the greatest challenge yet at the concept of an impartial jury. With a smartphone in every juror's pocket, the "evidence" is no longer confined to the courtroom. A juror can now Google legal terms, look up a defendant's past, or even post about the trial on social media in seconds. This has forced courts to create increasingly strict and explicit `[[jury_instructions]]`, turning the story of juror misconduct into an ongoing battle to keep the 18th-century ideal of an impartial jury alive in a 21st-century world. ==== The Law on the Books: Statutes and Codes ==== There isn't a single, all-encompassing "Juror Misconduct Act." Instead, the rules are a mosaic of constitutional principles, court rules, and judicial precedents. The most critical piece of federal law is the **Federal Rule of Evidence 606(b)**. This is often called the "no-impeachment rule." > **Quoted Text:** "During an inquiry into the validity of a verdict or indictment, a juror may not testify about any statement made or incident that occurred during the jury's deliberations; the effect of anything on that juror's or another juror's vote; or any juror's mental processes concerning the verdict or indictment." **Plain-Language Explanation:** This rule creates a shield of secrecy around jury deliberations. The goal is to protect the finality of verdicts and to allow jurors to debate freely and frankly without fear that their discussions will later be picked apart in court. You can't call a juror to the stand and ask them, "Did Juror Smith seem confused?" or "Did Juror Jones persuade you to change your mind?" However, Rule 606(b) has three crucial exceptions where a juror **can** testify: * When **extraneous prejudicial information** was improperly brought to the jury's attention (e.g., a juror looking up the defendant's prior criminal record online). * When an **outside influence** was improperly brought to bear on any juror (e.g., a threat to a juror's family or a bribe). * When a **mistake was made in entering the verdict** on the verdict form (e.g., the jury agreed the defendant was not guilty, but the foreperson accidentally checked the "guilty" box). In addition to federal rules, every state has its own statutes and rules of `[[criminal_procedure]]` and `[[civil_procedure]]` that govern juror conduct and the process for challenging a verdict based on misconduct. For example, many state laws explicitly make it a crime for a juror to accept a bribe or for an outsider to attempt to influence a juror. These rules work in tandem with the constitutional mandate of the `[[sixth_amendment]]` (for criminal cases) and the `[[seventh_amendment]]` (guaranteeing a jury trial in certain civil cases) to form the legal framework for policing juror misconduct. ==== A Nation of Contrasts: Jurisdictional Differences ==== While the core principle of an impartial jury is universal in the U.S., the specific rules and, more importantly, the standard for what to do about misconduct can vary significantly between the federal system and different states. The key question is always: "Was the misconduct harmful enough to deny a party a fair trial?" ^ **Jurisdiction** ^ **Standard for Granting a New Trial** ^ **What This Means for You** ^ | **Federal Courts** | Misconduct involving an external influence creates a **presumption of prejudice**. The burden is on the government/winning party to prove the contact was harmless. | If you can show a juror was contacted by an outsider or brought in outside research, the court will likely assume it was harmful unless the other side can prove it wasn't. This is a favorable standard for the party alleging misconduct. | | **California (CA)** | A presumption of prejudice arises if there is a **"substantial likelihood"** that the juror was improperly influenced by the outside information or contact. | The standard is high. You not only have to show misconduct occurred, but also that it was substantially likely to have influenced the juror's vote. The court will look at the nature of the information and the overall evidence in the case. | | **Texas (TX)** | The party alleging misconduct must prove that the misconduct occurred AND that it **caused them "probable injury."** No presumption of prejudice. | This is a very tough standard. You have the full burden of proving not just that a juror broke the rules, but also that this rule-breaking directly led to an unfair verdict against you. It's not enough to show a juror googled the case; you must show what they found probably made them vote against you. | | **New York (NY)** | Misconduct must be shown to have been **"prejudicial to a substantial right"** of the defendant. The court assesses the specific facts of each case. | Similar to California, this is a fact-intensive inquiry. You have to convince the judge that the misconduct wasn't just a minor, technical violation but something that genuinely compromised the fairness of the trial process and impacted your rights. | | **Florida (FL)** | A three-part test is used: (1) misconduct occurred, (2) the material was not admitted into evidence, and (3) there is a **reasonable possibility** that the misconduct affected the verdict. | This "reasonable possibility" standard is a bit more lenient than Texas's "probable injury" but still requires a strong showing. You need to persuade the court that the juror's actions could have realistically tipped the scales of justice. | ===== Part 2: Deconstructing the Core Elements ===== ==== The Anatomy of Juror Misconduct: Key Types Explained ==== Juror misconduct isn't a single act but a category of behaviors that undermine a fair trial. Understanding the different types is crucial for identifying them. These can be broadly grouped into actions involving external information/influence and those involving internal deliberation problems. === Type 1: External Influence & Independent Investigation === This is the most common and rapidly growing category of juror misconduct in the digital age. It occurs when a juror introduces information into the deliberation process that was not presented as evidence in the courtroom. * **Playing Detective Online:** This includes using a smartphone, tablet, or computer to: * **Google the defendant, plaintiff, witnesses, or attorneys.** A juror might discover a defendant's prior criminal record that was specifically excluded from the trial as being too prejudicial. * **Look up legal terms or concepts.** A juror might search for the definition of "`[[reasonable_doubt]]`" or "`[[negligence]]`" and find a definition that contradicts the judge's official instructions. * **Use social media.** A juror might look at a defendant's Facebook profile or read tweets about the case, forming an opinion based on information that was never subject to `[[cross-examination]]`. * **Unauthorized Physical Investigation:** This involves a juror trying to conduct their own real-world investigation. * **Visiting the crime scene:** A juror in a car accident case might drive to the intersection to see the sightlines for themselves, becoming an unsworn witness and introducing their own "evidence." * **Conducting experiments:** A juror might try to re-enact a part of the alleged crime at home, which is strictly forbidden. * **Consuming Media Reports:** Despite a judge's daily warnings, a juror might read a newspaper article, watch a TV news report, or listen to a podcast about the trial they are serving on. **Hypothetical Example:** In a `[[medical_malpractice]]` case, a juror is unsure about a complex medical procedure mentioned in testimony. During a lunch break, he uses his phone to watch a YouTube video explaining the procedure. He returns to deliberations and tells the other jurors, "I saw a video online, and the doctor in the video said what our defendant-doctor did was completely wrong." This is classic juror misconduct. He has introduced extraneous, un-vetted information, effectively becoming an expert witness and denying the defense the right to challenge the video's accuracy. === Type 2: Unauthorized Communication === Jurors are sworn to discuss the case only among themselves and only after formal deliberations begin. Violating this rule is serious misconduct. * **Discussing the case with anyone outside the jury:** This includes spouses, friends, co-workers, or their own lawyer. Even a casual comment like, "The defendant seems so nervous on the stand," is a violation. * **Talking to other jurors about the case before deliberations:** The judge will instruct jurors not to form or express an opinion until all evidence has been presented. If jurors start forming mini-factions or debating the evidence during trial breaks, it undermines the official deliberation process. * **Contact with a party, lawyer, or witness:** Any private communication, no matter how seemingly innocent, is strictly forbidden and can be grounds for an immediate `[[mistrial]]`. === Type 3: Concealing Bias During Voir Dire === The `[[voir_dire]]` process, where lawyers question potential jurors, is designed to uncover biases that would prevent a juror from being impartial. Lying or intentionally concealing information during this process is a form of misconduct. * **Failing to disclose relationships:** A potential juror might know the defendant, a witness, or one of the attorneys but fails to mention it, hoping to serve on the jury. * **Hiding strong personal beliefs or experiences:** In a drunk driving case, a juror who has a family member who was killed by a drunk driver might conceal the depth of their feelings on the matter, claiming they can be impartial when, in reality, they cannot. * **Lying about prejudice:** A juror might hold racist or other discriminatory views but deny them during questioning to ensure they are selected for the jury. === Type 4: Internal Deliberation Misconduct === While courts are very reluctant to pry into what happens during deliberations (due to Rule 606(b)), certain actions are so improper that they cross the line into misconduct. * **Deciding the case by chance:** Jurors cannot flip a coin, draw straws, or use any other method of chance to reach a verdict. * **Agreeing to a "quotient verdict":** This occurs in `[[civil_law]]` cases where, to determine damages, each juror writes down a number, and they agree in advance to be bound by the average. This is improper because it avoids true deliberation. * **Racial or ethnic bias:** If there is clear evidence that a juror stated they were voting against a defendant because of the defendant's race, this can be a powerful exception to the no-impeachment rule and grounds to overturn the verdict. * **Coercion or intimidation:** While passionate debate is expected, a juror cannot threaten or intimidate another juror to force them to change their vote. ==== The Players on the Field: Who's Who in a Juror Misconduct Issue ==== * **The Judge:** The ultimate arbiter. The judge is responsible for instructing the jury on the rules, investigating allegations of misconduct, and deciding the appropriate remedy, which could range from dismissing a single juror to declaring a mistrial. * **The Attorneys (Plaintiff/Prosecution and Defense):** They are the first line of defense against misconduct. They are responsible for observing the jury, bringing any suspected misconduct to the judge's attention through a formal `[[motion]]`, and arguing for or against a new trial. * **The Parties (Plaintiff/Defendant):** The individuals or entities whose lives and finances hang in the balance. For them, juror misconduct represents a potential denial of justice. * **The Other Jurors:** They can be both a source of misconduct and the primary witnesses to it. An honest juror has a duty to report misconduct by a fellow juror to the court. * **The Court Clerk or Bailiff:** These court officials often have the most direct contact with the jury. They are responsible for relaying juror questions to the judge and are often the first to be notified if a problem arises. ===== Part 3: Your Practical Playbook ===== ==== Step-by-Step: What to Do if You Suspect Juror Misconduct ==== Discovering potential juror misconduct can feel like a crisis, but there is a clear legal process for addressing it. Acting quickly and correctly is paramount. This guide is from the perspective of a party in a lawsuit (plaintiff or defendant). === Step 1: Recognize the Red Flags === Misconduct is often subtle. Be observant. Red flags can include: - Seeing a juror talking to a witness or an attorney in the hallway. - Overhearing a juror in the restroom discussing the case on their phone. - A juror mentioning a piece of information in open court (e.g., in a question to the judge) that was never introduced as evidence. - A post-verdict discovery, such as a juror's social media post showing they were researching the case all along. - A juror contacting you or your attorney after the trial to report improper behavior by another juror. === Step 2: Document Everything Immediately === The moment you suspect something, write it down. Your memory will fade, but contemporaneous notes are powerful. Record: - **Who:** Which juror(s) were involved? - **What:** What exactly did you see or hear? Be as specific as possible. Quote the exact words if you can. - **When:** The exact date and time of the incident. - **Where:** The precise location (e.g., "Hallway outside Courtroom 4B," "the public cafeteria"). - **Witnesses:** Was anyone else present who saw or heard the incident? Get their names and contact information if possible. === Step 3: Inform Your Attorney Immediately and Without Exception === This is the single most important step. **Do not try to handle this yourself.** Do not approach the juror, the judge, or any other court official. - **Call your lawyer.** Tell them everything you documented. Your attorney is your shield and your advocate. They will know the specific procedural rules for their jurisdiction and how to raise the issue with the judge without prejudicing your case. - **The Waiver Trap:** If you know about misconduct and fail to report it to your attorney before the verdict is read, the court will likely rule that you have **waived** your right to object to it later. You cannot "wait and see" if you get a favorable verdict and then complain if you lose. === Step 4: The Attorney's Action - Motion for a Hearing === Your lawyer will bring the issue to the judge's attention, typically outside the presence of the jury. They will likely file a formal `[[motion_for_a_new_trial]]` if the verdict has already been rendered, or a motion for a mistrial or to remove the juror if the trial is ongoing. This motion will be supported by an `[[affidavit]]` (a sworn written statement) from you or any other witness detailing the facts of the misconduct. === Step 5: The Evidentiary Hearing === If the allegation is credible, the judge will hold a special hearing to investigate. This is sometimes called a "Remmer hearing," named after a landmark Supreme Court case. - The judge may call the juror in question, as well as other jurors or witnesses, to testify under oath about what happened. - The attorneys for both sides will have the opportunity to question the witnesses. - The inquiry will be carefully limited to avoid delving into the jury's protected deliberations, focusing instead on the external influence or improper action. === Step 6: The Judge's Ruling === After hearing the evidence, the judge will make a ruling. The judge has several options: - **Find no misconduct occurred:** The trial continues or the verdict stands. - **Find misconduct was harmless:** The judge may find a juror broke a rule, but that it was not serious enough to have affected the verdict. For example, a juror briefly saw a headline but didn't read the article. - **Issue a curative instruction:** The judge may strongly reinstruct the jury to disregard the outside information and decide the case only on the evidence. - **Dismiss the juror:** If the trial is ongoing, the judge may dismiss the single offending juror and replace them with an alternate. - **Declare a Mistrial or Grant a New Trial:** If the judge finds the misconduct was so prejudicial that a fair trial is no longer possible or a fair verdict was not reached, they will declare a mistrial (if ongoing) or grant a motion for a new trial (if post-verdict). This is the most drastic remedy. ==== Essential Paperwork: Key Forms and Documents ==== While your attorney will handle the drafting, understanding the key documents is empowering. * **Affidavit:** This is your sworn, written testimony. It is the primary vehicle for presenting the facts of the alleged misconduct to the court. It must be detailed, truthful, and signed under penalty of `[[perjury]]`. Your attorney will help you draft it to be as effective as possible. * **Motion for a New Trial:** This is the formal legal document filed with the court after a verdict, arguing that the trial was fundamentally unfair due to juror misconduct (or other errors) and asking the judge to set aside the verdict and order a new trial. This motion will cite legal precedent and attach the affidavits as evidence. You can often find templates or examples on state court websites, but this should always be drafted by a qualified attorney. * **Motion to Inquire or for an Evidentiary Hearing:** This is a request made to the judge to hold the hearing described in Step 5. It argues that the allegations are credible enough to warrant a formal investigation by the court. ===== Part 4: Landmark Cases That Shaped Today's Law ===== The rules governing juror misconduct are not arbitrary; they were forged in the fire of real-world legal battles that reached the highest courts. ==== Case Study: *Remmer v. United States* (1954) ==== * **The Backstory:** A juror named Smith was approached by an unnamed person during a criminal tax evasion trial who suggested the juror could profit by delivering a verdict favorable to the defendant. The juror immediately reported the incident to the judge. The judge, after consulting with the prosecutors, had the FBI investigate. The FBI concluded the remark was made in jest. The judge did nothing further, and the defense attorney was never told about the incident until after the defendant was convicted. * **The Legal Question:** Does an unauthorized, private communication with a juror about a pending case create a presumption that the defendant's right to a fair trial was violated? * **The Court's Holding:** Yes. The Supreme Court held that any private communication or tampering with a juror during a trial is "presumptively prejudicial." The burden is not on the defendant to prove they were harmed; instead, the burden shifts to the government to prove that the contact was harmless. Because the trial judge held no hearing and the defense was kept in the dark, the defendant was denied the opportunity to investigate, and the conviction was overturned. * **How it Impacts You Today:** **The *Remmer* presumption is a powerful tool.** If you can show that there was an improper outside contact with a juror in your federal case, the legal burden flips. The other side must affirmatively prove to the judge that the incident was harmless beyond a `[[reasonable_doubt]]`. ==== Case Study: *Tanner v. United States* (1987) ==== * **The Backstory:** After two defendants were convicted of fraud, their lawyer was contacted by a juror who revealed a shocking story. The juror alleged that several other jurors were regularly drinking alcohol, smoking marijuana, and even doing cocaine during trial recesses. They claimed the jury foreperson "was falling asleep all the time." The defense moved for a new trial based on this internal misconduct. * **The Legal Question:** Does Federal Rule of Evidence 606(b) bar a juror from testifying about other jurors' drug and alcohol use during the trial, or does this count as an "outside influence"? * **The Court's Holding:** The Supreme Court held that Rule 606(b) **did bar** this testimony. The Court reasoned that drugs and alcohol were an "internal" matter, not an "external" influence like a bribe or a newspaper article. The rule is meant to protect the sanctity and finality of deliberations. While the jurors' behavior was appalling, the Court drew a firm line: inquiries into the jury's physical or mental competence are internal and generally forbidden. * **How it Impacts You Today:** *Tanner* establishes a high wall around jury deliberations. You cannot overturn a verdict simply because you believe jurors were inattentive, unintelligent, or made a decision based on a misunderstanding of the facts. The misconduct must generally involve an **external** element to pierce the veil of secrecy created by Rule 606(b). ==== Case Study: *Pena-Rodriguez v. Colorado* (2017) ==== * **The Backstory:** After a criminal trial, two jurors told the defense counsel that another juror (a former law enforcement officer) had made blatantly racist statements during deliberations. He stated that he believed the defendant was guilty because he was Mexican and that Mexican men are "guilty of being aggressive." He also stated that, in his experience, "nine times out of ten Mexican men were guilty of being aggressive and physically abusive." * **The Legal Question:** Does the `[[sixth_amendment]]` right to an impartial jury require an exception to the no-impeachment rule (like Rule 606(b)) when a juror makes a clear statement indicating that racial bias was a motivating factor in their decision to convict? * **The Court's Holding:** In a landmark decision, the Supreme Court said **yes**. For the first time, it created a constitutional exception to the no-impeachment rule. The Court declared that the Sixth Amendment right to a jury trial free from racial bias is so fundamental that it overrides the general rule of deliberation secrecy. Where there is a showing that a juror made statements "exhibiting overt racial bias that was a significant motivating factor in the juror's vote to convict," the court must be allowed to consider the evidence. * **How it Impacts You Today:** *Pena-Rodriguez* is a crucial protection against racial discrimination in the justice system. It gives defendants a narrow but vital pathway to challenge a conviction if they can produce evidence that the verdict was tainted by explicit racial animus within the jury room, one of the few internal deliberation issues that can now be investigated. ===== Part 5: The Future of Juror Misconduct ===== ==== Today's Battlegrounds: Current Controversies and Debates ==== The single biggest battleground today is the **Internet**. The `[[first_amendment]]` right to access information clashes directly with the `[[sixth_amendment]]` right to a trial based only on evidence. Courts are struggling with a host of modern problems: * **The Ineffectiveness of Instructions:** Judges routinely give stern warnings about not using the internet, but studies and anecdotal evidence suggest many jurors simply cannot resist the temptation to Google. Is it realistic to ask a citizen to ignore a device they use for everything else in their life? * **Defining "Prejudice":** What is the actual harm of a juror's online search? If a juror looks up a word on dictionary.com, is that prejudicial? What if they look up the defendant on a public records site and find nothing? Courts are divided on where to draw the line between harmless curiosity and verdict-altering contamination. * **Social Media Footprints:** Lawyers now regularly scrutinize potential jurors' social media profiles to uncover biases. Is this a smart `[[litigation]]` tactic or an invasion of privacy? Furthermore, what happens when a juror "likes" a post related to the case or posts a vague status like, "This jury duty is so stressful!"? These new forms of communication create a gray area of potential misconduct. The debate rages on: Should courts embrace technology and give jurors supervised internet access in the jury room? Or should they implement more draconian measures, like confiscating all electronic devices for the duration of a trial? There are no easy answers, and this will remain the central controversy for the foreseeable future. ==== On the Horizon: How Technology and Society are Changing the Law ==== The challenges of juror misconduct are poised to become even more complex in the coming years, driven by technology and evolving social norms. * **Artificial Intelligence and "Jury Analytics":** High-powered law firms and litigation consultants are beginning to use AI to analyze vast amounts of data on potential jurors—from their social media history to their consumer habits—to predict how they might vote. This raises profound ethical questions about creating a "perfect" (and perhaps biased) jury and could lead to a new type of "stealth juror" who knows how to game the system. * **The "Deepfake" Threat:** Imagine a juror receiving a highly realistic but completely fake video of a defendant confessing or a witness recanting testimony. The potential for malicious outside influence through sophisticated disinformation campaigns is a terrifying future prospect that the legal system is unprepared for. * **Increasing Political Polarization:** As society becomes more politically and ideologically divided, the risk of "stealth" or "activist" jurors increases. These are individuals who lie during `[[voir_dire]]` specifically to get on a jury to advance a political agenda or engage in `[[jury_nullification]]` (acquitting a defendant they believe is guilty to protest the law). Proving this type of hidden bias, rooted in deeply held beliefs, presents a nearly insurmountable challenge for the courts. In the next decade, we can expect to see new court rules, and perhaps even legislation, aimed at tackling these technological and social challenges to protect the age-old right to a fair and impartial jury. ===== Glossary of Related Terms ===== * **[[adversarial_system]]:** The legal system used in the United States where two advocates represent their parties' positions before an impartial person or group of people, such as a jury or judge. * **[[affidavit]]:** A written statement confirmed by oath or affirmation, for use as evidence in court. * **[[appeal]]:** A legal process in which a losing party in a lower court asks a higher court to review the decision for errors. * **[[common_law]]:** The body of law derived from judicial decisions of courts and similar tribunals, rather than from statutes. * **[[cross-examination]]:** The formal questioning of a witness called by the other party in a legal case. * **[[jury_instructions]]:** The set of legal rules that a judge reads to the jury to guide their deliberations. * **[[jury_nullification]]:** The act of a jury acquitting a defendant they believe to be guilty of the charged crime, often as a form of protest against the law itself. * **[[jury_tampering]]:** The crime of illegally attempting to influence a juror's decision through bribery, threats, or other improper means. * **[[litigation]]:** The process of taking legal action; a lawsuit. * **[[mistrial]]:** A trial rendered invalid through an error in the proceedings or a hung jury. * **[[motion]]:** A formal request made to a judge for an order or ruling. * **[[motion_for_a_new_trial]]:** A post-verdict request to a judge to set aside a jury's verdict and order a new trial due to a significant error, such as juror misconduct. * **[[perjury]]:** The criminal offense of willfully telling an untruth in a court after having taken an oath or affirmation. * **[[sixth_amendment]]:** The amendment to the U.S. Constitution that guarantees the rights of criminal defendants, including the right to a speedy and public trial by an impartial jury. * **[[voir_dire]]:** A preliminary examination of a witness or a juror by a judge or counsel. ===== See Also ===== * `[[sixth_amendment]]` * `[[due_process]]` * `[[mistrial]]` * `[[appeal]]` * `[[reasonable_doubt]]` * `[[criminal_procedure]]` * `[[civil_procedure]]`