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You're correct in that the jury prevents a corrupt government from convicting innocent people.
That's why a jury's role is to return a verdict of guilty or not guilty. You will note there's no third option for a jury to return a verdict of "guilty but exempt".
Do you really want a court system where 12 idiots decide whether the law should apply? That's the antithesis of a fair and just legal system.
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jury_nullification
If you actually read the wiki page, you will find it supports everything I've said.
it covers everything you've said. it doesn't support it. those are two very different things. It also covers a fair amount of the position people like myself hold.
Yes. and fun fact we already do, the only way for us to not have it is to do away with juries of ones peers entirely. shrug as I said having random people in the process inoculates it from a ton of problems. move long now. you're:
Juries decide whether defendants are guilty of the charges against them. They do not decide whether the law ought to apply. If you don't understand the difference then you're right... I'm not going to be able to put an argument before you that you'll be able to comprehend.
It's patently obvious to everyone that a fair and just system of laws needs to apply equally to everyone, even in cases where we dislike the victim.
Who said anything about not applying the laws equally? (fun fact: there is a difference between equal and fair; I believe laws should be applied fairly not equally) if a law is unjust or does has mitigating circumstances (brian thompson decisions resulting is untold amounts of pain/suffering/death for millions of individuals) you 'equally' refuse to allow the punishment of defendant by returning a 'not guilty' verdict. Luigi was acting in self defense; which is a common defense for when someone gets killed and the defendant was acting within their rights. Its the jury's job to recognize that convicting luigi of murder is incorrect due to the circumstances and make sure the proper verdict is handed down. 'not guilty', regardless of the letter of the law.
pretty simple. again, as i told you earlier I've thought about this a lot longer than you have. Its also pretty clear you have no experience in designing systems that need to deal with adverse actors. and that you're generally an asshole thinking everyone on a jury is an idiot and that you're probably one of those idiots thinking people need to specialize in law to know right from wrong.
That's not what equally means. The same law needs to be applied to everyone. Making exceptions creates inequality.
If that is Luigi's legal defense then the jury needs to weigh the evidence of that claim and if supported of course they would return a not-guilty verdict. That's not jury nullification.
This is, quite obviously, a corruption of the legal process. If jury nullification is an intended feature of the legal process then why aren't jurors instructed to find the defendant guilty, not-guilty, or exempt? Why don't defense attorneys tell jury's that the application of the law in this case is unjust and therefore they should find the defendant not guilty?
Your fixation with DeSiGnInG RoBuSt sYsTeMs is absurd. It doesn't support your position in any way. I could just as well say that you obviously don't have a job that requires much thought or requires you to consider complex problems with unquantifiable ethical aspects.
You thinking about this for a long time also does not support your position in any way. People can believe in all sorts of nonsense their entire lives. The inflexibility and inability to support your position is a pretty good indicator that you haven't really thought about this but merely like how the concept feels.