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The American Jury Initiative: Trial by Jury Quiz

Trial by Jury - A Quiz

Test your knowledge of the jury! Your quiz is scored online and includes an explanation of answers.
  1. The Magna Carta secured the right to trial by jury for all English subjects.

    True     False

  2. Medieval English juries were bound to deliver their verdict based on the evidence they heard at trial.

    True     False

  3. Prior to the eighteenth century, English juries could be punished with imprisonment and fines for delivering the "wrong" verdict.

    True     False

  4. The U.S. Constitution, as originally ratified, guaranteed the right to trial by jury in criminal and civil cases.

    True     False

  5. Juries may contain fewer than 12 members, depending on state law.

    True     False

  6. Juries in a criminal trial can convict a defendant only if their verdict is unanimous.

    True     False

  7. The judge in a civil case can set aside the jury's verdict if the judge finds that there was no factual basis for the jury's verdict.

    True     False

  8. The judge in a criminal case can set aside a jury verdict acquitting the defendant and order the defendant to stand for a new trial.

    True     False

  9. England has abolished the use of "peremptory challenges," which enables lawyers to exclude potential jurors from a trial without giving a reason for the exclusion.

    True     False

  10. Jury pools today are supposed to represent a fair cross-section of the community.

    True     False

Score =
Correct answers:

Explanation of answers