Jury Nullification and Its Effects on Black America
Date Submitted: 09/02/2002 06:37:43
It is obvious that significant improvements have been made in the way that the criminal justice system deals with Blacks during the history of the United States. Blacks have not always been afforded a right to trial, not to mention a fair one. Additionally, for years, Blacks were unable to serve on juries, clearly affecting the way both Blacks and whites were tried. Much of this improvement has been achieved through various court decisions, and
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ed., 1993), at 137, 158
19 Randall Kennedy, The State, Criminal Law, and Racial Discrimination: A Comment, 107 Harvard Law Review (1994), at 1262.
20 Morris, supra note 3.
21 Morris, supra note 3.
22 See Douglas S. Massey, America's Apartheid and the Urban Underclass, Social Service Review (December 1994), at 480.
23 Butler, supra note 1.
24 Michael Vitiello, Reconsidering Rehabilitation, 65 Tulane Law Review (1991).
25 Benjamin A. Holden, Laurie P. Cohen, and Eleena De Lisser, Does Race Affect Juries? Injustice with Verdicts, Chicago Sun-Times (October 8, 1995) at 28.
26 Butler, supra note 1.
27 Butler, supra note 1.
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