Library/PT 146/Sec 4/Reading Comp
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Reading Comprehension

Passage Breakdown

Both passages discuss jury nullification — when jurors acquit someone even though the judge and evidence say they are guilty. Passage A warns this is risky because juries don’t explain themselves, often lack important information, and aren’t elected lawmakers so law changes should happen publicly; Passage B argues nullification can be a useful safety valve against overzealous prosecutors or unfair laws and that harmful nullifications are likely rare because all twelve jurors must agree.

Logic Breakdown

Compare Passage A's explicit rejection of juries as legislators/interpreters with Passage B's endorsement of jury discretion to refuse to apply laws; choose the option that captures that disagreement.

Passage Stimulus

Passage Redacted

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4.

The authors of the passages would be most likely to disagree over whether

Correct Answer
D
Passage A rejects an interpretive role for juries: 'Third, jurors are not legislators. We have an elected legislature to pass laws and elected or appointed judges to interpret them. The jury is unelected, is unaccountable, and has no obligation to think through the effect an acquittal will have on others.' Passage B, by contrast, endorses jury discretion to decline to apply laws and to inform the legislature: 'the jury can act as a safety valve and use its own discretion to decide, for example, that a case is too trivial or the circumstances too extenuating for the case to result in a conviction' and 'When a jury nullifies because it does not believe a law should be applied to a particular defendant, the jury can also be viewed as assisting the legislature.' These opposing stances show the authors would most likely disagree over whether juries may properly interpret or refuse to apply the law.
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