Challenge to Jury
Challenge to jury in Law Enforcement
Main Entry: Law Enforcement in the Legal Dictionary. This section provides, in the context of Law Enforcement, a partial definition of challenge to jury.
Resources
See Also
- Law Enforcement Officer
- Police Officer
- Law Enforcement Agency
Further Reading
- challenge to jury in A Dictionary of Law Enforcement (Oxford University Press)
- challenge to jury in the Encyclopedia of Law Enforcement
- A Treatise on the Police of the Metropolis
English Legal System: Challenge To Jury
In the context of the English law, A Dictionary of Law provides the following legal concept of Challenge To Jury : A procedure by which the parties may object to the composition of a jury before it is sworn. Before the Criminal Justice Act 1988 came into force a challenge could be peremptory (i.e. with no reason for the challenge being given) or for cause. Peremptory challenges were abolished by the Criminal Justice Act 1988, but the prosecution can ask that a juror “stand by”, in which case he rejoins the jury panel and may be challenged for cause when the rest of the panel has been gone through. Either party may challenge for cause. This may be to the array, in which the whole panel is challenged by alleging some irregularity in the summoning of the jury (e.g. bias or partiality on the part of the jury summoning officer): or to the polls, in which individual jurors may be challenged. Any challenge to jurors for cause is tried by the judge before whom the accused is to be tried.
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