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Thinking legally
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Thinking legally
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Thinking legally | Legal and political issues Thinking legally Skip to content Home About ← Older posts January 10, 2022 · 4:24 pm The Colston Four and ‘perverse’ jury verdicts: a very English tradition The UK “Colston Four” trial of various people involved in removing the statue of the slave trader (and “philanthropist”) Edwin Colston from the streets of Bristol has focused attention on so-called “perverse” court verdicts and what, if anything, to do about them. Those lovers of England’s Common Law, Britain’s “rule of law”, trial by jury and Magna Carta (from which English jury trial may be seen to have derived) feel there is something wrong when that system allows protesters to apparently flout the law for political purpose. Yet “perverse” verdicts are part of the great English legal tradition with almost constitutional import, greatly admired as a way of spurring social progress or resisting an overwheening authority. The believers of our great British tradit...
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