On average, about 70 of trials end in a guilty verdict.
i think the verdict was a judge from the early 1500's. they told him to shut up and then told him he was considered guilty..... The End
Usually, at the end of a trial a jury will render a verdict. A verdict could be guilty or innocent depending on what the jury believes. Sometimes, there is no verdict and a mistrial can be declared and the case can be retried.
If they have evidence that the jury was tampered with they can file an appeal for the overturn of the verdict HOWEVER - No, not usually in a normally conducted trial.
That all other jurors vote for guilty or not guilty, and he will abstain (not vote). If everyone votes guilty, then they will put guilty as their verdict. If not, the jurors will talk about the case more.
At the end of the episode, 'Patriot', the defendant, Frank Miller is found guilty of 2nd degree murder. The verdict is read in the last 60 seconds of the episode; see the link below.
Consider Your Verdict ended in 1964-06.
The 8 day Scopes Trial ended when the jury reached a verdict on July 21, 1925. John Scopes was found guilty and charged a fine.
Second Verdict ended on 1976-07-01.
I assume you mean the verdict (as opposed to the sentence).
Guilty or Not Guilty ended on 1959-01-31.
Verdict with Dan Abrams ended on 2008-08-21.
The kid was found not guilty by the jury. The entire play/movie was a sociological allegorical study of character, morals, ethics, and philosophy. At the end all the jurors were dismissed, each having learned something about themselves. A GREAT PLAY.