A defendant may choose to accept a plea bargain instead of going to trial to potentially receive a lighter sentence, avoid the uncertainty and cost of a trial, and to resolve the case more quickly.
The jury does not decide what punishment the defendant gets, the judge does. The only thing the jury decides is whether the defendant is guilty or not guilty of what he is accused of.
whether the defendant is guilty
No. This is false. - A Medicare participating provider can not decide to accept assignment on a claim-by-claim basis. The provider registers with Medicare as a provider that will accept assignment and must accept assignment on all patients.
You will need to check with a particular college to see if it accepts a GED instead of a High School Diploma. If you are 18 and get kicked out of high school and then get your GED, the answer is probably not, or at least not at this time. If you are 30 and decide to get serious and decide to continue your education and get a GED, the answer is probably yes. Still, if you are 18 there might be a college that will accept you.
You do if you decide to accept it, although there may be the possibility that the car you won won't be available and you'll be given a cash prize for the equivalent of the car's price instead.
Sometimes the judge may decide the case immediately, announce his or her ... some judges hear the case and issue a decision that becomes effective only if .... If the defendant's motion is denied, the defendant has 10 days from the date to appeal.
Maybe. If there is a hung jury, the prosecution must decide whether or not to have another trial. If they decline to re-try the case, the defendant would be released. If they decide to have another trial, the defendant would remain in custody to await the new trial, if he/she was in custody for the first trial. Often, after a mistrial, the defense will make a motion or renew a motion for bond or for reduction of bond.
Deliberated means to consider carefully. A jury is chosen from a pool of the defendant's peers. Upon hearing all aspects of a court case, the jury must deliberate, and jointly decide on the charges against the defendant.
Sounds like you are giving up your right to be served papers in whatever legal proceeding that you are involved in, and that you waive your need for an attorney. You basically give the court the right to decide the case without your presence.
When serving on a jury, individuals listen to evidence presented in court and then deliberate with other jurors to decide if the defendant is guilty or innocent based on the facts and the law.
if the hypothesis is proven to be correct or incorrect
Jurors review the evidence in a trial and then decide issues of fact, and give a verdict based on their agreed upon facts. For example, in a murder trial, they would watch the evidence and decide "did he do it?" If they are convinced he did, they would find the defendant guilty. In a civil trial, the issue would be more akin to "is she responsible?" In that case, they would find the defendant liable and set damages.