1. Helen's attorney suggested her neighbour had killed her husband. 2. A witness, Mrs Black, clinched the jury's verdict. 3. Carol Wesson, called by the defence, exercised her legal right to refuse to answer questions that might incriminate her. 4. The criminal was found guilty. 5. The victim's sister said, "We finally got the justice due to us." 6. The circumstantial evidence was mounting up against the man. 7. The man was sentenced to ten years behind bars, but from the dock he continued to protest his innocence. 8. The woman stood by her testimony. 9. Two psychologists and a psychiatrist testified for the defence. 10. The man was found guilty and sentenced to life in prison, without a chance of parole. 11. Jack Dobson was still on parole after spending ten years in jail for hijacking. 12. They do not have the death penalty in New York State, so the man will stay in jail for the rest of his life. 13. The prosecutor proved that the young woman took an active part in the killing. 14. Mr James went to the homicide division and begged detectives to investigate the case. 15. The jury decided that there was insufficient evidence to find the man guilty of embezzlement. 16. Mrs Smith agreed to testify on behalf of the prosecution at Ted's pre-sentence hearing. 17. While the suspect was still at the police station, police went to his home armed with a search warrant. 18. Ted was let out on bail while the police investigated. 19. Jackson appealed against the jury's verdict.
3. Comment on the duties of the following people:
A defence lawyer
|
|
A prosecutor
|
|
A solicitor
|
|
A judge
|
|
A jury
|
|
A witness
|
|
A barrister
|
|
Prompts:to defend a person who has been accused of something; to argue in a court of law that the charges are not true; to support a person; to speak in the higher courts of law on behalf of either the defence or the prosecution; to prove in a trial that the person who is on trial is guilty; to appear in a court of law to tell what he/she knows about some crime; to give legal advice to clients and prepare legal documents and cases; to make decisions about how the law should be applied to people, how a person who has been found guilty of a crime should be punished; to listen to the facts about a crime and to decide whether the person accused is guilty or not.