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 Posted by Anthony Marsh on 11/07/06 23:19 
Tarkus wrote: 
> On Tue, 07 Nov 2006 05:30:28 GMT, jayembee wrote: 
>  
>> Anthony Marsh <anthony_marsh@comcast.net> wrote: 
>> 
>>> jayembee wrote: 
>>>> spam@uce.gov (Citizen Bob) wrote:  
>>>> 
>>>>> jayembee <jayembeenospam@snurcher.com> wrote: 
>>>>> 
>>>>>>> Therefore the law you claim is binding is not really binding - 
>>>>>> Horseshit. If you really believe that, then *no* law is binding. 
>>>>> That does not follow from what I have stated. 
>>>> Sure it does. You set up a hypothetical case where you'd be given 
>>>> a trial for violating copyright, and then arguing that a single 
>>>> juror voting "Not Guilty" exonerates you, and that this means 
>>>> that the law against copyright violation is not binding. 
>>>> 
>>>> How does that differ from any other crime? The criminal trial jury 
>>>> "exonerated" OJ Simpson on the charge of murder. Does that mean 
>>>> that the law against murder is not binding? 
>>> But in the OJ Simpson case and almost every other case it take a  
>>> unanimous finding of the jurors, not just one juror. 
>> Bob's original point was that if eleven jurors think he's guilty, 
>> and one obstinate juror votes "not guilty", there's no verdict of 
>> guilt. And that if the charge is copyright violation, then the 
>> lack of a guilty verdict renders the law non-binding. 
>  
> Isn't copyright law a civil matter, in which case neither a unanimous 
> verdict nor reasonable doubt applies?  (As in the second OJ trial.) 
 
 
There are both civil and criminal prosecutions. 
But yes, your point about civil trials is helpful.
 
  
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