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The Thirteenth Juror is a 1927 American silent mystery film directed by Edward Laemmle and written by Charles Logue and Walter Anthony. It is based on the 1908 play Counsel for the Defense by Henry Irving Dodge. The film stars Anna Q. Nilsson, Francis X. Bushman, Walter Pidgeon, Martha Mattox, Sidney Bracey and Sailor Sharkey.
Dead Irish (1989) and The 13th Juror (1994) were nominees for the Shamus and Anthony Awards for Best Mystery Novel, respectively; additionally The 13th Juror is included in the International Thriller Writers publication "100 Must-Read Thrillers Of All Time." Hard Evidence (1993) is named in The Complete Idiot's Guide to the Ultimate Reading List.
The "Chris Newsom Act" was introduced to eliminate the need for a judge's signature on a jury verdict after the delivery of a unanimous verdict. This thus eliminates the '13th juror' rule, which stipulates that a judge must validate a jury's verdict. Had such a law been in place during the case, the retrials would have been avoided. [3] [7]
In other words, Juror #2 is indeed “a story about people”—circumstantially burdened, deeply flawed, plagued by a fraught conscience. The characters exist, perhaps like most humans at one ...
What is going on with Clint Eastwood's film Juror No. 2?Warner Bros.' new thriller closed out AFI Fest, the long-running Los Angeles film festival, on Oct. 27 — and the 94-year-old filmmaker was ...
The 13th Juror: Finalist Val McDermid: Crack Down: Finalist Walter Mosley: Black Betty: Finalist Derek Raymond: Not Till the Red Fog Rises: Finalist Janwillem van de Wetering: Just a Corpse at Twilight: Finalist 1996: Mary Willis Walker: Under the Beetle's Cellar: Winner [2] Michael Connelly: The Last Coyote: Finalist Barbara D’Amato: Hard ...
The wife of a prominent Georgia attorney has been convicted of killing her husband and burning his body. On Thursday, Dec. 5, Georgia Superior Court Judge David L. Cannon Jr. sentenced Farris, 64 ...
They were granted bail pending their appeals. The appeals process dragged on for several years. During this period, Nelson wrote books about his experiences in Spain (The Volunteers) and his sedition trial and imprisonment (The 13th Juror) to raise money to sustain him and his family. [6] Finally, in April 1956 in Pennsylvania v.