Question

The landmark Bushell’s Case resulted from the application of this practice in R. v Penn and Mead just over a decade before defendant William Penn founded an American colony. For 10 points each:
[10m] Name this practice by which jurors acquit a defendant despite finding he did violate the law.
ANSWER: jury nullification [or jury equity; or issuing perverse verdicts; accept word forms of “nullification” such as nullify]
[10e] Thanks to the prototypical “Philadelphia Lawyer” Andrew Hamilton, the jury nullified the libel charges brought in 1735 against this publisher of The New York Weekly Journal for the paper’s criticism of Governor William Cosby.
ANSWER: John Peter Zenger [accept Zenger case]
[10h] The year before Zenger’s case, his Weekly Journal published some libertarian “Reflections on Libelling” that became part of this influential essay collection. Up to half of colonial shelves might have held this collection of Commonwealthmen political thought, for which John Trenchard and Thomas Gordon used a classical pseudonym.
ANSWER: Cato’s Letters [or Essays on Liberty, Civil and Religious] (from which the Cato Institute gets its name)
<History - American History>

Back to bonuses

Summary

2024 ARGOS @ Chicago11/23/2024Y618.3367%100%17%
2024 ARGOS @ Christ's College12/14/2024Y316.6733%100%33%
2024 ARGOS @ Columbia11/23/2024Y316.6767%100%0%
2024 ARGOS @ McMaster11/17/2024Y514.0040%100%0%
2024 ARGOS @ Stanford02/22/2025Y320.00100%100%0%

Data

BHSU ReFantazioWho is the Colleen Hoover of the Zulus?10101030
That Feeling When Knee Surgery Is in Five DaysClown Squad1010020
WashUMusic to Help You Stop Smoking100010
hawk two ofNortheast by Northwestern100010
Clown SenpaisNotre Dame1010020
The Love Song of J Alfred PrufRock and Roll All Nite (and Party Every Day)BHSU Rebirth1010020