Supreme Court will decide whether criminal cases must have 12 jurors, in Florida case
WASHINGTON (AP) -- The Supreme Court on Monday agreed to decide whether states can use juries made up of only six people in criminal cases, instead of the usual 12. The case puts a Florida
WASHINGTON (AP) — The Supreme Court on Monday agreed to decide whether states can use juries made up of only six people in criminal cases, instead of the usual 12. The case puts a Florida chiropractor convicted of practicing with a suspended license in an unlikely leading role in a constitutional clash.
The justices will hear arguments in the fall in the case of Hamed Kian, who argues that a six-person jury violates his constitutional rights.
Opening excerpt. Read the full story at Newsdata · Florida Politics ↗
Sourced from Newsdata · Florida Politics · indexed by Statura on June 16, 2026. Statura indexes Florida political news and tags it by industry and jurisdiction so government-affairs teams can monitor signal without scanning every outlet by hand. Read the full story at Newsdata · Florida Politics ↗
More like this
- Florida Politics · June 16, 2026Orlando-built, Moon-bound: NUVIEW clears ESA’s next gate for its lunar LiDAR shot
- Florida Phoenix · June 16, 2026Florida’s AG continues to toy with NFL over ‘minority’ hiring
- Florida Politics · June 15, 2026Darryl Rouson adds Charlie Crist endorsement, praises his ‘integrity and dedication to public service’
- FlaglerLive · June 15, 2026Was FIFA Wrong to Ban Haiti’s World Cup Jersey?
- Florida Politics · June 15, 2026Ryan Owens: Florida’s universities are strong. Viewpoint diversity is weak.
- Tampa Bay Times · June 15, 2026In Chicago, a Tampa chef represents his hometown at the James Beard Awards
!role~Preview!mt~photo!fmt~JPEG%20Baseline)