Vocabulary
Legal Jargon
The Jurors
The Details
Reasonable Doubt
100

Character types that appear so often that their natures are immediately familiar to the reader or  audience 

Stereotypes

100

Premeditated Homicide

1st Degree Murder

100

The Bigot 

Juror 10

100

The type of knife used as the murder weapon

a switch-blade knife

100

The witness with the bum leg that testified to the boy's guilt and says he saw the boy running down the stairs after the murder. 

The old man who lived in the apartment beneath where the murder happened. 

200

Where were you on the night of May 14th? 

"I was walking around when the switchblade knife fell through a hole in my pocket. I swear!" 

Alibi 

200

Capitol Punishment

The death penalty

200

The main antagonist

Juror 3

200

The age of the defendent

16

200

The reason why the old man might not have heard the boy's voice clearly when the boy screamed, "I'm gonna kill you!!"

The noise of a passing elevated train

300

Everybody votes the same way. 

unanimous

300

The evidence made orally by a witness under oath in response to interrogation by a lawyer; what the witness saw or knows.  

 

Testimony

300

The first juror to vote 'not guilty', and happens to be the protagonist. 

Juror 8

300

The cost of a switch-knife that looks exactly like the murder weapon, that proves the knife is not rare.

$6

300

How Juror 8 created a reasonable doubt about the old man seeing the boy running down the steps. 

Re-enacting the old man's testimony that it took him 15 seconds to get into the hallway to see the boy escaping

400

Someone with an extreme prejudice against another ethnic group. 

Bigot

400

They have the burden of proof in a trial, ie. they have to prove the defendant committed the crime.

Prosecution

400

The elderly man and the second to vote 'not guilty' and brought reasonable doubt about the woman's eyesight that saw the murder through the windows of a moving elevated train. 

Juror 9

400

The city in which the jury room is located.

New York City

400

Why the jury reasonably doubts the testimony of the woman across the street who witnessed the murder.

People don't wear glasses to bed. 

500

The point or points in the play where the action becomes most emotional.  

Dramatic Climax

500

When a jury cannot come to a unanimous decision 

Hung Jury

500

He grew up in the slums and solidified reasonable doubt about the knife wound that killed the victim.

Juror 5

500

The setting

The jury room

500

The idea/theme that caused many of the jurors to believe the boy was guilty

Prejudice

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