Sixth Amendment
By: Tasha • Essay • 479 Words • April 21, 2010 • 1,958 Views
Sixth Amendment
The sixth amendment is a right to a speedy trial, which
means in all criminal prosecutionsthe accused shall
enjoy the right to a speedy and public trial, by an
impartial jury of the state and district wherin the crime
shall have been committed.
2 The right to a speedy trial may be derived from a
provision of Magna Carta and it was a right so
interpreted by Coke 12. Much the same language was
incorporated into the Virginia Declaration of Rights of
1776 and from there into the Sixth Amendment.
3 President and vs President
4 Basically, the 6th Amendment states that in all
criminal trials, the defendant has the right to demand
that a trial be held quickly, and also that they have the
right to demand that a trial be held publicly. It also
states that an unbiased jury be impaneled (note -this-
well!) from the State -and- District in which the crime
was committed. It also states that the accused be fully
informed of both the nature of the charges against
them (the charges that have been placed, the reasons
why they are being charged, and the result of the
charges should they be affirmed), and the cause of the
charges against them (the accused must be informed
as to who placed the charges). It also states that the
defendant has the right to be faced with the people
who placed the charges; and that the Defendant has
the right to call witnesses in their defense, and that the
defendant has the right to have an attorney-at-law
(lawyer) assist them in making their defense.
The sixth amendment is a right to a speedy trial, which
means in all criminal prosecutionsthe accused shall
enjoy the right to a speedy and public trial, by an
impartial jury of the state and district wherin the crime
shall have been committed.
2 The right