What is the difference between a Judge and a Jury?


hey there at the moment i am revising for my citizenship exam in Aqa exam board and one of the questions on a long-gone paper sed what is the difference between a judge and a jury oh yeah and what does a magistrate do? please can you help me! appreciation!
Best Answer:
NO I can't help you. If this is how you are "studying" for your citizenship exam... I'd a bit not be a part of it. Are you serious?
A judge is a judge and a jury is a jury. Same thing beside the moon and the sun. The moon is the moon and the sun is the sun. A judge is 1, a jury is 12 in most courts.
A judge addresses matters of ruling. A jury addresses matters of fact. A go-between is a person with a law license (graduated regulation school and practiced as an attorney). A judge is an expert in decree and determines how the law will apply in court cases. A jury is a panel of citizens. These citizens are not experts in the tenet. The judge will instruct the jury how to interpret the law. The jury will also determine, after hearing adjectives of the evidence, whether a defendant is guilty of a crime (in a criminal case), or which party prevails in a civil case. In cases in need a jury, the judge will determine both matters of fact and statute.