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Johnson leaves for others the question: should police and courts rely on just "so" stories?
Its courts rely on English common law, which is, in theory, free from political influence.
Considering that 80% of people funneled through our courts rely on court appointed counsel, this is not a small problem.
Nowadays, courts rely on police and intelligence reports and witness testimony by security personnel to establish defendants' guilt in politically motivated cases.
(Although the Obama administration is trying to change this by refusing to fund courts that don't offer maintenance, many courts rely on state rather than federal funding).
Russian courts rely on government forensic centers rather than independent experts; though a victim's family may hire a specialist, state investigators have discretion over whether to provide access to case files and tissue specimens.
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"The government has an obligation to tell the Supreme Court, in some formal way, that a claim it made repeatedly, and that the court relied on in its decision, was simply not true," he said.
In the last presidential election, courts relied on Section 5 to block voter identification requirements and cutbacks on early voting in covered jurisdictions.
The courts relied on evidence obtained through torture and other illegal means, and the prisoners' supporters had petitioned peacefully through official channels for months to appeal the convictions.
Civil rights leaders, on the other hand, pointed to the role the law played in the recent election, with courts relying on it to block voter identification requirements and cutbacks on early voting.
Enforcement remains woefully insufficient: in the first full year that the law was put into effect, from 2010 to 2011, courts relied on it in just 4 percent of the 2,299 reported episodes that could be defined as crimes under the measure, according to a November 2011 report by the United Nations human rights division.
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com