A Milwaukee woman has been jailed for 11 years for killing the man that prosecutors said had sex trafficked her as a teenager.

The sentence, issued on Monday, ends a six-year legal battle for Chrystul Kizer, now 24, who had argued she should be immune from prosecution.

Kizer was charged with reckless homicide for shooting Randall Volar, 34, in 2018 when she was 17. She accepted a plea deal earlier this year to avoid a life sentence.

Volar had been filming his sexual abuse of Kizer for more than a year before he was killed.

Kizer said she met Volar when she was 16, and that the man sexually assaulted her while giving her cash and gifts. She said he also made money by selling her to other men for sex.

  • fine_sandy_bottom@lemmy.federate.cc
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    29 days ago

    I just posted this somewhere else but it belongs here…

    It’s a jury’s job to find a defendant guilty or not guilty of a given charge.

    When a jury starts considering whether they feel a charge is fair, they’re pretty much just making up the law. At that point you don’t need a court and a jury you could just have a bunch of people deciding the defendants fate based on the vibe.

    When you say they “don’t want jurors to know”, they simply want jurors who understand their role in finding a defendant guilty or not guilty. Thinking that nullification is a possible outcome is tantamount to a refusal to fulfil the role of a juror.

    • xcjs@programming.dev
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      29 days ago

      Whether a jury feels a charge is fair is the whole reason trial by a jury of peers exists.

      It’s a feature of the system, not a bug.

    • Kalysta@lemm.ee
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      29 days ago

      Tell that to those abolitionists who were not convicted of harboring fugitive slaves because of jury nullification.

      Sometimes laws aren’t just. And as citizens we have a right to stand up to unjust laws.