11. if you have been accused and found guilty in court, you cant appeal. circle: true / false\n12. appeals…

11. if you have been accused and found guilty in court, you cant appeal. circle: true / false\n12. appeals courts do not have a trial. instead they determine if the original trial was fair.\nwho makes this determination about a fair trial?
Answer
Question 11:
Brief Explanations:
In criminal law, if one is accused and found guilty, they can appeal. Appeals are a right to challenge the conviction or sentence, so the statement "you can't appeal" is false.
Answer:
False
Question 12:
Brief Explanations:
Appeals courts review the record of the trial court to determine if legal errors occurred, not to conduct a new trial. They assess if the original trial was fair and legal procedures were followed.
Answer:
True (assuming the statement is "Appeals courts do not have a trial, instead they determine if the original was fair" - though the original text has some typos, the core idea is correct as appeals courts don't hold trials but review for fairness/errors)
Question (Who makes this determination about a fair trial?):
Brief Explanations:
In the context of a fair trial determination (especially on appeal), appellate judges (judges in appeals courts) review the trial record, legal procedures, and evidence to determine if the trial was fair. They assess compliance with legal standards of fairness.
Answer:
Appellate judges (or judges in appeals courts) make the determination about whether a trial was fair, typically by reviewing the trial court's proceedings for legal errors and adherence to due process.