- Fri May 03, 2024 9:39 pm
#106299
Hi lemonade,
"Permissive" means that the laws are too lenient. In other words, they permit or allow a lot of behavior that some would consider criminal. It's the opposite of laws that are too strict or severe.
For example, a law that said "theft is not a crime unless the property stolen is worth over $500" would probably be considered too permissive by most people as it would allow people to steal property worth less than $500.
In Passage B, one reason that juries would nullify would be because the laws were too strict, not because they were too lenient/permissive.
The reason that the defendant probably wouldn't be factually guilty under permissive laws is that permissive laws allow a lot more behavior and are therefore harder to break.
For example, it's probably very easy to accidentally break a strict speed limit of 25 miles per hour. It's much harder to accidentally break a permissive speed limit of 100 miles per hour.
"General," on the other hand, does not mean permissive at all. A law that is too general means that it was worded in such a way that it could apply to more people/situations than was actually intended. Think of general as too "broad" (line 48), not specific enough.
For example, if there was a very general/broad law that said "All theft is punishable by at least one year in prison," then a jury may find that such a general/broad law should not apply in a minor case (such as a child shoplifting a candy bar), and so the jury could nullify in that case.