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I will pay for the following article Appeal for Retrial in State v. Meilin Schumann. The work is to be 6 pages with three to five sources, with in-text citations and a reference page.

I will pay for the following article Appeal for Retrial in State v. Meilin Schumann. The work is to be 6 pages with three to five sources, with in-text citations and a reference page. The researcher states that a conviction can be appealed in cases where the defendant has reason to believe that the trial jury improperly conducted itself during the trial or during deliberations of the case in question. Jury misconduct constitutes improper contract between juror and witness as well as the use of drugs, alcohol or experiments during trials or trial deliberations. Any contact of a witness or lawyer with a juror is capable of breeding a sense of familiarity, creating presumption of prejudice and thus amounting appearance of absence of impartiality. Such claims are often deleterious to undecided court proceedings in a manner to warrant a retrial motion as illustrated in State of Utah, Plaintiff and Respondent, v. Phillip Paul Larocco, Defendant and Appellant, 742 P.2d 89, Utah 860172-CA. According to the case presented before the court, Meilin Schumann was charged with second degree murder of her husband Edward Schumann for which she has since filed an appeal. Both the appellant and her late husband are natives of Utah and by the time of the alleged murder, they were living in Utah. Notwithstanding the ongoing court proceedings, it is factual to note that the chief homicide investigator in the mentioned case is Trina Bateson. It is also vital to record that our client, Ms. Schumann had offered her confession in the case wherein Bateson was a key witness and the tainted juror was a member of the presiding bench. During recess, Bateson and Ramsfield improperly communicated. According to Ms. Schumann, conversation was social in nature and went as follows, “I know I’m not allowed to talk to you about the case, and I won’t. But I’m just curious if you’re related to John Bateson, who graduated from North High School in the late 1980s.” Bateson laughed and ascertained that John Bateson was her brother. Ramsfield said that John was quite a well-known character at her high school and that they had been good friends. She asked what John was doing these days, and Bateson said that he was the head of a start-up technology firm in California.

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