The jury found the defendant guilty of willful murder.
Acquittal means the same as being found "not guilty."
the role of the jury is to deiced if guilty or not guilty.
The jury does not decide what punishment the defendant gets, the judge does. The only thing the jury decides is whether the defendant is guilty or not guilty of what he is accused of.
The jury could see that the defendant was guilty.
By acquitting a guilty defendant. This is known as "jury nullification."
An acquittal is when the judge (in a bench trial) or the jury (in a jury trial) finds the defendant not guilty. The defendant has to go through the whole trial before he is acquitted. A dismissal is when the judge throws out the case before going to trial for a specific reason (lack of evidence for example.) The dismissal happens before there is even a trial. Good question, hope this answer helps.
Adjudicated means the case is done: it has been convicted either by the defendant pleading guilty or found guilty by the Judge/jury.
Regardless of whether the jury or the judge found you guilty, the next thing to do would be to file an appeal with the next higher court.
"He was found guilty by the jury" is passive voice.
A petit jury in a criminal trial decides whether or not a defendant is guilty beyond a reasonable doubt. The other type of jury, the Grand Jury, decides whether or not there is sufficient evidence to bring charges against a defendant prior to the trial. It does not decide whether or not the defendant is guilty. Therefore the Grand Jury is not bound by the standard of beyond a reasonable doubt.
REASONABLE doubt.