The Jury: Murder Trial

British TV series or programme From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Jury: Murder Trial is a British reality television series. Each series is a verbatim re-enactment from court records of a real murder trial in which actors take the parts of the legal teams and judges while the jurors are people drawn from every-day life.[1]

Country of originUnited Kingdom
Original languageEnglish
ProducerByron Archard Productions
Production companyScreenDog
Quick facts Country of origin, Original language ...
The Jury: Murder Trial
Country of originUnited Kingdom
Original languageEnglish
Production
ProducerByron Archard Productions
Production companyScreenDog
Original release
NetworkChannel 4
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Premise

The series questions whether or not juries randomly drawn from citizens from all backgrounds without legal qualifications are suitable for making a just decision in cases that can lead to life prison sentences.[2] In Series 1 which aired in February 2024, two juries in isolation of each other followed the re-enactment of a real case in which a man admits to killing his wife with a hammer after two months of marriage because he 'just snapped', hoping for a verdict of the lesser crime of manslaughter.[2] The second series which was broadcast in August 2025 is a reconstruction of a murder trial in which a woman is accused of having stabbed her partner to death during an alleged attempt by him to strangle her during a domestic altercation. The series was again filmed with actors for the court officials but only one jury of randomly selected citizens.[2]

Reception

The first series of The Jury: Murder Trial won 'Best Reality' at the 2025 British Academy Television Awards and 'Best Original Programme' at the Broadcast Awards 2025.[3][4] Television critic Lucy Mangan gave the first series 4 out of 5 stars.[2] Writing for The Guardian Rachel Aroesti awarded 4 out of 5 stars for the second series, stating "Are random citizens fit to dole out life sentences? Probably not. Does the jury system double as a Petri dish for truly illuminating reality TV? Absolutely."[2]

References

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