RT Article T1 Attitudes, anger, and nullification instructions influence jurors’ verdicts in euthanasia cases JF Psychology, crime & law VO 23 IS 10 SP 983 OP 1009 A1 Peter-Hagene, Liana C. A2 Bottoms, Bette L. LA English YR 2017 UL https://krimdok.uni-tuebingen.de/Record/1736068725 AB Courts have historically avoided informing jurors about their nullification power (i.e. the power to return a not-guilty verdict when their conscience demands it but the law directs otherwise), fearing that such knowledge would prompt disregard for the law and reliance on attitudes and emotions rather than evidence. We investigated jurors’ inclination to nullify the law in a morally ambiguous case of physician-assisted suicide, testing the impact of euthanasia attitudes on case judgments as well as moderators and mediators of that effect. Mock jurors with pro-euthanasia attitudes were overall less likely to vote guilty than anti-euthanasia jurors, especially when they were given jury instructions informing them of jurors’ power to nullify. Nullification instructions also exacerbated the effect of jurors’ attitudes on anger, disgust, and moral outrage toward the defendant - emotions that mediated the effect of attitudes on verdicts. We also tested the impact of incidentally induced anger on jurors’ reliance on their attitudes rather than the law, given anger’s propensity to increase certainty and heuristic processing. Anger enhanced mock jurors’ reliance on their attitudes under certain conditions. Theoretical and practical implications for understanding juror decision-making are discussed. K1 Jurors K1 Attitudes K1 Euthanasia K1 Incidental anger K1 Jury nullification K1 physician-assisted suicide DO 10.1080/1068316X.2017.1351967