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In History / High School | 2014-11-18

U.S. residents who are NOT citizens may not:

A. serve on juries
B. attend school
C. find a job
D. buy a home

Asked by DeirdreStrouse

Answer (2)

U.S. **residents **who are **NOT **citizens may not serve on juries . Thus, option **A **is the **correct **option.
Who is a resident?
A **resident **can be defined as a person who lives somewhere permanently. Which implies that he is a citizen of that country and is **residing **and **earning **there.
While selecting a **juror **for the court, the person needs to be above **eighteen **years of age, and also that person should be a **citizen **of the United States.
The people who lie about this, it is a **conspiracy **to become a jury, would have to face serious **consequences **in respect to that. All those people who are **not citizens **or have **green cards **from the states are not allowed to be a juror.
All these laws are stated in the **legislation **of the United States and shall be followed. As these rides are only reserved for residents who are citizens of the United States. Therefore option **A **is the **correct **option.
Learn more about residents , here:
https://brainly.com/question/22384834
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Answered by poojatomarb76 | 2024-06-16

U.S. residents who are not citizens cannot serve on juries, making option A the correct choice. Though they have rights like attending school, finding jobs, and buying homes, jury service is restricted to citizens. This ensures the integrity of the legal process in the country.
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Answered by poojatomarb76 | 2024-08-26