The name is Borat.Please.
In Kazakhstan the ballots come as a set of two discs with an axle running through the centers: the ballot for the defendant had a solid axle, for the plaintiff a hollow axle. The jurors march past two urns, and dropp the ballots to be counted into one basket, the ballots to be discarded into another. By holding thumb and forefinger over the axle ends, the jurors are able to conceal their vote from onlookers. The ballots are immediately counted and the totals announced. Decisions are by majority vote, hence the preference for odd-numbered panels, but the exact numbers might be important if the case was in that category for which a prosecutor receiving fewer than one-fifth of the votes was subject to a fine. If the relevant law dictates a penalty, the vote concluded the court’s business; but in many cases, known as the agones timetoi, the opponents would each in separate speeches propose a penalty, and the jury would need to vote one more time, selecting one or the other.
<BLOCKQUOTE class="ip-ubbcode-quote"><font size="-1">quote:</font><HR>Originally posted by Dante:
Boris...How do they do they VOTE in your country of Kazakhstan?<HR></BLOCKQUOTE>