Amendment 6 guarantees a speedy trial which is public and assessed by a jury that is chosen as easily as it can be accomplished to be impartial. It also makes a requirement that the defendant must understand the charge. And he has the right to question his accusers and present witnesses who will speak on his behalf.
D really doesn't matter. Americans are governed by their own constitution, not the constitution and laws of other nations.
Not A: Though 12 is not a magic number (6 jurors could be chosen and that number will be enough), the supreme court has ruled that the number of jurors cannot go below 6. I don't think there is an upper limit, but common practice is 12 and almost any crime can be tried by a jury if the amount involved is over 20 dollars. (That's amendment 7). I don't think A is what you want.
The other 2 are covered by D. I honestly don't think there is a good answer to this question. Sometimes you get questions like this. I suppose that since you cannot pick anything else, pick D, but a warning. It could be A or B. The right to a speed open trial where the charge is understood, is what the constitution guarantees.
Answer:
Your question makes no sense. Can you write it a bit clearer?
Explanation:
<span>The annotated-bibliography system helps the research to list the books he/she used to write the book, theasis. It is the only list used by the reader to further develop the topic. The citation used one book may lightened / create spark for new developments the same field.
The documents in one book may be studied by other and it may examined the originality and authenticity of the records.</span>