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Meaning of indict a ham sandwich | Babel Free

Verb CEFR C2
/ɪnˈdaɪt‿ə ˌhæm ˈsændwɪt͡ʃ/

Definitions

Of a grand jury: to charge a person with a crime, despite a perceived lack of evidence.

US, excessive, humorous, idiomatic, intransitive

Examples

“Advocates of the grand jury say it is the only shield in the criminal justice system between police and prosecutors and the accused. […] But critics say the grand jury doesn't shield anybody because the prosecutor runs the show. "The district attorney could get a grand jury to indict a ham sandwich if he wanted to," one Rochester defense lawyer said.”
“In a bid to make prosecutors more accountable for their actions, Chief Justice Sol Wachtler has proposed that the state scrap the grand jury system of bringing criminal indictments. Wachtler, who became the state's top judge earlier this month, said district attorneys now have so much influence on grand juries that "by and large" they could get them to "indict a ham sandwich."”
“[H]e merely had to couch his presentation in a certain way, give a few verbal winks, as it were, and the grand jury would catch on immediately. But mainly you used the grand jury to indict people, and in the famous phrase of Sol Wachtler, chief justice of the State Court of Appeals, a grand jury would "indict a ham sandwich," if that's what you wanted.”
“When asked in an interview Thursday with ABC13 if she was worried about being indicted herself, Hidalgo responded "I don't know how far this is going to go and it's very easy if you present one-sided facts to a grand jury. Everybody knows that a grand jury can indict a ham sandwich if that's all they see."”
“Grand jurors hear evidence and testimony only from prosecutors and the witnesses that they choose to present. They do not hear from the defense or usually from the person accused, unlike in a criminal trial where proceedings are adversarial. […] That one-sided arrangement often leads defense lawyers to minimize indictments and argue that prosecutors could persuade jurors to "indict a ham sandwich," a proverbial phrase that former Vice President Mike Pence used on CNN Thursday night.”

CEFR level

C2
Mastery
This word is part of the CEFR C2 vocabulary — mastery level.

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