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Double jeopardy has led to a lot of court decisions explaining the Constitutional protection against double jeopardy.
As a broad generality, the same event cannot be the subject of more than one trial; so that, for the same single event, a defendant cannot first be tried for attempted murder, and if acquitted then the prosecutor goes after him for aggravated assault of the same person.
There are, however, certain exception, such as murder or aggravated assault under state law may also be treated as civil rights violation in federal law. This second nibble by the prosecution (actually switching from state to federal prosecutor) was applauded in civil rights cases in the 1960s, but some of us had a slightly different attribute in 1992 (IIRC) when the cops involved in the Rodney King beating were tried a second time and in a city intimidated by rioters.
If a trial does not reach a normal verdict but is terminated by something other than a conventional verdict, there is also a debate about whether a retrial is possible.
Lots of opportunities for lawyers to become rich arguing the details.
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