After the leaders of
the new United States wrote the Constitution,
they had to get the thirteen states to agree to it. Some of the states didn't
want to agree unless they could add some specific rights for individual people.
So in 1791 the United States added ten new rights to the Constitution. These
are called the Bill of Rights.
These are the ten rights that are in the Bill of Rights:
1- Congress can't make any law about your religion,
or stop you from practicing your religion, or keep you from saying whatever you
want, or publishing whatever you want (like in a newspaper or a book). And
Congress can't stop you from meeting peacefully for a demonstration to ask the
government to change something.
2- Congress can't stop people from having and
carrying weapons, because we need to be able to defend ourselves.
3- You don't have to let soldiers live in your
house, except if there is a war, and even then only if Congress has passed a
law about it.
4- Nobody
can search your body, or your house, or your papers and things, unless they can
prove to a judge that they have a good reason to think you have committed a crime.
5- You can't be tried for any serious crime without
a Grand Jury meeting first to decide whether there's enough evidence for a
trial. And if the jury decides you are innocent, the government can't try again
with another jury. You don't have to say anything at your trial. You can't be
killed, or put in jail, or fined, unless you were convicted of a crime by a
jury. And the government can't take your house or your farm or anything that is
yours, unless the government pays for it.
6- If you're arrested, you have a right to have your
trial pretty soon, and the government can't keep you in jail without trying
you. The trial has to be public, so everyone knows what is happening. The case
has to be decided by a jury of ordinary people from your area. You have the
right to know what you are accused of, to see and hear the people who are
witnesses against you, to have the government help you get witnesses on your
side, and you have the right to a lawyer to help you.
7- You also have the right to a jury when it is a
civil case (a law case between two people rather than between you and the
government).
8- The government can't make you pay more than is
reasonable in bail or in fines, and the government can't order you to have
cruel or unusual punishments (like torture) even if you are convicted of a
crime.
9- Just because these rights are listed in the
Constitution doesn't mean that you don't have other rights too.
10-Anything that the Constitution doesn't say that
Congress can do should be left up to the states, or to the people.
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