What does the Fifth Amendment's protection against "double jeopardy" prohibit?

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Multiple Choice

What does the Fifth Amendment's protection against "double jeopardy" prohibit?

Explanation:
The essential idea is that the government cannot put someone on trial again for the same offense after a final decision has been reached. Once jeopardy attaches—usually when the trial starts—and a verdict of acquittal or conviction is entered, reusing the same charge in a new trial is not allowed. That’s why the statement that the government cannot try a person twice for the same offense best captures the protection. The other points mix in a different right or are incomplete. The part about retrying after an acquittal contradicts the double jeopardy rule. The part about being compelled to testify against oneself relates to the Fifth Amendment’s privilege against self-incrimination, not to double jeopardy. The broader claim that a person can be tried twice for the same offense sounds similar but lacks the necessary condition about jeopardy having attached and a final decision.

The essential idea is that the government cannot put someone on trial again for the same offense after a final decision has been reached. Once jeopardy attaches—usually when the trial starts—and a verdict of acquittal or conviction is entered, reusing the same charge in a new trial is not allowed. That’s why the statement that the government cannot try a person twice for the same offense best captures the protection.

The other points mix in a different right or are incomplete. The part about retrying after an acquittal contradicts the double jeopardy rule. The part about being compelled to testify against oneself relates to the Fifth Amendment’s privilege against self-incrimination, not to double jeopardy. The broader claim that a person can be tried twice for the same offense sounds similar but lacks the necessary condition about jeopardy having attached and a final decision.

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