Can I be kicked off the jury after the case is in deliberation?
You have the right to simply refuse to vote guilty. You can just say, "I cannot vote guilty." You don't have to give a reason for it, that's your right. If you start talking about it, if you start arguing with the other jurors one of them may report you to the judge and they may say "this person disagrees with the law, they think it's a bad law or they don't think it's being correctly applied in this case." The judge may remove you from the jury and replace you with an alternate simply because you disagree with the law. Now they really shouldn't do that. You should be able to have a discussion with your fellow jurors and say "I really think it's a crummy law that everybody with blue eyes has to be off the streets by ten o'clock at night or they go to jail." But, you know, that's the law. But you can disagree with it or refuse to convict people, but don't tell anybody that, because they will probably take you off and they'll say you're not following the law as it was given to you. You don't really have to, but they want you to. You have a right to veto that law or to nullify that law. So just keep that opinion to yourself and just refuse to vote guilty. You don't have to give a reason.