Really? Jurors should reach their decisions according to their own assessment of what has been presented to them, shouldn’t they? Even if the arithmetic says no agreed verdict has been reached, each will have arrived at their own “bloody decision”. Are you suggesting that some should acquiesce for the sake of a clear majority?
Just another little insight for you - lawyers, judges and court staff prefer a decision to be made, it doesn't really matter to them what it is.
Letby is an extreme example, but a hung jury on all charges and an inevitable retrial after nine months would have suited no one - apart from Letby.
On a routine level, if you've managed to get a case listed, got through a two or three week trial without mishap and sent the jury out, there's only two decisions you want, guilty or not guilty.
I've always thought that film was mis-titled.
There weren't 12 angry men, certainly not Henry Fonda in the lead role, the old guy who gave him some support, the foreman was amenable, as was the salesman - the list could go on.
The only genuinely angry man was the Lee J Cobb character who had a mini-breakdown.
Mind, calling the film 'One Angry Man and Eleven who were Fairly Reasonable' doesn't have much of a ring to it.