After the fiasco of the Vicky Pryce trial is trial by jury under threat? Are British people becoming too stupid to act as jurors? Do we have too many potential jurors who do not really understand English? Should would be jurors be givewn a basic English and IQ test before appointment? The Times feature is today (as I guess others will have) but I cannot link to there (subscription website).
If there is no struggle, there is no progress. Those who profess to favor freedom, and yet depreciate agitation, are men who want crops without plowing up the ground. They want rain without thunder and lightning. They want the ocean without the awful roar of its many waters. This struggle may be a moral one; or it may be a physical one; or it may be both moral and physical; but it must be a struggle.
After the fiasco of the Vicky Pryce trial is trial by jury under threat? Are British people becoming too stupid to act as jurors? Do we have too many potential jurors who do not really understand English? Should would be jurors be givewn a basic English and IQ test before appointment? The Times feature is today (as I guess others will have) but I cannot link to there (subscription website).
No it's not. That jury was found to be unfit and was dismissed. If it shows anything, it's that the system works.
It also adds to the general sense that there are a lot of very stupid people out there. Let's face it, the entire Mantel debacle, whereby people were perfectly happy to be whipped into an ignorant frenzy by the Sun and the Mail, both of which lied about the original lecture, was hardly enough to make you feel good about general standards of intelligence in this realm.
After the fiasco of the Vicky Pryce trial is trial by jury under threat? Are British people becoming too stupid to act as jurors? Do we have too many potential jurors who do not really understand English? Should would be jurors be givewn a basic English and IQ test before appointment? The Times feature is today (as I guess others will have) but I cannot link to there (subscription website).
You can read this though and having done jury service myself and sat on two trails (one as foreman) it is spot on:
"If you haven't done jury service you haven't lived. Outside of family life, it's one of the most important things you could ever do. The structure, order and even-handedness of the trial system are remarkable. If you were ever sent for trial you should count yourself lucky to have it heard here, and before a jury."
"In my limited but freshly minted experience, jurors take their responsibilities very seriously. They pay attention. They wrestle with the facts. They work as a team. They ask good questions, in good faith, in an attempt to get to the truth. In turn, I and my fellow jurors were looked after very well by the court staff. We were treated with courtesy and respect, and thanked sincerely for our efforts."
Mirrors my experience down to a tee. This bit "The structure, order and even-handedness of the trial system are remarkable." is most definitely true.
It will be a wish to do their duty as jurors that led them to ask the questions they did. I can imagine several of them had opinions as to what "reasonable doubt" meant but if they could not explain this to their colleagues who were struggling with the concept the foreman did the right thing in passing the questions on.
It is VERY impressive in my opinion how the courts go about their business and how you as jurors are treated and you feel duty bound to do the right thing which as the article above concludes:
Mr Justice Sweeney concluded his guidance to the Southwark jury with these words: "If, after further consideration, you find yourselves in a position where you are simply not able to agree, then you must of course have the courage to say so." That is what they did, and in so doing they performed their civic duty admirably.
Dally wrote:
After the fiasco of the Vicky Pryce trial is trial by jury under threat? Are British people becoming too stupid to act as jurors? Do we have too many potential jurors who do not really understand English? Should would be jurors be givewn a basic English and IQ test before appointment? The Times feature is today (as I guess others will have) but I cannot link to there (subscription website).
You can read this though and having done jury service myself and sat on two trails (one as foreman) it is spot on:
"If you haven't done jury service you haven't lived. Outside of family life, it's one of the most important things you could ever do. The structure, order and even-handedness of the trial system are remarkable. If you were ever sent for trial you should count yourself lucky to have it heard here, and before a jury."
"In my limited but freshly minted experience, jurors take their responsibilities very seriously. They pay attention. They wrestle with the facts. They work as a team. They ask good questions, in good faith, in an attempt to get to the truth. In turn, I and my fellow jurors were looked after very well by the court staff. We were treated with courtesy and respect, and thanked sincerely for our efforts."
Mirrors my experience down to a tee. This bit "The structure, order and even-handedness of the trial system are remarkable." is most definitely true.
It will be a wish to do their duty as jurors that led them to ask the questions they did. I can imagine several of them had opinions as to what "reasonable doubt" meant but if they could not explain this to their colleagues who were struggling with the concept the foreman did the right thing in passing the questions on.
It is VERY impressive in my opinion how the courts go about their business and how you as jurors are treated and you feel duty bound to do the right thing which as the article above concludes:
Mr Justice Sweeney concluded his guidance to the Southwark jury with these words: "If, after further consideration, you find yourselves in a position where you are simply not able to agree, then you must of course have the courage to say so." That is what they did, and in so doing they performed their civic duty admirably.
Somebody on Radio 4 this morning, I didn't catch who it was, suggested that there should be some juries in some cases that are studied during and questioned after the case so as to determine if there are similar issues with juries across the board. Apparently there is currently no way of finding out if, for instance, juries often struggle with the concept of reasonable doubt or if juries are allowing personal feelings/prejudices etc to affect their decisions. Of course there are always going to be one-off cases but I think it would be a good idea to try and find out if there are recurring issues, as I would imagine most people on a jury haven't been on one before.
I've no doubt about the sincerity of the jurors, but how could anyone ask: 'Can a juror come to a verdict based on a reason that was not presented in court and has no facts or evidence to support it either from the prosecution or defence?'
I've no doubt about the sincerity of the jurors, but how could anyone ask: 'Can a juror come to a verdict based on a reason that was not presented in court and has no facts or evidence to support it either from the prosecution or defence?'
In the mid-1970's, I was called for jury service. One guy on the jury could tell, apparently, that the defendent was guilty from the way she stood in the box. Upon being reminded by other jurors that part of the oath we had sworn was "according to the evidence", his response was that, to him, that WAS evidence and, anyway, the police wouldn't have brought it to court if she wasn't guilty.
In the end we reached a majority "Not Guilty" verdict despite him ... but I can imagine that we could easily have reached the stage where we would have needed to send a note to the judge, if only to to get him to make clear to that one guy that it was not "evidence".
It doesn't take an entire jury to get a jury dismissed.
I've no doubt about the sincerity of the jurors, but how could anyone ask: 'Can a juror come to a verdict based on a reason that was not presented in court and has no facts or evidence to support it either from the prosecution or defence?'
I can well imagine the other 11 jurors wondering the same thing when someone asked this question but I am not sure I see your point.