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Jury nullification

Jury nullification (US/UK), jury equity[1][2] (UK), or a perverse verdict (UK)[3][4] occurs when the jury in a criminal trial gives a not guilty verdict regardless of whether they believe a defendant has broken the law. The jury's reasons may include the belief that the law itself is unjust,[5][6] that the prosecutor has misapplied the law in the defendant's case,[7] that the punishment for breaking the law is too harsh, or general frustrations with the criminal justice system. Some juries have also refused to convict due to their own prejudices in favor of the defendant.[8] Such verdicts are possible because a jury has an absolute right to return any verdict it chooses.[9]

Nullification is not an official part of criminal procedure, but is the logical consequence of two rules governing the systems in which it exists:

  1. Jurors cannot be punished for passing an incorrect verdict.[10]
  2. In many jurisdictions, a defendant who is acquitted cannot be tried a second time for the same offence.[11]

A jury verdict that is contrary to the letter of the law pertains only to the particular case before it. However, if a pattern of acquittals develops in response to repeated attempts to prosecute a particular offence, this can have the de facto effect of invalidating the law. Such a pattern may indicate public opposition to an unwanted legislative enactment. It may also happen that a jury convicts a defendant even if no law was broken, although such a conviction may be overturned on appeal. Nullification can also occur in civil trials,[12] but (unlike in criminal trials) if the jury renders a not liable verdict that is clearly at odds with the evidence, the judge can issue a judgment notwithstanding the verdict, or order a new trial.[13]

Background edit

 
A 19th-century jury

In the past, it was feared that a single judge or panel of government officials might be unduly influenced to follow established legal practice, even when that practice had drifted from its origins. In most modern Western legal systems, judges often instruct juries to act only as "finders of fact", whose role it is to determine the veracity of the evidence presented, the weight accorded to the evidence,[14] to apply that evidence to the law as explained by the judge, and to reach a verdict; but not to question the law itself. Similarly, juries are routinely cautioned by courts and some attorneys not to allow sympathy for a party or other affected persons to compromise the fair and dispassionate evaluation of evidence. These instructions are criticized by advocates of jury nullification. Some commonly cited historical examples of jury nullification involve jurors refusing to convict persons accused of violating the Fugitive Slave Act by assisting runaway slaves or being fugitive slaves themselves, and refusal of American colonial juries to convict a defendant under English law.[15]

Jury nullification is the source of much debate. Some maintain that it is an important safeguard of last resort against wrongful imprisonment and government tyranny.[16][17] Some view it as a violation of the right to a jury trial, which undermines the law;[17] whereas others, such as those members of Congress who voted to impeach Supreme Court Justice Samuel Chase for instructing a jury against nullification, view a jury as a body charged with judging both law and fact. Some view it as a violation of the oath sworn by jurors. In the United States, some view the requirement that jurors take an oath to be unlawful in itself, while still others view the oath's reference to "deliverance" to require nullification of unjust law: "will well and truly try and a true deliverance make between the United States and the defendant at the bar, and a true verdict render according to the evidence, so help [me] God". United States v. Green, 556 F.2d 71 (D.C. Cir. 1977).[18]

Some fear that nullification could be used to permit violence against socially unpopular factions.[19] They point to the danger that a jury may choose to convict a defendant who has not broken the letter of the law. However, judges retain the rights both to decide sentences and to disregard juries' guilty verdicts, acting as a check against malicious juries. Jury nullification may also occur in civil suits, in which the verdict is generally a finding of liability or lack of liability (rather than a finding of guilty or not guilty).[20]

The main ethical issue involved in jury nullification is the tension between democratic self-government and integrity.[21] The argument has been raised that prosecutors are not allowed to seek jury nullification, and therefore defendants should not be allowed to seek it either.[22] However, for a prosecutor to nullify a law in this context would require negating the presumption of innocence. (For this reason, prosecutorial nullification is typically defined as declining to prosecute.)[23]

Nevertheless, there is little doubt as to the ability of a jury to nullify the law. Today, there are several issues raised by jury nullification, such as:

  1. whether juries can or should be instructed or informed of their power to nullify.
  2. whether a judge may remove jurors "for cause" when they refuse to apply the law as instructed.
  3. whether a judge may punish a juror for practicing jury nullification.
  4. whether all legal arguments, except perhaps on motions in limine to exclude evidence, should be made in the presence of the jury.

In some cases in the United States, a stealth juror will attempt to get on a jury in order to nullify the law.[24] Some lawyers use a shadow defense to expose the jury to information that would otherwise be inadmissible, hoping that evidence will trigger a nullification.[25][26]

Common law precedent edit

 
Even prior to Bushel's Case, Sir Nicholas Throckmorton, a non-Episcopalian English Dissenter, or Nonconformist, outside the established Church of England, was acquitted by a jury despite hostility of the judges.

The early history of juries supports the recognition of the de facto power of nullification. By the 12th century, common law courts in England began using juries for more than administrative duties. Juries were composed primarily of "laymen" from the local community and provided a somewhat efficient means of dispute resolution with the benefit of supplying legitimacy.

The general power of juries to decide on verdicts was recognised in the English Magna Carta[27] of 1215, which put into words existing practices:

No free man shall be captured, and or imprisoned, or disseised of his freehold, and or of his liberties, or of his free customs, or be outlawed, or exiled, or in any way destroyed, nor will we proceed against him by force or proceed against him by arms, but by the lawful judgment of his peers, or by the law of the land.

For a trivial offence, a free man shall be fined only in proportion to the degree of his offence, and for a serious offence correspondingly, but not so heavily as to deprive him of his livelihood. In the same way, a merchant shall be spared his merchandise, and a husbandman the implements of his husbandry, if they fall upon the mercy of a royal court. None of these fines shall be imposed except by the assessment on oath of reputable men of the neighbourhood.

Largely, the earliest juries returned verdicts in accordance with the judge or the Crown. This was achieved either by "packing the jury" or by "writ of attaint". Juries were packed by hand-selecting or by bribing the jury so as to return the desired verdict. That was a common tactic in cases involving treason or sedition. In addition, the writ of attaint allowed a judge to retry the case in front of a second jury when the judge believed the first jury returned a "false verdict". If the second jury returned a different verdict, that verdict was imposed, and the first jury was imprisoned or fined.

That history is marked by a number of notable exceptions, several of which claim rights commonly recognized as fundamental in modern Democratic societies, such as freedom of speech and of the press, and freedom of religious practice. In 1554, a jury acquitted Sir Nicholas Throckmorton but was severely punished by the court. Almost a century later, in 1649, in the first known attempt to argue for jury nullification, a jury likewise acquitted John Lilburne for his part in inciting a rebellion against Oliver Cromwell's regime. Lilburne had been charged with seditious libel for the publication of articles critical of the government; the jury were instructed to give a verdict only on whether the text was published, and to leave the issue of libel to the judge, while Lilburne argued the jury should give a general verdict and should judge whether the law's restraint on speech against the government was just. The theoretician and politician Eduard Bernstein wrote of Lilburne's trial:

His contention that the constitution of the Court was contrary to the fundamental laws of the country was unheeded, and his claim that the jury was legally entitled to judge not only as to matters of fact but also as to the application of the law itself, as the Judges represented only 'Norman intruders', whom the jury might here ignore in reaching a verdict, was described by an enraged judge as 'damnable, blasphemous heresy'. This view was not shared by the jury, which, after three days' hearing, acquitted Lilburne—who had defended himself as skillfully as any lawyer could have done—to the great horror of the Judges and the chagrin of the majority of the Council of State. The Judges were so astonished at the verdict of the jury that they had to repeat their question before they would believe their ears, but the public which crowded the judgment hall, on the announcement of the verdict, broke out into cheers so loud and long as, according to the unanimous testimony of contemporary reporters, had never before been heard in the Guildhall. The cheering and waving of caps continued for over half an hour, while the Judges sat, turning white and red in turns, and spread thence to the masses in London and the suburbs. At night bonfires were lighted, and even during the following days the event was the occasion of joyful demonstrations.[28]

In 1653, Lilburne was on trial again and asked the jury to acquit him if it found the death penalty "unconscionably severe" in proportion to the crime he had committed. The jury found Lilburne "not guilty of any crime worthy of death".[29]

In 1670, a petit jury refused to convict William Penn of unlawful assembly for religious practice not associated with the Church of England. The judge held the jury in contempt of court, which was ruled inappropriate by the Court of Common Pleas in Bushel's Case.

In 1681, a grand jury refused to indict the Earl of Shaftesbury. In 1688, a jury acquitted the Seven Bishops of the Church of England of seditious libel. Juries continued, even in non-criminal cases, to act in defiance of the Crown. In 1763 and 1765, juries awarded £4,000 to John Wilkes and £300 to John Entick in separate suits for trespass against the Crown's messengers. In both cases, messengers had been sent by Lord Halifax to seize allegedly-libellous papers.[citation needed]

In Scotland, jury nullification had the profound effect of introducing the three-verdict system including the option of "not proven", which remains in Scotland to this day. In 1728, Carnegie of Finhaven accidentally killed the Earl of Strathmore. As the defendant had undoubtedly killed the Earl, the law, as it then stood, required the jury merely to look at the facts and to pass a verdict of "proven" or "not proven", depending on whether it believed that the facts proved the defendant had killed the Earl.[citation needed] If the jury brought in a "proven" verdict, that would lead to Carnegie's hanging though he had not intended any harm to the Earl. To avert that injustice, the jury decided to assert what it believed to be its "ancient right" to judge the whole case, not just the facts, and rendered the verdict of "not guilty". Over time, juries have tended to favour the "not guilty" verdict over "not proven" and so the interpretation has changed. The "not guilty" verdict has become the normal verdict when a jury is convinced of innocence, and the "not proven" verdict is used only if the jury is not certain of innocence or guilt.[citation needed]

The standard jury trial practice in the United States during the Founding Era and for several decades afterward was to argue all issues of law in the presence of the jury so that it heard the same arguments as the bench in reaching its rulings on motions. That is evidenced by such decisions as the 1839 case Stettinius, which held, "The defense can argue law to the jury before the court gives instructions."[30] Later, judges began to demand the parties submit motions in writing, often before the jury was empaneled, to be argued and decided without the jury being present. The transition began with motions in limine to exclude evidence on which it was felt the jury should not hear the argument because it would be informed of the evidence to be excluded. Later, that was expanded to include all legal argument and so that today, the earlier practice of arguing law before the jury has been largely forgotten, and judges even declare mistrials or overturn verdicts if legal arguments are made to the jury.[citation needed]

Specific jurisdictions edit

Germany edit

In 1921, the Armenian genocide survivor, Soghomon Tehlirian, assassinated Talaat Pasha, who was considered the main architect of the genocide, in Berlin. Although Tehlirian's lawyers did not contest that their client had killed Talat, the jury (Germany used jury trials until 1924) returned a verdict of not guilty.[31][32]

Canada edit

Although extremely rare, jury nullification occurs in Canada. As the prosecution has powers to appeal the resulting acquittal, it lacks the finality found in the United States. However, the Crown cannot appeal on grounds of an unreasonable acquittal although it can appeal on errors of law. In R. v. Latimer, 2001 SCC 1,[33] the Supreme Court discussed jury nullification and indicated that it is a duty of the presiding justice to try to prevent it from occurring.

Perhaps the most famous cases of jury nullification in Canada were the various trials of Henry Morgentaler, who openly operated a private abortion clinic in violation of the Criminal Code. Repeated attempts at prosecuting Morgentaler resulted in acquittals at jury trials in the 1970s and the 1980s. In the 1988 Supreme Court case, R. v. Morgentaler, 1988 SCR 30,[34] a nullification was appealed all the way to the country's highest court, which struck down the law in question. In obiter dicta, Chief Justice Dickson wrote:

The contrary principle contended for by Mr. Manning, that a jury may be encouraged to ignore a law it does not like, could lead to gross inequities. One accused could be convicted by a jury who supported the existing law, while another person indicted for the same offence could be acquitted by a jury who, with reformist zeal, wished to express disapproval of the same law. Moreover, a jury could decide that although the law pointed to a conviction, the jury would simply refuse to apply the law to an accused for whom it had sympathy. Alternatively, a jury who feels antipathy towards an accused might convict despite a law which points to acquittal. To give a harsh, but I think telling example, a jury fueled by the passions of racism could be told that they need not apply the law against murder to a white man who had killed a black man. Such a possibility need only be stated to reveal the potentially frightening implications of Mr. Manning's assertions.... It is no doubt true that juries have a de facto power to disregard the law as stated to the jury by the judge. We cannot enter the jury room. The jury is never called upon to explain the reasons which lie behind a verdict. It may even be true that in some limited circumstances the private decision of a jury to refuse to apply the law will constitute, in the words of a Law Reform Commission of Canada working paper, "the citizen's ultimate protection against oppressive laws and the oppressive enforcement of the law" (Law Reform Commission of Canada, Working Paper 27, The Jury in Criminal Trials (1980)). But recognizing this reality is a far cry from suggesting that counsel may encourage a jury to ignore a law they do not support or to tell a jury that it has a right to do so.

The Supreme Court in 2006 issued a decision, R. v. Krieger, 2006 SCC 47,[35] which confirmed that juries in Canada have the power to refuse to apply the law when their consciences require that they do so. The decision stated that "juries are not entitled as a matter of right to refuse to apply the law—but they do have the power to do so when their consciences permit of no other course".[35]

England and Wales edit

By the late 17th century, the court's power to punish juries was removed in Bushel's Case[36] involving a juror on the case against William Penn. Penn and William Mead had been arrested in 1670 for illegally preaching a Quaker sermon and disturbing the peace, but four jurors, led by Edward Bushell, refused to find them guilty. Instead of dismissing the jury, the judge sent them back for further deliberations. Despite the judge demanding a guilty verdict, the jury now unanimously found Penn guilty of preaching but acquitted him on the charge of disturbing the peace and acquitted Mead of all charges. The jury was then subsequently kept for three days without "meat, drink, fire and tobacco" to force it to bring in a guilty verdict. When it failed to do so, the judge ended the trial. As punishment, the judge ordered the jurors imprisoned until they paid a fine to the court.

 
Plaque at the Old Bailey

Four jurors refused to pay the fine, and after several months, Bushell sought a writ of habeas corpus. Chief Justice Vaughan, sitting on the Court of Common Pleas, discharged the writ, released them, called the power to punish a jury "absurd" and forbade judges from punishing jurors for returning a verdict the judge disagreed with.[37] That series of events is considered a significant milestone in the history of jury nullification.[38] The "courage and endurance" of the jury is celebrated in a plaque displayed in the Central Criminal Court (the Old Bailey) in London.

In a criminal libel case, R. v. Shipley (1784), 4 Dougl. 73, 99 E.R. 774, at p. 824, Lord Mansfield, sitting as a judge in the case, disparaged the practice of jury nullification:

So the jury who usurp the judicature of law, though they happen to be right, are themselves wrong, because they are right by chance only, and have not taken the constitutional way of deciding the question. It is the duty of the Judge, in all cases of general justice, to tell the jury how to do right, though they have it in their power to do wrong, which is a matter entirely between God and their own consciences.

To be free is to live under a government by law.... Miserable is the condition of individuals, dangerous is the condition of the State, if there is no certain law, or, which is the same thing, no certain administration of law, to protect individuals, or to guard the State.

...

In opposition to this, what is contended for? – That the law shall be, in every particular cause, what any twelve men, who shall happen to be the jury, shall be inclined to think; liable to no review, and subject to no control, under all the prejudices of the popular cry of the day, and under all the bias of interest in this town, where thousands, more or less, are concerned in the publication of newspapers, paragraphs, and pamphlets. Under such an administration of law, no man could tell, no counsel could advise, whether a paper was or was not punishable [for publishing a libel].

A 2016 study exploring the history of juror punishment in England and Wales after Bushel's Case found no clear examples of jurors being punished solely for returning the "wrong" verdict. The closest that a jury came to that was in 1917, when a jury acquitted two teenage boys of arson. The boys had confessed at their pre-trial hearing but entered pleas of not guilty at their trial. Home Office civil servants suspected the difference between the pleas could be explained by the difference between the boys' admitting that they had caused the fire and their denial that they had done so maliciously. The trial judge did not consider that possibility or was not satisfied with it. On receiving the jury's verdict, he told them that "you have been absolutely regardless of your oath. These men have pleaded guilty, and the evidence is of the clearest possible nature. You are none of you fit to serve on a Jury, but you will remain here until the end of the Sessions".

The foreman, George Lathan, considered that a form of punishment for the jury, as the jurors were not going to be permitted to serve on any more juries but were nonetheless required to keep attending court or face contempt proceedings, which Lathan considered a tacit form of imprisonment. Officials in the Lord Chancellor's Office noted that while the judge's conduct "was ill-judged and arbitrary, he did not, so far as I can see, do any act which would justify the Lord Chancellor in removing him from the Bench". Home Office officials wrote to the judge, advising him that his actions "would be impossible for the Home Secretary to defend as constitutional or right", and after several days, the jurors were relieved of their duties. Home Office minutes suggest they did not think that kind of informal punishment of jurors who had returned the "wrong" verdict to be unheard of.[39]

In 1982, during the Falklands War, the Royal Navy sank the Argentine cruiser, General Belgrano. Three years later a civil servant, Clive Ponting, leaked two government documents concerning the sinking of the cruiser to a Member of Parliament (Tam Dalyell) and was subsequently charged with breaching section 2 of the Official Secrets Act 1911.[40] The prosecution in the case demanded that the jury convict Ponting, as he had clearly contravened the Act by leaking official information about the sinking of the Belgrano during the Falklands War. His main defence was that it was in the public interest that the information be made available. The judge, Sir Anthony McCowan, "indicated that the jury should convict him",[41] and had ruled that "the public interest is what the government of the day says it is".[42] However, the jury acquitted him, much to the consternation of the government.

In 2001, two people were charged with conspiracy to cause criminal damage to a Trident submarine in a Barrow-in-Furness shipyard. Though the two admitted their intention to trash the submarine, the two said they were planning to do so due to nuclear bombs being immoral and illegal. The judge told the juries that such ideals were not a defence against the charge. The jury brought a verdict of not guilty on these two anti-nuclear protesters.[43]

In 2021, six activists associated with the environmental protest organisation Extinction Rebellion were tried for causing criminal damage to the British headquarters of the multinational oil company Royal Dutch Shell. The judge told the jury that there was 'no defence in law' for the protestors' actions, which according to the prosecutor had caused 'significant damage' to the building, but the activists were acquitted.[44][45]

In 2023, Insulate Britain members Giovanna Lewis and Amy Pritchard were jailed for seven weeks after defying the judge's ban on informing the jury of the reasons for their actions.[46] In charging them with contempt, the judge referred to an earlier case where another environmental activist was sentenced to eight weeks in prison for the same reason.[47] Following juries acquitting activists, dozens of people have been threatened with arrest for displaying signs that remind jurors of their right to make decisions based on conscience.[48][49]

United States edit

In the United States, jury nullification first appeared just before the American Revolutionary War, when colonial juries frequently exercised their nullification power, principally in maritime cases and cases implicating free speech. Jury nullification became so common that many British prosecutors gave up trying maritime cases since conviction seemed hopeless.[50] Before the American Civil War, juries sometimes refused to convict for violations of the Fugitive Slave Act. Later, during Prohibition, juries often nullified alcohol control laws.[51] That resistance may have contributed to the adoption of the Twenty-first Amendment, which repealed Prohibition and the Eighteenth Amendment.

In a well-known example of jury nullification, at the end of Wild Bill Hickok's trial for the manslaughter of Davis Tutt in 1865, Judge Sempronius Boyd gave the jury two instructions. He first instructed the jury that a conviction was its only option under the law. He then instructed them that they could apply the unwritten law of the "fair fight" and acquit. Hickok was acquitted; the verdict was not popular with the public.[52][53]

There have been contemporary instances of activists being arrested for informing jurists of their right of jury nullification in front of court houses, with subsequent rulings that arresting people for this activity is unconstitutional.[54]

Fugitive Slave Act edit

Juries across the North acquitted defendants who had clearly breached the Fugitive Slave Act in the 1850s. Part of the Compromise of 1850, it had been passed to mollify Southern slaveowners, who were otherwise threatening to secede from the Union.

Secretary of State Daniel Webster was a key supporter of the law as expressed in his famous "Seventh of March" speech. He wanted high-profile convictions, but the jury nullifications ruined his presidential aspirations and his last-ditch efforts to find a compromise between North and South. Webster led the prosecution when defendants were accused of rescuing Shadrach Minkins in 1851 from Boston officials who intended to return Minkins to his owner. The juries convicted none of the men. Webster tried to enforce a law that was extremely unpopular in the North, and his Whig Party passed over him again when it chose a presidential nominee in 1852.[55]

After Civil War edit

White defendants accused of crimes against black people and other minorities were often acquitted by all-white juries, especially in the South, even in the face of irrefutable evidence.[56]

21st century edit

In the 21st century, many discussions of jury nullification center on drug laws, which some consider unjust in principle or because they are seen to discriminate against certain groups.[57] A jury nullification advocacy group estimates that 3–4% of all jury trials involve nullification,[58] and a recent rise in hung juries is seen by some as being indirect evidence that juries have begun to consider the validity or the fairness of the laws themselves.[59]

Judicial opinion edit

In the 1895 case of Sparf v. United States, written by Associate Justice John Marshall Harlan, the US Supreme Court held 5-4 that a trial judge has no responsibility to inform the jury of the right to nullify laws.[60] That decision, often cited, has led to a common practice by US judges to penalize anyone who attempts to present a nullification argument to jurors and to declare a mistrial if such argument has been presented to them. In some states, jurors are likely to be struck from the panel during voir dire if they do not agree to accept as correct the rulings and instructions of the law as provided by the judge.[61]

In later rulings the courts continued to prohibit informing juries about jury nullification. In a 1969, Fourth Circuit Court of Appeals decision, U.S. v. Moylan, 417 F.2d 1002 (4th Cir.1969), the Court affirmed the concept of jury nullification, but upheld the power of a court to refuse to permit an instruction to the jury to this effect.[62] In 1972, in United States v. Dougherty, 473 F.2d 1113, the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit issued a ruling similar to Moylan that affirmed the de facto power of a jury to nullify the law but upheld the denial of the defense's chance to instruct the jury about the power to nullify.[63]

In 1988, the Sixth Circuit upheld a jury instruction: "There is no such thing as valid jury nullification." In United States v. Thomas (1997), the Second Circuit ruled that jurors can be removed if there is evidence that they intend to nullify the law. The Supreme Court has not recently confronted the issue of jury nullification.

In 2017, a jury was instructed: "You cannot substitute your sense of justice, whatever that means, for your duty to follow the law, whether you agree with it or not. It is not for you to determine whether the law is just or whether the law is unjust. That cannot be your task. There is no such thing as valid jury nullification. You would violate your oath and the law if you willfully brought a verdict contrary to the law given to you in this case." The Ninth Circuit upheld the first three sentences of the jury's instruction and overruled the remainder but deemed that instruction a harmless error and affirmed the conviction.[64]

State laws edit

In 2002, South Dakota voters rejected by a 78% margin a state constitutional amendment to permit criminal defendants to argue for jury nullification.[65]

On June 18, 2012, New Hampshire passed a law explicitly allowing defense attorneys to inform juries about jury nullification.[66] On October 24, 2014, the New Hampshire Supreme Court effectively nullified the law and held that the wording of the statute does not allow defense attorneys to tell juries they can nullify a law.[67][68]

The Maryland State Constitution, Declaration of Rights, states that "in the trial of all criminal cases, the Jury shall be the Judges of Law, as well as of fact, except that the Court may pass upon the sufficiency of the evidence to sustain a conviction." Nevertheless, the Maryland Courts jury service brochure states that "it is your duty to accept what the judge is saying about the law, and how it is to be applied to the case."

See also edit

References edit

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  2. ^ "The Cheshire Cab Driver: Reasons of Conscience". Volteface. October 18, 2016. Retrieved March 23, 2020.
  3. ^ Bethel G. A. Erastus-Obilo (October 30, 2008). "13: The 'Perverse' Verdict". The Place of the Explained Verdict in the English Criminal Justice System: Decision-making and Criminal Trials. Universal-Publishers. pp. 197–. ISBN 978-1-59942-689-1.
  4. ^ David Hewitt (May 1, 2018). . The Justice Gap. Archived from the original on September 9, 2019. Retrieved September 8, 2019.
  5. ^
  6. ^ Trial of Penn and Mead March 24, 2016, at the Wayback Machine
  7. ^ Clive Ponting and "Troubled history of Official Secrets Act", 1985 January 15, 2016, at the Wayback Machine
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  9. ^ Duane, James (1996). "Jury Nullification: The Top Secret Constitutional Right" (PDF). Litigation. 22 (4): 6–60.
  10. ^ Balko, Radley (August 1, 2005), Justice Often Served By Jury Nullification, Fox News
  11. ^ Conrad, Clay S. (1995), Jury Nullification as a Defense Strategy, 2 TEX. F. ON C.L. & C.R. 1, 1-2
  12. ^ Conaway, Teresa L.; Mutz, Carol L.; Ross, Joann M. (2004). "Jury Nullification: A Selective, Annotated Bibliography". Valparaiso University Law Review. 39: 410, 428–429. from the original on May 14, 2021 – via ValpoScholar.
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  24. ^ , American Bar Association, archived from the original on November 21, 2008
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  27. ^ Magna Carta of 1215 September 10, 2014, at the Wayback Machine
  28. ^ Eduard Bernstein, Sozialismus und Demokratie in der grossen englischen Revolution (1895); trans. H. J. Stenning (1963, NYC) as Cromwell and Communism: Socialism and Democracy in the Great English Revolution, Library of Congress 63-18392.
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  36. ^ Bushell's Case trial report June 1, 2016, at the Wayback Machine.
  37. ^ Simon Stern, "Between Local Knowledge and National Politics: Debating Rationales for Jury Nullification after Bushell's Case" June 24, 2016, at the Wayback Machine, Yale Law Journal 111 (2002): 1815-48.
  38. ^ Abramson, Jeffrey (1994). We, The Jury. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press. pp. 68–72. ISBN 978-0-674-00430-6.
  39. ^ Crosby, K (2016). "Before the Criminal Justice and Courts Act 2015: juror punishment in nineteenth- and twentieth-century England". Legal Studies. 36 (2): 179. doi:10.1111/lest.12098. S2CID 146794693.
  40. ^ Martin Rosenbaum "Clive Ponting case: Where is the investigators' report?" May 4, 2016, at the Wayback Machine BBC News. 18 May 2011. Retrieved on 13 June 2013.
  41. ^ "Troubled history of Official Secrets Act". BBC. November 18, 1998. Retrieved June 8, 2015. It was hailed as a victory for the jury system. The judge had indicated that the jury should convict him.
  42. ^ Preston, Peter (November 30, 2014). "Clodagh Hartley, chequebooks … and a Clive Ponting moment". The Observer.
  43. ^ Berlins, Marcel (January 22, 2001). "Perverting the course of justice?". The Guardian. Retrieved June 30, 2022.
  44. ^ Press Association, Jury acquits Extinction Rebellion protesters despite 'no defence in law', The Guardian, 23 April 2021. Retrieved on 16 August 2021.
  45. ^ Extinction Rebellion: Jury acquits protesters despite judge's direction, BBC News, 23 April 2021. Retrieved on 16 August 2021
  46. ^ "Insulate Britain activists jailed for seven weeks". openDemocracy. Retrieved August 2, 2023.
  47. ^ Gayle, Damien (February 7, 2023). "Insulate Britain activist jailed for eight weeks for contempt of court". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved August 2, 2023.
  48. ^ "Breaking: Dozens more people risk prison for literally upholding the law – Just Stop Oil". July 17, 2023. Retrieved August 2, 2023.
  49. ^ Press, Insulate Britain (May 15, 2023). "BREAKING: HIGH NOON AT CROWN COURT AS 24 PEOPLE INCLUDING LAWYERS, MEDICS AND QUAKERS DEFY JUDGE WHO JAILED DEFENDANTS FOR SPEAKING ABOUT THEIR MOTIVATIONS". Insulate Britain. Retrieved August 2, 2023.
  50. ^ McKnight, Aaron. "Jury Nullification as a Tool to Balance the Demands of Law and Justice". Retrieved December 10, 2014.
  51. ^ UMKC January 23, 2011, at the Wayback Machine.
  52. ^ "Legal Culture, Wild Bill Hickok and the Gunslinger Myth" February 13, 2007, at the Wayback Machine University of Texas Tarlton Law Library
  53. ^ O'Connor, Richard (1959). Wild Bill Hickok p. 85.
  54. ^ "He Was Arrested for Promoting Jury Nullification. A Federal Court Says That Was Illegal". August 5, 2022.
  55. ^ Gary Collison, "'This Flagitious Offense': Daniel Webster and the Shadrach Rescue Cases, 1851-1852", New England Quarterly Vol. 68, No. 4 (December 1995), pp. 609-625 in JSTOR May 9, 2016, at the Wayback Machine
  56. ^ Conrad, Clay S. (1998). Jury Nullification, The Evolution of a Doctrine, Carolina Academic Press, pp. 167–185. ISBN 0890897026.
  57. ^ Fukurai, Hiroshi, and Richard Krooth (2003). Race in the jury box: affirmative action in jury selection. Albany, New York: State University of New York Press. p. 178. OCLC 872139501
  58. ^ Clay, Conrad J. (PDF). Fully Informed Jury Association. Archived from the original (PDF) on October 19, 2017. Retrieved August 16, 2016.
  59. ^ The Washington Post.
  60. ^ Sparf v. United States, 156 U.S. 51 (1895).
  61. ^ "... the court can also attempt to prevent such an occurrence of juror nullification by (1) informing prospective jurors at the outset that jurors have no authority to disregard the law and (2) obtaining their assurance that they will not do so if chosen to serve on the jury." People v. Estrada, 141 Cal.App.4th 408 (July 14, 2006. No. C047785).
  62. ^ U.S. vs Moylan, 417 F 2d 1002, 1006 (1969) June 4, 2016, at the Wayback Machine
  63. ^ U.S. v Dougherty July 31, 2010, at the Wayback Machine
  64. ^ "Juries Can Acquit the Guilty, 9th Circuit Says, but 'There Is No Right to Nullification'". Reason.com. June 20, 2017. Retrieved June 25, 2017.
  65. ^ PAULA L. HANNAFORD-AGOR AND VALERIE P. HANS (August 26, 2003). "NULLIFICATION AT WORK? A GLIMPSE FROM THE NATIONAL CENTER FOR STATE COURTS STUDY OF HUNG JURIES". Retrieved January 9, 2018.
  66. ^ Tuccille, J.D. (June 29, 2012), New Hampshire Adopts Jury Nullification Law, Reason Magazine
  67. ^ . Fully Informed Jury Association. October 24, 2014. Archived from the original on October 30, 2017.
  68. ^ Tynan, Kirsten C. (September 6, 2021). "What About New Hampshire?". Fully Informed Jury Association.

External links edit

Organizations

  • FIJA - The Fully Informed Jury Association, an activist group that encourages educating potential jurors about jury nullification


Articles and other works

  • Jury Nullification by Doug Linder January 23, 2011, at the Wayback Machine
  • Essay on the Trial by Jury by Lysander Spooner
  • Bushell's Case, history of Bushell's Case and jury nullification in its aftermath
  • How to Get Out of Jury Duty (Satirical defense of jury powers)
  • History of Trial by Jury, William Forsyth. (1875)

jury, nullification, book, clay, conrad, jury, nullification, book, jury, equity, perverse, verdict, occurs, when, jury, criminal, trial, gives, guilty, verdict, regardless, whether, they, believe, defendant, broken, jury, reasons, include, belief, that, itsel. For the book by Clay Conrad see Jury Nullification book Jury nullification US UK jury equity 1 2 UK or a perverse verdict UK 3 4 occurs when the jury in a criminal trial gives a not guilty verdict regardless of whether they believe a defendant has broken the law The jury s reasons may include the belief that the law itself is unjust 5 6 that the prosecutor has misapplied the law in the defendant s case 7 that the punishment for breaking the law is too harsh or general frustrations with the criminal justice system Some juries have also refused to convict due to their own prejudices in favor of the defendant 8 Such verdicts are possible because a jury has an absolute right to return any verdict it chooses 9 Nullification is not an official part of criminal procedure but is the logical consequence of two rules governing the systems in which it exists Jurors cannot be punished for passing an incorrect verdict 10 In many jurisdictions a defendant who is acquitted cannot be tried a second time for the same offence 11 A jury verdict that is contrary to the letter of the law pertains only to the particular case before it However if a pattern of acquittals develops in response to repeated attempts to prosecute a particular offence this can have the de facto effect of invalidating the law Such a pattern may indicate public opposition to an unwanted legislative enactment It may also happen that a jury convicts a defendant even if no law was broken although such a conviction may be overturned on appeal Nullification can also occur in civil trials 12 but unlike in criminal trials if the jury renders a not liable verdict that is clearly at odds with the evidence the judge can issue a judgment notwithstanding the verdict or order a new trial 13 Contents 1 Background 2 Common law precedent 3 Specific jurisdictions 3 1 Germany 3 2 Canada 3 3 England and Wales 3 4 United States 3 4 1 Fugitive Slave Act 3 4 2 After Civil War 3 4 3 21st century 3 4 4 Judicial opinion 3 4 5 State laws 4 See also 5 References 6 External linksBackground edit nbsp A 19th century juryIn the past it was feared that a single judge or panel of government officials might be unduly influenced to follow established legal practice even when that practice had drifted from its origins In most modern Western legal systems judges often instruct juries to act only as finders of fact whose role it is to determine the veracity of the evidence presented the weight accorded to the evidence 14 to apply that evidence to the law as explained by the judge and to reach a verdict but not to question the law itself Similarly juries are routinely cautioned by courts and some attorneys not to allow sympathy for a party or other affected persons to compromise the fair and dispassionate evaluation of evidence These instructions are criticized by advocates of jury nullification Some commonly cited historical examples of jury nullification involve jurors refusing to convict persons accused of violating the Fugitive Slave Act by assisting runaway slaves or being fugitive slaves themselves and refusal of American colonial juries to convict a defendant under English law 15 Jury nullification is the source of much debate Some maintain that it is an important safeguard of last resort against wrongful imprisonment and government tyranny 16 17 Some view it as a violation of the right to a jury trial which undermines the law 17 whereas others such as those members of Congress who voted to impeach Supreme Court Justice Samuel Chase for instructing a jury against nullification view a jury as a body charged with judging both law and fact Some view it as a violation of the oath sworn by jurors In the United States some view the requirement that jurors take an oath to be unlawful in itself while still others view the oath s reference to deliverance to require nullification of unjust law will well and truly try and a true deliverance make between the United States and the defendant at the bar and a true verdict render according to the evidence so help me God United States v Green 556 F 2d 71 D C Cir 1977 18 Some fear that nullification could be used to permit violence against socially unpopular factions 19 They point to the danger that a jury may choose to convict a defendant who has not broken the letter of the law However judges retain the rights both to decide sentences and to disregard juries guilty verdicts acting as a check against malicious juries Jury nullification may also occur in civil suits in which the verdict is generally a finding of liability or lack of liability rather than a finding of guilty or not guilty 20 The main ethical issue involved in jury nullification is the tension between democratic self government and integrity 21 The argument has been raised that prosecutors are not allowed to seek jury nullification and therefore defendants should not be allowed to seek it either 22 However for a prosecutor to nullify a law in this context would require negating the presumption of innocence For this reason prosecutorial nullification is typically defined as declining to prosecute 23 Nevertheless there is little doubt as to the ability of a jury to nullify the law Today there are several issues raised by jury nullification such as whether juries can or should be instructed or informed of their power to nullify whether a judge may remove jurors for cause when they refuse to apply the law as instructed whether a judge may punish a juror for practicing jury nullification whether all legal arguments except perhaps on motions in limine to exclude evidence should be made in the presence of the jury In some cases in the United States a stealth juror will attempt to get on a jury in order to nullify the law 24 Some lawyers use a shadow defense to expose the jury to information that would otherwise be inadmissible hoping that evidence will trigger a nullification 25 26 Common law precedent edit nbsp Even prior to Bushel s Case Sir Nicholas Throckmorton a non Episcopalian English Dissenter or Nonconformist outside the established Church of England was acquitted by a jury despite hostility of the judges The early history of juries supports the recognition of the de facto power of nullification By the 12th century common law courts in England began using juries for more than administrative duties Juries were composed primarily of laymen from the local community and provided a somewhat efficient means of dispute resolution with the benefit of supplying legitimacy The general power of juries to decide on verdicts was recognised in the English Magna Carta 27 of 1215 which put into words existing practices No free man shall be captured and or imprisoned or disseised of his freehold and or of his liberties or of his free customs or be outlawed or exiled or in any way destroyed nor will we proceed against him by force or proceed against him by arms but by the lawful judgment of his peers or by the law of the land For a trivial offence a free man shall be fined only in proportion to the degree of his offence and for a serious offence correspondingly but not so heavily as to deprive him of his livelihood In the same way a merchant shall be spared his merchandise and a husbandman the implements of his husbandry if they fall upon the mercy of a royal court None of these fines shall be imposed except by the assessment on oath of reputable men of the neighbourhood Largely the earliest juries returned verdicts in accordance with the judge or the Crown This was achieved either by packing the jury or by writ of attaint Juries were packed by hand selecting or by bribing the jury so as to return the desired verdict That was a common tactic in cases involving treason or sedition In addition the writ of attaint allowed a judge to retry the case in front of a second jury when the judge believed the first jury returned a false verdict If the second jury returned a different verdict that verdict was imposed and the first jury was imprisoned or fined That history is marked by a number of notable exceptions several of which claim rights commonly recognized as fundamental in modern Democratic societies such as freedom of speech and of the press and freedom of religious practice In 1554 a jury acquitted Sir Nicholas Throckmorton but was severely punished by the court Almost a century later in 1649 in the first known attempt to argue for jury nullification a jury likewise acquitted John Lilburne for his part in inciting a rebellion against Oliver Cromwell s regime Lilburne had been charged with seditious libel for the publication of articles critical of the government the jury were instructed to give a verdict only on whether the text was published and to leave the issue of libel to the judge while Lilburne argued the jury should give a general verdict and should judge whether the law s restraint on speech against the government was just The theoretician and politician Eduard Bernstein wrote of Lilburne s trial His contention that the constitution of the Court was contrary to the fundamental laws of the country was unheeded and his claim that the jury was legally entitled to judge not only as to matters of fact but also as to the application of the law itself as the Judges represented only Norman intruders whom the jury might here ignore in reaching a verdict was described by an enraged judge as damnable blasphemous heresy This view was not shared by the jury which after three days hearing acquitted Lilburne who had defended himself as skillfully as any lawyer could have done to the great horror of the Judges and the chagrin of the majority of the Council of State The Judges were so astonished at the verdict of the jury that they had to repeat their question before they would believe their ears but the public which crowded the judgment hall on the announcement of the verdict broke out into cheers so loud and long as according to the unanimous testimony of contemporary reporters had never before been heard in the Guildhall The cheering and waving of caps continued for over half an hour while the Judges sat turning white and red in turns and spread thence to the masses in London and the suburbs At night bonfires were lighted and even during the following days the event was the occasion of joyful demonstrations 28 In 1653 Lilburne was on trial again and asked the jury to acquit him if it found the death penalty unconscionably severe in proportion to the crime he had committed The jury found Lilburne not guilty of any crime worthy of death 29 In 1670 a petit jury refused to convict William Penn of unlawful assembly for religious practice not associated with the Church of England The judge held the jury in contempt of court which was ruled inappropriate by the Court of Common Pleas in Bushel s Case In 1681 a grand jury refused to indict the Earl of Shaftesbury In 1688 a jury acquitted the Seven Bishops of the Church of England of seditious libel Juries continued even in non criminal cases to act in defiance of the Crown In 1763 and 1765 juries awarded 4 000 to John Wilkes and 300 to John Entick in separate suits for trespass against the Crown s messengers In both cases messengers had been sent by Lord Halifax to seize allegedly libellous papers citation needed In Scotland jury nullification had the profound effect of introducing the three verdict system including the option of not proven which remains in Scotland to this day In 1728 Carnegie of Finhaven accidentally killed the Earl of Strathmore As the defendant had undoubtedly killed the Earl the law as it then stood required the jury merely to look at the facts and to pass a verdict of proven or not proven depending on whether it believed that the facts proved the defendant had killed the Earl citation needed If the jury brought in a proven verdict that would lead to Carnegie s hanging though he had not intended any harm to the Earl To avert that injustice the jury decided to assert what it believed to be its ancient right to judge the whole case not just the facts and rendered the verdict of not guilty Over time juries have tended to favour the not guilty verdict over not proven and so the interpretation has changed The not guilty verdict has become the normal verdict when a jury is convinced of innocence and the not proven verdict is used only if the jury is not certain of innocence or guilt citation needed The standard jury trial practice in the United States during the Founding Era and for several decades afterward was to argue all issues of law in the presence of the jury so that it heard the same arguments as the bench in reaching its rulings on motions That is evidenced by such decisions as the 1839 case Stettinius which held The defense can argue law to the jury before the court gives instructions 30 Later judges began to demand the parties submit motions in writing often before the jury was empaneled to be argued and decided without the jury being present The transition began with motions in limine to exclude evidence on which it was felt the jury should not hear the argument because it would be informed of the evidence to be excluded Later that was expanded to include all legal argument and so that today the earlier practice of arguing law before the jury has been largely forgotten and judges even declare mistrials or overturn verdicts if legal arguments are made to the jury citation needed Specific jurisdictions editGermany edit See also Assassination of Talaat Pasha In 1921 the Armenian genocide survivor Soghomon Tehlirian assassinated Talaat Pasha who was considered the main architect of the genocide in Berlin Although Tehlirian s lawyers did not contest that their client had killed Talat the jury Germany used jury trials until 1924 returned a verdict of not guilty 31 32 Canada edit Although extremely rare jury nullification occurs in Canada As the prosecution has powers to appeal the resulting acquittal it lacks the finality found in the United States However the Crown cannot appeal on grounds of an unreasonable acquittal although it can appeal on errors of law In R v Latimer 2001 SCC 1 33 the Supreme Court discussed jury nullification and indicated that it is a duty of the presiding justice to try to prevent it from occurring Perhaps the most famous cases of jury nullification in Canada were the various trials of Henry Morgentaler who openly operated a private abortion clinic in violation of the Criminal Code Repeated attempts at prosecuting Morgentaler resulted in acquittals at jury trials in the 1970s and the 1980s In the 1988 Supreme Court case R v Morgentaler 1988 SCR 30 34 a nullification was appealed all the way to the country s highest court which struck down the law in question In obiter dicta Chief Justice Dickson wrote The contrary principle contended for by Mr Manning that a jury may be encouraged to ignore a law it does not like could lead to gross inequities One accused could be convicted by a jury who supported the existing law while another person indicted for the same offence could be acquitted by a jury who with reformist zeal wished to express disapproval of the same law Moreover a jury could decide that although the law pointed to a conviction the jury would simply refuse to apply the law to an accused for whom it had sympathy Alternatively a jury who feels antipathy towards an accused might convict despite a law which points to acquittal To give a harsh but I think telling example a jury fueled by the passions of racism could be told that they need not apply the law against murder to a white man who had killed a black man Such a possibility need only be stated to reveal the potentially frightening implications of Mr Manning s assertions It is no doubt true that juries have a de facto power to disregard the law as stated to the jury by the judge We cannot enter the jury room The jury is never called upon to explain the reasons which lie behind a verdict It may even be true that in some limited circumstances the private decision of a jury to refuse to apply the law will constitute in the words of a Law Reform Commission of Canada working paper the citizen s ultimate protection against oppressive laws and the oppressive enforcement of the law Law Reform Commission of Canada Working Paper 27 The Jury in Criminal Trials 1980 But recognizing this reality is a far cry from suggesting that counsel may encourage a jury to ignore a law they do not support or to tell a jury that it has a right to do so The Supreme Court in 2006 issued a decision R v Krieger 2006 SCC 47 35 which confirmed that juries in Canada have the power to refuse to apply the law when their consciences require that they do so The decision stated that juries are not entitled as a matter of right to refuse to apply the law but they do have the power to do so when their consciences permit of no other course 35 England and Wales edit By the late 17th century the court s power to punish juries was removed in Bushel s Case 36 involving a juror on the case against William Penn Penn and William Mead had been arrested in 1670 for illegally preaching a Quaker sermon and disturbing the peace but four jurors led by Edward Bushell refused to find them guilty Instead of dismissing the jury the judge sent them back for further deliberations Despite the judge demanding a guilty verdict the jury now unanimously found Penn guilty of preaching but acquitted him on the charge of disturbing the peace and acquitted Mead of all charges The jury was then subsequently kept for three days without meat drink fire and tobacco to force it to bring in a guilty verdict When it failed to do so the judge ended the trial As punishment the judge ordered the jurors imprisoned until they paid a fine to the court nbsp Plaque at the Old BaileyFour jurors refused to pay the fine and after several months Bushell sought a writ of habeas corpus Chief Justice Vaughan sitting on the Court of Common Pleas discharged the writ released them called the power to punish a jury absurd and forbade judges from punishing jurors for returning a verdict the judge disagreed with 37 That series of events is considered a significant milestone in the history of jury nullification 38 The courage and endurance of the jury is celebrated in a plaque displayed in the Central Criminal Court the Old Bailey in London In a criminal libel case R v Shipley 1784 4 Dougl 73 99 E R 774 at p 824 Lord Mansfield sitting as a judge in the case disparaged the practice of jury nullification So the jury who usurp the judicature of law though they happen to be right are themselves wrong because they are right by chance only and have not taken the constitutional way of deciding the question It is the duty of the Judge in all cases of general justice to tell the jury how to do right though they have it in their power to do wrong which is a matter entirely between God and their own consciences To be free is to live under a government by law Miserable is the condition of individuals dangerous is the condition of the State if there is no certain law or which is the same thing no certain administration of law to protect individuals or to guard the State In opposition to this what is contended for That the law shall be in every particular cause what any twelve men who shall happen to be the jury shall be inclined to think liable to no review and subject to no control under all the prejudices of the popular cry of the day and under all the bias of interest in this town where thousands more or less are concerned in the publication of newspapers paragraphs and pamphlets Under such an administration of law no man could tell no counsel could advise whether a paper was or was not punishable for publishing a libel A 2016 study exploring the history of juror punishment in England and Wales after Bushel s Case found no clear examples of jurors being punished solely for returning the wrong verdict The closest that a jury came to that was in 1917 when a jury acquitted two teenage boys of arson The boys had confessed at their pre trial hearing but entered pleas of not guilty at their trial Home Office civil servants suspected the difference between the pleas could be explained by the difference between the boys admitting that they had caused the fire and their denial that they had done so maliciously The trial judge did not consider that possibility or was not satisfied with it On receiving the jury s verdict he told them that you have been absolutely regardless of your oath These men have pleaded guilty and the evidence is of the clearest possible nature You are none of you fit to serve on a Jury but you will remain here until the end of the Sessions The foreman George Lathan considered that a form of punishment for the jury as the jurors were not going to be permitted to serve on any more juries but were nonetheless required to keep attending court or face contempt proceedings which Lathan considered a tacit form of imprisonment Officials in the Lord Chancellor s Office noted that while the judge s conduct was ill judged and arbitrary he did not so far as I can see do any act which would justify the Lord Chancellor in removing him from the Bench Home Office officials wrote to the judge advising him that his actions would be impossible for the Home Secretary to defend as constitutional or right and after several days the jurors were relieved of their duties Home Office minutes suggest they did not think that kind of informal punishment of jurors who had returned the wrong verdict to be unheard of 39 In 1982 during the Falklands War the Royal Navy sank the Argentine cruiser General Belgrano Three years later a civil servant Clive Ponting leaked two government documents concerning the sinking of the cruiser to a Member of Parliament Tam Dalyell and was subsequently charged with breaching section 2 of the Official Secrets Act 1911 40 The prosecution in the case demanded that the jury convict Ponting as he had clearly contravened the Act by leaking official information about the sinking of the Belgrano during the Falklands War His main defence was that it was in the public interest that the information be made available The judge Sir Anthony McCowan indicated that the jury should convict him 41 and had ruled that the public interest is what the government of the day says it is 42 However the jury acquitted him much to the consternation of the government In 2001 two people were charged with conspiracy to cause criminal damage to a Trident submarine in a Barrow in Furness shipyard Though the two admitted their intention to trash the submarine the two said they were planning to do so due to nuclear bombs being immoral and illegal The judge told the juries that such ideals were not a defence against the charge The jury brought a verdict of not guilty on these two anti nuclear protesters 43 In 2021 six activists associated with the environmental protest organisation Extinction Rebellion were tried for causing criminal damage to the British headquarters of the multinational oil company Royal Dutch Shell The judge told the jury that there was no defence in law for the protestors actions which according to the prosecutor had caused significant damage to the building but the activists were acquitted 44 45 In 2023 Insulate Britain members Giovanna Lewis and Amy Pritchard were jailed for seven weeks after defying the judge s ban on informing the jury of the reasons for their actions 46 In charging them with contempt the judge referred to an earlier case where another environmental activist was sentenced to eight weeks in prison for the same reason 47 Following juries acquitting activists dozens of people have been threatened with arrest for displaying signs that remind jurors of their right to make decisions based on conscience 48 49 United States edit Main article Jury nullification in the United States In the United States jury nullification first appeared just before the American Revolutionary War when colonial juries frequently exercised their nullification power principally in maritime cases and cases implicating free speech Jury nullification became so common that many British prosecutors gave up trying maritime cases since conviction seemed hopeless 50 Before the American Civil War juries sometimes refused to convict for violations of the Fugitive Slave Act Later during Prohibition juries often nullified alcohol control laws 51 That resistance may have contributed to the adoption of the Twenty first Amendment which repealed Prohibition and the Eighteenth Amendment In a well known example of jury nullification at the end of Wild Bill Hickok s trial for the manslaughter of Davis Tutt in 1865 Judge Sempronius Boyd gave the jury two instructions He first instructed the jury that a conviction was its only option under the law He then instructed them that they could apply the unwritten law of the fair fight and acquit Hickok was acquitted the verdict was not popular with the public 52 53 There have been contemporary instances of activists being arrested for informing jurists of their right of jury nullification in front of court houses with subsequent rulings that arresting people for this activity is unconstitutional 54 Fugitive Slave Act edit Juries across the North acquitted defendants who had clearly breached the Fugitive Slave Act in the 1850s Part of the Compromise of 1850 it had been passed to mollify Southern slaveowners who were otherwise threatening to secede from the Union Secretary of State Daniel Webster was a key supporter of the law as expressed in his famous Seventh of March speech He wanted high profile convictions but the jury nullifications ruined his presidential aspirations and his last ditch efforts to find a compromise between North and South Webster led the prosecution when defendants were accused of rescuing Shadrach Minkins in 1851 from Boston officials who intended to return Minkins to his owner The juries convicted none of the men Webster tried to enforce a law that was extremely unpopular in the North and his Whig Party passed over him again when it chose a presidential nominee in 1852 55 After Civil War edit White defendants accused of crimes against black people and other minorities were often acquitted by all white juries especially in the South even in the face of irrefutable evidence 56 21st century edit In the 21st century many discussions of jury nullification center on drug laws which some consider unjust in principle or because they are seen to discriminate against certain groups 57 A jury nullification advocacy group estimates that 3 4 of all jury trials involve nullification 58 and a recent rise in hung juries is seen by some as being indirect evidence that juries have begun to consider the validity or the fairness of the laws themselves 59 Judicial opinion edit In the 1895 case of Sparf v United States written by Associate Justice John Marshall Harlan the US Supreme Court held 5 4 that a trial judge has no responsibility to inform the jury of the right to nullify laws 60 That decision often cited has led to a common practice by US judges to penalize anyone who attempts to present a nullification argument to jurors and to declare a mistrial if such argument has been presented to them In some states jurors are likely to be struck from the panel during voir dire if they do not agree to accept as correct the rulings and instructions of the law as provided by the judge 61 In later rulings the courts continued to prohibit informing juries about jury nullification In a 1969 Fourth Circuit Court of Appeals decision U S v Moylan 417 F 2d 1002 4th Cir 1969 the Court affirmed the concept of jury nullification but upheld the power of a court to refuse to permit an instruction to the jury to this effect 62 In 1972 in United States v Dougherty 473 F 2d 1113 the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit issued a ruling similar to Moylan that affirmed the de facto power of a jury to nullify the law but upheld the denial of the defense s chance to instruct the jury about the power to nullify 63 In 1988 the Sixth Circuit upheld a jury instruction There is no such thing as valid jury nullification In United States v Thomas 1997 the Second Circuit ruled that jurors can be removed if there is evidence that they intend to nullify the law The Supreme Court has not recently confronted the issue of jury nullification In 2017 a jury was instructed You cannot substitute your sense of justice whatever that means for your duty to follow the law whether you agree with it or not It is not for you to determine whether the law is just or whether the law is unjust That cannot be your task There is no such thing as valid jury nullification You would violate your oath and the law if you willfully brought a verdict contrary to the law given to you in this case The Ninth Circuit upheld the first three sentences of the jury s instruction and overruled the remainder but deemed that instruction a harmless error and affirmed the conviction 64 State laws edit This section needs expansion You can help by adding to it July 2013 In 2002 South Dakota voters rejected by a 78 margin a state constitutional amendment to permit criminal defendants to argue for jury nullification 65 On June 18 2012 New Hampshire passed a law explicitly allowing defense attorneys to inform juries about jury nullification 66 On October 24 2014 the New Hampshire Supreme Court effectively nullified the law and held that the wording of the statute does not allow defense attorneys to tell juries they can nullify a law 67 68 The Maryland State Constitution Declaration of Rights states that in the trial of all criminal cases the Jury shall be the Judges of Law as well as of fact except that the Court may pass upon the sufficiency of the evidence to sustain a conviction Nevertheless the Maryland Courts jury service brochure states that it is your duty to accept what the judge is saying about the law and how it is to be applied to the case See also edit nbsp Law portalCitizens Rule Book Fully Informed Jury Association Josephine Terranova Judgment notwithstanding verdict Judicial override Jury nullification in the United States Ultimate fact Jury Nullification book References edit What is jury equity eNotes Retrieved March 23 2020 The Cheshire Cab Driver Reasons of Conscience Volteface October 18 2016 Retrieved March 23 2020 Bethel G A Erastus Obilo October 30 2008 13 The Perverse Verdict The Place of the Explained Verdict in the English Criminal Justice System Decision making and Criminal Trials Universal Publishers pp 197 ISBN 978 1 59942 689 1 David Hewitt May 1 2018 Not only a right but a duty A history of perverse verdicts The Justice Gap Archived from the original on September 9 2019 Retrieved September 8 2019 Trial of the Quaker William Penn founder of Pennsylvania 1670 Trial of Penn and Mead Archived March 24 2016 at the Wayback Machine Clive Ponting and Troubled history of Official Secrets Act 1985 Archived January 15 2016 at the Wayback Machine Kennedy Randall Racial Conduct by Jurors and Judges The Problem of the Tainted Conviction pp 277 282 and Black Power in the Jury Box pp 295 310 Race Crime and the Law 1997 Duane James 1996 Jury Nullification The Top Secret Constitutional Right PDF Litigation 22 4 6 60 Balko Radley August 1 2005 Justice Often Served By Jury Nullification Fox News Conrad Clay S 1995 Jury Nullification as a Defense Strategy 2 TEX F ON C L amp C R 1 1 2 Conaway Teresa L Mutz Carol L Ross Joann M 2004 Jury Nullification A Selective Annotated Bibliography Valparaiso University Law Review 39 410 428 429 Archived from the original on May 14 2021 via ValpoScholar Rubenstein Arie M 2006 Verdicts of Conscience Nullification and the Modern Jury Trial PDF Columbia Law Review 106 960 via JSTOR Graves Dr Frederick D 2009 Fact definition Jurisdictionary archived from the original on December 26 2009 retrieved January 4 2010 Gaspee Affair Archived April 20 2016 at the Wayback Machine William C Heffernan John Kleinig From Social Justice to Criminal Justice Poverty and the Administration of Criminal Law Contributor William C Heffernan John Kleinig Oxford University Press US 2000 ISBN 0195129857 ISBN 978 0 19 512985 4 p 219 a b Randolph N Jonakait The American Jury System Yale University Press 2006 p 253 ISBN 0 300 12463 5 ISBN 978 0 300 12463 7 Barbara J Shapiro A Culture of Fact England 1550 1720 Cornell University Press 2003 p 21 ISBN 0 8014 8849 4 ISBN 978 0 8014 8849 8 Recognising the Activist Juror Deliberations Law news and thoughts on juries and jury trials June 12 2007 retrieved January 4 2010 Lars Noah Civil Jury Nullification Iowa Law Review 86 2001 1601 Schopp Robert F 1995 1996 Verdicts of Conscience Nullification and Necessity as Jury Responses to Crimes of Conscience vol 69 S Cal L Rev p 2039 Bissell John W 1997 1998 Comments on Jury Nullification vol 7 Cornell Journal of Law and Public Policy p 51 Fairfax Roger A 2011 Prosecutorial Nullification PDF Boston College Law Review archived from the original PDF on March 9 2021 retrieved April 12 2016 The Stealth Juror Reality or Rarity American Bar Association archived from the original on November 21 2008 Hall Jr John Wesley 2003 Putting on a Jury Nullification Defense and Getting Away with It Conrad Clay 1998 Using Theories and Themes to Acquit the Guilty Magna Carta of 1215 Archived September 10 2014 at the Wayback Machine Eduard Bernstein Sozialismus und Demokratie in der grossen englischen Revolution 1895 trans H J Stenning 1963 NYC as Cromwell and Communism Socialism and Democracy in the Great English Revolution Library of Congress 63 18392 Birch Thomas ed 1742 Slate Papers 1653 August 5 of 5 A Collection of the State Papers of John Thurloe Volume 1 1638 1653 London Fletcher Gyles pp 435 445 Retrieved December 1 2016 via British History Online Stettinius v United States Federal Case No 13 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Wayback Machine Yale Law Journal 111 2002 1815 48 Abramson Jeffrey 1994 We The Jury Cambridge MA Harvard University Press pp 68 72 ISBN 978 0 674 00430 6 Crosby K 2016 Before the Criminal Justice and Courts Act 2015 juror punishment in nineteenth and twentieth century England Legal Studies 36 2 179 doi 10 1111 lest 12098 S2CID 146794693 Martin Rosenbaum Clive Ponting case Where is the investigators report Archived May 4 2016 at the Wayback Machine BBC News 18 May 2011 Retrieved on 13 June 2013 Troubled history of Official Secrets Act BBC November 18 1998 Retrieved June 8 2015 It was hailed as a victory for the jury system The judge had indicated that the jury should convict him Preston Peter November 30 2014 Clodagh Hartley chequebooks and a Clive Ponting moment The Observer Berlins Marcel January 22 2001 Perverting the course of justice The Guardian Retrieved June 30 2022 Press Association Jury acquits Extinction Rebellion protesters despite no defence in law The Guardian 23 April 2021 Retrieved on 16 August 2021 Extinction Rebellion Jury acquits protesters despite judge s direction BBC News 23 April 2021 Retrieved on 16 August 2021 Insulate Britain activists jailed for seven weeks openDemocracy Retrieved August 2 2023 Gayle Damien February 7 2023 Insulate Britain activist jailed for eight weeks for contempt of court The Guardian ISSN 0261 3077 Retrieved August 2 2023 Breaking Dozens more people risk prison for literally upholding the law Just Stop Oil July 17 2023 Retrieved August 2 2023 Press Insulate Britain May 15 2023 BREAKING HIGH NOON AT CROWN COURT AS 24 PEOPLE INCLUDING LAWYERS MEDICS AND QUAKERS DEFY JUDGE WHO JAILED DEFENDANTS FOR SPEAKING ABOUT THEIR MOTIVATIONS Insulate Britain Retrieved August 2 2023 McKnight Aaron Jury Nullification as a Tool to Balance the Demands of Law and Justice Retrieved December 10 2014 UMKC Archived January 23 2011 at the Wayback Machine Legal Culture Wild Bill Hickok and the Gunslinger Myth Archived February 13 2007 at the Wayback Machine University of Texas Tarlton Law Library O Connor Richard 1959 Wild Bill Hickok p 85 He Was Arrested for Promoting Jury Nullification A Federal Court Says That Was Illegal August 5 2022 Gary Collison This Flagitious Offense Daniel Webster and the Shadrach Rescue Cases 1851 1852 New England Quarterly Vol 68 No 4 December 1995 pp 609 625 in JSTOR Archived May 9 2016 at the Wayback Machine Conrad Clay S 1998 Jury Nullification The Evolution of a Doctrine Carolina Academic Press pp 167 185 ISBN 0890897026 Fukurai Hiroshi and Richard Krooth 2003 Race in the jury box affirmative action in jury selection Albany New York State University of New York Press p 178 OCLC 872139501 Clay Conrad J Doing Your Best as a Trial Juror Surviving Voir Dire PDF Fully Informed Jury Association Archived from the original PDF on October 19 2017 Retrieved August 16 2016 The Washington Post Sparf v United States 156 U S 51 1895 the court can also attempt to prevent such an occurrence of juror nullification by 1 informing prospective jurors at the outset that jurors have no authority to disregard the law and 2 obtaining their assurance that they will not do so if chosen to serve on the jury People v Estrada 141 Cal App 4th 408 July 14 2006 No C047785 U S vs Moylan 417 F 2d 1002 1006 1969 Archived June 4 2016 at the Wayback Machine U S v DoughertyArchived July 31 2010 at the Wayback Machine Juries Can Acquit the Guilty 9th Circuit Says but There Is No Right to Nullification Reason com June 20 2017 Retrieved June 25 2017 PAULA L HANNAFORD AGOR AND VALERIE P HANS August 26 2003 NULLIFICATION AT WORK A GLIMPSE FROM THE NATIONAL CENTER FOR STATE COURTS STUDY OF HUNG JURIES Retrieved January 9 2018 Tuccille J D June 29 2012 New Hampshire Adopts Jury Nullification Law Reason Magazine New Hampshire Supreme Court Nullifies Jury Nullification Statute Fully Informed Jury Association October 24 2014 Archived from the original on October 30 2017 Tynan Kirsten C September 6 2021 What About New Hampshire Fully Informed Jury Association External links edit nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Jury nullification Organizations FIJA The Fully Informed Jury Association an activist group that encourages educating potential jurors about jury nullificationArticles and other works Cromwell and Communism aka Socialism and Democracy in the Great English Revolution Jury Nullification by Doug Linder Archived January 23 2011 at the Wayback Machine Jury Nullification Why you should know what it is by Russ Emal Essay on the Trial by Jury by Lysander Spooner Bushell s Case history of Bushell s Case and jury nullification in its aftermath How to Get Out of Jury Duty Satirical defense of jury powers History of Trial by Jury William Forsyth 1875 Idiot Legal Arguments A Casebook for Dealing with Extremist Legal Arguments Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Jury nullification amp oldid 1186379867, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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