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Juries Must Go.

If you don't have a better solution, what's the point of complaining?

If you'd been keeping up, you would have noticed that I proposed a panel of lay judges.

Now, are you going to bother showing which "other" systems are inferior to juries, and why?
 
Televised phone vote, because OJ would have been found not guilty.

Since he was acquitted anyway, that wouldn't be an inferior result - just the same result.

How about a straw poll at the pub at lunchtime on the second Thursday monthly?
 
Corruption of judges or jurors has been either done or attempted at various points in history; more notably during the rise of organized crime.

Judges are generally paid fairly well, and in many districts are elected officials as well. Their records are public and capable of scrutiny.
Attempts to suborn members of juries may be done by threat, bribery, or whatever. There have been numbers of cases, but I think overall they are relatively rare.
High profile cases where the defendants are part of organized crime tend to be handled very carefully.
 
Cavemonster,

In the US, there was a huge scandal of Bush's Department of Justice screening for political allegiance, and even race. That's as crooked as it gets.

Bingo...
 
Those seem like two excellent pieces of evidence against juries. I want juries who rely on evidence, not empathy with the defendant, and while I support legalisation of all drugs, I'd want a drug jury to also rule on the evidence, rather than their personal beliefs.
False dichotomy. I want juries to rule on what they think is just, and that has to be based both on the facts of the case and the law.
On your basis, a juror who wanted to acquit a murderer on the basis that the victim was an abortionist would be perfectly ok.
False analogy, since I don't have problem with murder being illegal.

By your reasoning, however, the jury on Clive Ponting's case (cited by Fiona up-thread) should have found him guilty, since he clearly was.
It's exactly what I want to avoid, so thanks for making that point for me.
Except I didn't, because you had to set up a couple of straw men for me to supposedly make that point.
 
I want juries to rule on what they think is just, and that has to be based both on the facts of the case and the law.

Did you really say that?

Wow!

You want juries to decide justice? I want them to decide guilt or innocence; I'm quite happy to leave justice for the sky-daddy.

False analogy, since I don't have problem with murder being illegal.

Then you've just refuted your previous post. Make your mind up.

Except I didn't, because you had to set up a couple of straw men for me to supposedly make that point.

Methinks you need to learn what a strawman is, because your argument was refuted and no haystacks were harmed.
 
No, I always have evidence: the Philip Field trial.

The court spent a fortnight trying to empanel 12 jurors capable of attending a three-month trial, and given that they're one down within the first two days, I give the trial no chance of proceeding to the end.


They only spent two days getting the jury, not two weeks. Learn how to read. The trial was supposed to start on the Monday. On Tuesday seven jurors were released, and on Wednesday they were replaced. On Thursday a single juror was released, and is not going to be replaced.
 
You want juries to decide justice? I want them to decide guilt or innocence; I'm quite happy to leave justice for the sky-daddy.

That really is a false dichotomy, The Atheist. In the vast majority of cases the jury does exactly what you say and anecdotal evidence suggests that most take their responsibilities very seriously: certainly those I know who have been called do: and those who have posted about their own experience tend to confirm this: I have seen nothing to suggest they are frivolous nor that they are incapable of discharging that responsibility on the basis of the evidence, though there have been some worries about their ability to do this in complex financial cases. (as an aside I am quite interested that there was a strong push to take such cases out of the jury system on those grounds: since there now seems to be ample evidence that professionals were incapable of understanding complex financial arrangements too :))

Nonetheless I see a need for a human element within the system for the reasons I outlined above. Your response to the Clive Ponting case was to say it was not an argument in favour of juries but an argument in favour of changing a bad law. I think you miss the point. It was the view of the jury in that case that it was a bad law and they refused to convict on that basis: though Ponting was clearly guilty. That is a safeguard which I do not think could have come from an entirely professional system.

If there was no such safeguard how do you suggest a bad law would be identified as such? Most people are not aware of the legal position on many issues: professionals within the legal system are very conscious that it is not for them to make law but to apply it (some will make representations on particular issues, perhaps: but there are VERY strong inhibitions about that and enormous resistance to interference in politics by the judiciary for very good reason): That is how they are trained to see it and so they should be

So one way of identifying when the law is bad or has become out of step with the view of the people is a situation like Pontings: the jury did not believe the law was just: and refused to convict. That was a very controversial matter and it led to a big debate. It also led to some changes in the law and I do not see another mechanism which would have had that result.

It is not perfect because the jury for the most part accepts that their role is to determine guilt on the basis of the law as it stands: it is probably true that Ponting got the result he did partly on irrelevant matters: he was a senior civil servant and he dressed and talked well. But I do not believe the decision was made on those factors, though they probably played a part: it was primarily based on the defence of public interest which he mounted: his advantages probably let him present his case better, but it was still the case he made which carried the jury: and this does not happen very often.

If you wish to remove this safeguard: which is indeed based on the jury's role in giving some weight to justice rather than the letter of the law, how do you propose to replace this function?
 
I have followed all the arguments here, and have served on a jury and thought we did a good job.

I still think that a tribunal of a judge and two eminent experts would be a superior system.
 
In the vast majority of cases the jury does exactly what you say and anecdotal evidence suggests that most take their responsibilities very seriously:

To recap:

Obviously, most juries get the right result; most trials are a piece of cake and - luckily - imbeciles can understand the evidence.

Nobody's suggested they aren't serious enough.

I have followed all the arguments here, and have served on a jury and thought we did a good job.

I still think that a tribunal of a judge and two eminent experts would be a superior system.

Well, there's a couple of us...
 
I have followed all the arguments here, and have served on a jury and thought we did a good job.

I still think that a tribunal of a judge and two eminent experts would be a superior system.


Maybe on paper but in reality I think putting a few experts in charge of the legal system would totally destory it's creditbility with the vast majority of the public. They would see it as an elite having the total power over the average man.
Yeah, the Jury system has it's flaws, but I think the fact that the final judges of guilt or innocence are 12 citizens is what makes the Common Law system work.
Acdemic argument anyway, the Jury system is here to stay. I see no support whatsoever for replacing it except among a few academics.
 
There are problems with having "professional" juries as well. The first that springs to mind is corruption. If everyone knows who the jurors are going to be, then unscrupulous persons can dig into their life histories for dirt or susceptibility of bribery.
More difficult when jurors are pulled from a large constituency and then sequestered after the selection process..

I was under the impression that sequestering jurors was very rare (perhaps in part because it's very expensive to provide them hotel rooms, 3 meals every day, transportation to and from court and anywhere else the judge will allow them to go in their free time.
 
Maybe on paper but in reality I think putting a few experts in charge of the legal system would totally destory it's creditbility with the vast majority of the public. They would see it as an elite having the total power over the average man.
Excellent point.
 
Maybe on paper but in reality I think putting a few experts in charge of the legal system would totally destory it's creditbility with the vast majority of the public. They would see it as an elite having the total power over the average man.

I don't think "experts" is right. As I said earlier, trained lay people, as used by Dispute Tribunals would see to be an option.

Acdemic argument anyway, the Jury system is here to stay. I see no support whatsoever for replacing it except among a few academics.

Well, I'm no academic, and neither is lionking, so that theory's blown.

As to whether it's appropriate to discuss matters here which won't change, we'd be shutting the forum if that's where the bar was set.
 
Did you really say that?

Wow!
You want juries to decide justice? I want them to decide guilt or innocence; I'm quite happy to leave justice for the sky-daddy.
From the fact that you seem to need to resort to ridicule, I'll conclude you don't have an adequate rejoinder.

Yes, call me strange, but when it says I have the right (as I do in the US) to be tried by a jury, I don't expect that to mean that I'm actually tried by the judge and the jury gets to rubber-stamp the judge's opinion.
Then you've just refuted your previous post. Make your mind up.
No, I don't think so. You're going to have put more effort into this than simply making unsupported assertions.
Methinks you need to learn what a strawman is, because your argument was refuted and no haystacks were harmed.
More unsupported assertion. I guess reasoned argument, let alone evidence, is only necessary for people who aren't obviously blisteringly intelligent as you, eh?
 
I guess reasoned argument, let alone evidence, is only necessary for people who aren't obviously blisteringly intelligent as you, eh?

Nope.

I just have no idea what you're on about, having already contradicted yourself as noted in my first paragraph of the last post.
 

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