-Caveat Lector-

In a message dated 98-12-20 06:34:24 EST, you write:

<< Date: Sat, 19 Dec 1998 11:11:29 -0700 (MST)
 >From: Jury Rights Project <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
 >Subject: Atty. Grant Responds to Judge Ryan (11/98)
 >
 >Summit Free Press
 >P.O. Box 8386
 >Breckenridge, CO 80424
 >Email: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 >
 >November 1998
 >
 >Jury Nullification is a constitutional right, attorney argues
 >
 >     I write in response to Judge Jeffrey Ryan recently lengthy attack on
 >the Fully Informed Jury Association ("FIJA") and the ideas it promotes,
 >which he described as "jury nullification."
 >     The judge began by smearing FIJA with an attempt to prove "guilt by
 >association."  After that, he attacked what FIJA promotes, jury
 >independence or nullification.
 >     FIJA may be too "radical" for the judge, but FIJA's literature
 >promoting jury rights, they quote such historical supporters as John Adams
 >(2d President of the United States), Thomas Jefferson (author of the
 >Declaration of Independence and 3rd President), and John Jay (1st Chief
 >Justice of the United States Supreme Court).  FIJA also recounts famous
 >trials where juries stood up for the rights of the accused, in defiance of
 >tyrannical and oppressive kings, judges and prosecutors, trials such as
 >that of William Penn in London in 1670, of John Peter Zenger in New York in
 >1735, and trials under the Fugitive Slave Act in the 1850's.  These trials
 >helped establish freedom of religion and assembly, freedom of the press,
 >and the end of slavery.  English juries refusing to convict when conviction
 >led to death helped end the "bloody codes" of England (under which over 200
 >offenses were punished by death).  That's a pretty good pedigree for "jury
 >rights," or "jury nullification."  Juries also helped end Prohibition.
 >What part of that history does the judge find objectionable?
 >     FIJA literature recalls that the Anglo-American legal system has had
 >written guarantees of the right to jury trial since it was first enshrined
 >in Magna Charta, in 1215, when the barons of England forced King John to
 >recognize the right.  King John was forced to restore to juries the
 >responsibilty of determining what was a crime, meaning that juries judged
 >the legitimacy of the King's rules, or proclamations, as well as whether a
 >person had violated those rules.
 >     Our nation's founders complained bitterly that the British were
 >depriving Americans of the benefits of trial by jury, and included that
 >complaint as one of the justifications for independence listed in the
 >Declaration of Independence.  Why did Britain fear American juries?
 >     The reason was that Americans through juries refused to enforce many
 >British laws - such as the Stamp Acts, tea taxes, anti-smuggling laws, etc.
 >American juries also convicted British tax collectors and inspectors of
 >trespassing against Americans, in defiance of British law which provided
 >immunity for government officials.  Britain was denying Americans trial by
 >jury because American juries were expressing disagreement with invalid or
 >unjust British laws.  American juries were abiding by their oaths to "well
 >and truly try the case, and a true deliverance make."
 >     When our founders demanded the right to a jury trial in all criminal
 >prosecutions, and when they made that part of our Bill of Rights, they were
 >demanding a jury with the power to do justice, even if that conflicted with
 >the government's view of the law.
 >     The historical role of the jury extends back more than 1000 years.
 >We are not taught that in our schools, and you won't read much of that
 >history in court opinions, either.  Judges have concluded that if this
 >jury power ever existed, it is no longer necessary in our country, for we
 >no longer need fear tyrannical judges.  Right.
 >     Our system of government is a republic, based on the consent of the
 >people, not just the majority.  We protect individuals and minorities with
 >constitutions and bills of rights, and with the right to trial by jury.  No
 >one can be deprived of their life or liberty without a unanimous verdict
 >(except in Oregon and Louisiana) from a jury of their peers (except for the
 >90% or more of all criminal defendants whose cases are decided pre-trial,
 >by plea bargains and such, because the risks of trials to uninformed juries
 >are often too great).
 >     Over the last two centuries, our judges, lawyers, and legislators
 >have fallen in love with the myth that the government (rather than the
 >people) determines our laws and our rights.  But that's a myth.  The
 >majority may not oppress the minority.  Many of our criminal statutes are
 >not universally accepted and such laws should not be used to deprive
 >people of their liberty.  If cross-sectional juries were drawn from our
 >communities at random (no jury stacking through the jury selection
 >process), and if our juries were fully informed about what was going on in
 >the courtroom, and what harsh penalties might be imposed on defendants if
 >convicted, juries would be acquitting many more defendants, sending a
 >message to our so-called "representatives," that many of the laws they
 >pass are unacceptable and should be repealed.
 >     Our constitution guarantees "trial by jury," not trial by judges.
 >Anyone who has studied the history of trial by jury, can't escape the
 >conclusion that jury rights were demanded, fought for, and won, by persons
 >who insisted that juries would determine whether the offense charged was
 >even a crime, as well as whether the person charged did the deed and
 >should be punished for it.  I've got an essay from 1680 written by
 >England's Solicitor General which says precisely that.
 >     Judge Ryan quoted a court decision which says that "jury
 >nullification" (the jury's prerogative to bring back a verdict of not
 >guilty, for any reason they choose, even if in defiance of the law or the
 >judge's instructions on the law) is a "power," but not a "right."  Courts
 >have said that, but they are wrong.  A lawful power which the government
 >cannot review or interfere with - such as jury nullification - is, indeed,
 >a right, it is an "inalienable right."  It predates our constitution and
 >government.  Our government does not recognize an "inalienable right" when
 >it sees one.
 >     Judge Ryan believes that jury power will undermine our system of
 >government, leading to anarchy and injustice.  He suggests that in the 50s
 >and 60s, bigoted southern juries acquitted murderers.  What he overlooks is
 >the far moe prevalent problem that the police wouldn't arrest whites who
 >attacked or killed blacks, prosecutors wouldn't bring charges, and judges
 >would throw out the cases.
 >     The likelihood of a virtuous government and a corrupt jury is
 >inconceivable and is not provided for in our constitution.  There can be no
 >justice in a community so corrupt that juries acquit bigoted killers.
 >     Real history shows that Jim Crow laws depriving blacks of their
 >rights were passed by legislatures and enforced by our courts.  Blacks
 >were forbidden by law to own firearms so that they could not defend
 >themselves and blacks were also kept off juries prevented from voting.
 >They were prevented by the government from working in many trades and
 >professions. Our Supreme Court upheld laws treating blacks as inferior, as
 >long as so-called "separate but equal facilities were provided.  Those
 >government policies made blacks second-class citizens for a century.
 >     Pre-civil war northern juries, on the other hand, protected the
 >underground railroad, by which slaves escaped the South, by refusing to
 >convict those who helped runaway slaves.  Some judges responded to these
 >"lawless juries" by "jury stacking," conducting extensive jury interviews
 >and disqualifying from jury service any juror who refused to enforce the
 >Fugitive Slave Act.
 >     Jury stacking is practiced today in Colorado where juries are
 >routinely interrogated to determine whether any prospective juror
 >disagrees with the laws which will apply in the case, or whether any
 >prospective juror is suspicious of the government.  Jurors who confess to
 >either are then disqualified, leaving defendants with juries uniquely
 >qualified to rubber-stamp the government's case for conviction.  If I were
 >a defendant, I would want to disqualify any juror who was not suspicious
 >of the government.
 >     Judges refuse to instruct juries about their lawful power to acquit
 >if the jury determines, for any reason, that justice requires an
 >acquittal.  Attorneys are forbidden from mentioning that power.  Some
 >judges go so far as to tell juries that they "must" [rather than "should"]
 >follow the law as given to them by the judge.  All judges and attorneys
 >know that is false.
 >     Jurors cannot be punished for their verdicts.  Jurors can (morally,
 >they must) question the law, so long as they do so in their own minds -
 >some jurors have been removed from deliberations for vociferously opposing
 >a law or instruction.  (One juror has been prosecuted for criticizing the
 >law, in the jury room, on the pretext that she should have disclosed her
 >opinions during jury selection, even though she was not asked her
 >opinions.  That case is still pending on appeal.)
 >     The right to trial by jury means much less now than it did in 1776.
 >Fully informed juries can restore the right to its historical importance.
 >
 >Paul Grant
 ><[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
 >
 >Paul Grant is an attorney practicing in Parker, Colorado and he specializes
 >in constitutional law, criminal defense, and civil litigation.  He
 >represents the Gilpin County juror, Laura Kriho, who was prosecuted for not
 >disclosing her views on jury rights and the drug laws.   (Editor's note:
 >for more on that story, please see "From Juror to Defendant, the
 >controversial prosecution of Colorado hempster Laura Kriho," Summit Free
 >Press, September 1998.)
 >------------------------------------------------------------------------
 >                     Re-distributed by the:
 >             Jury Rights Project <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
 >            Web page: <http://www.lrt.org/jrp.homepage.htm>
 >         To be added to or removed from the JRP mailing list,
 >   send email with the word SUBSCRIBE or UNSUBSCRIBE in the title.
 >------------------------------------------------------------------------
 >
 >
  >>

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