Jury duty
- PsYcHo
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Re: Jury duty
Our justice system is based on the notion that it is better for ten guilty persons to go free than one to be unjustly punished. That is why all cases are supposed to be proved beyond a reasonable doubt.
Alcohol may have been a factor.
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- brimstoneSalad
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Re: Jury duty
That already happens: juries are much less likely to send criminals to their deaths if they know that's the penalty unless the criminals are absolutely unsympathetic and there is overwhelming proof. They'll rule not guilty even if they think the person is probably guilty due to sympathy and knowing a guilty verdict results in death.
So prosecutors know it's a risk to pursue the death penalty where it's not popular.
So prosecutors know it's a risk to pursue the death penalty where it's not popular.
- EquALLity
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Re: Jury duty
But why is that necessarily a good notion?PsYcHo wrote:Our justice system is based on the notion that it is better for ten guilty persons to go free than one to be unjustly punished. That is why all cases are supposed to be proved beyond a reasonable doubt.
It could also lead to innocent people being found guilty, but there's a lesser risk there because judges can overrule guilty verdicts and call for repeat trials.
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- EquALLity
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Re: Jury duty
Well, you should rule 'not guilty' if the person is only 'probably guilty'.brimstoneSalad wrote:That already happens: juries are much less likely to send criminals to their deaths if they know that's the penalty unless the criminals are absolutely unsympathetic and there is overwhelming proof. They'll rule not guilty even if they think the person is probably guilty due to sympathy and knowing a guilty verdict results in death.
This would make the risk even more significant. And that's just one example.brimstoneSalad wrote:So prosecutors know it's a risk to pursue the death penalty where it's not popular.
Are you also not concerned that this undermines the law in the eyes of citizens, and that it leads to people generally not valuing rule of law?
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- brimstoneSalad
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Re: Jury duty
It's always probably at most. There is no absolute certainty.EquALLity wrote: Well, you should rule 'not guilty' if the person is only 'probably guilty'.
No. See the discussions I had with Mr. Purple on deliberative democracy.EquALLity wrote: Are you also not concerned that this undermines the law in the eyes of citizens, and that it leads to people generally not valuing rule of law?
- EquALLity
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Re: Jury duty
Of course. I got the sense that by 'probably guilty', you were referring to just thinking it's likely a person is guilty, but not necessarily guilty beyond a 'reasonable doubt'.brimstoneSalad wrote:It's always probably at most. There is no absolute certainty.
The idea of a 'reasonable doubt' is also kind of subjective in a sense, but you can consider someone 'probably guilty' without considering it beyond a 'reasonable doubt'.
Where is that?brimstoneSalad wrote:No. See the discussions I had with Mr. Purple on deliberative democracy.
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- brimstoneSalad
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Re: Jury duty
That's the thing. The doubt becomes much more reasonable when the person is going to be killed based on your degree of certainty.EquALLity wrote: The idea of a 'reasonable doubt' is also kind of subjective in a sense,
That's why I said effectively Jury nullification already plays a role: it does so subconsciously through cognitive bias.
You might think a person is guilty, but convince yourself more of the doubt if the penalty is very severe.
Where Jury Nullification done consciously makes a big difference is in imprisonment for things like drug offenses.
This thread: http://philosophicalvegan.com/viewtopic.php?f=22&t=2008EquALLity wrote:Where is that?brimstoneSalad wrote:No. See the discussions I had with Mr. Purple on deliberative democracy.
You've probably already read the first couple pages, it starts toward the end of the third.