Principles discussed in the following transcend drug prosecutions

alan

New member
August 4, 2005


Justice Often Served by Jury Nullification
by Radley Balko

Radley Balko is a policy analyst at the Cato Institute.

In February of 2003, a California jury convicted marijuana activist Ed Rosenthal of growing marijuana, in violation of federal law.

What the jury didn't know — and wasn't allowed to hear — was that Rosenthal was not only growing the marijuana for medical patients, he was growing the stuff for the city of Oakland. After the trial, the jury was outraged. "'I'm sorry' doesn't begin to cover it," one told the New York Times. Said the foreman, "It's the most horrible mistake I've ever made in my entire life."

As you read this, a 46-year old paraplegic named Richard Paey is serving a 25-year prison sentence in Florida. Paey suffered a bad car accident followed by a botched back surgery, and both left him in incredible pain. Paey, a father, discovered that he could relieve his pain by taking large doses of tightly regulated opiate painkillers, but the quantity of the drugs he needed exceeded that which his doctors could legally prescribed. Paey felt he had no choice but to break the law to get the medication he needed to live a normal life, and he was convicted of obtaining the drugs by using a photocopy of the last prescription his doctor wrote for him.

Prosecutors admitted Paey never sold his medication. But they charged him with distribution anyway, under Drug War laws stating that anyone possessing a given amount of a controlled substance is automatically guilty of distribution. Here again, jurors expressed disappointment in how the law gave them no choice but to return an unjust verdict.

But is that necessarily true? Must jurors uphold even unjust laws? Maybe not.

In his 1998 book "Jury Nullification: The Evolution of a Doctrine," Clay S. Conrad defines "jury nullification" this way: "Jurors in criminal trials have the right to refuse to convict if they believe that a conviction would be in some way unjust."

The doctrine of jury nullification rests on two truths about the American criminal justice system: (1) Jurors can never be punished for the verdict they return, and (2) Defendants cannot be retried once a jury has found them not guilty, regardless of the jury's reasoning. So the juries in both the Rosenthal and Paey cases could have returned a "not guilty" verdict, even though Paey and Rosenthal were undoubtedly guilty of the charges against them.

This may sound radical, perhaps even subversive, but jury nullification serves as an important safeguard against unjust laws, as well as against the unfair application of well-intended laws. It's also steeped in American and British legal tradition.

The first case of jury nullification in British law came in the trial of William Mead and William Penn, the latter of whom would go on to found the province of Pennsylvania. In 1670, the two men were charged in England with unlawful assembly, a law aimed at preventing religions not recognized by the Crown from worshipping. Both almost certainly broke the law, and the judge demanded a guilty verdict. But the jury refused, on the grounds that the law itself was unjust. After repeated refusals, the judge ordered the jury imprisoned. England's highest court eventually ordered the jurors released, establishing into common law the independence and integrity of juries in criminal cases.

Here in America, the Founding Fathers understood the importance of allowing juries to determine not just the guilt or innocence of the man on trial, but the justice and fairness of the law he's charged with breaking. John Adams said of jury nullification, "It is not only [the juror's] right, but his duty...to find the verdict according to his own best understanding, judgment, and conscience, though in direct opposition to the direction of the court." John Jay, the first chief justice of the Supreme Court, said "The jury has the right to judge both the law as well as the fact in controversy."

In recent times, the doctrine has become almost obsolete. Judges routinely instruct jurors that they are not to determine the justness of the law in question, only whether the defendant is guilty of breaking it. This is simply not true. In the Rosenthal case, the judge actually cut off the defense lawyer when he hinted in his closing remarks that the jury had the power to acquit Rosenthal regardless of the evidence against him.

So why do judges continue to get jury nullification wrong? Many point to an 1895 case in which the Supreme Court ruled that judges aren't obligated to tell jurors of their power to nullify bad law. Some have wrongly interpreted that decision to invalidate the doctrine of jury nullification altogether. They're mistaken.

In fact, the Supreme Court has since repeatedly upheld the doctrine of nullification. In 1952, for example, the Court found that "juries are not bound by what seems inescapable logic to judges." And in 1972, that "The pages of history shine on instances of the jury's exercise of its prerogative to disregard instructions of the judge."

Indeed, Americans can be proud of our history of boldly and valiantly standing up to unjust laws (if not so proud of the laws themselves). There are multiple cases of jurors refusing to convict violators of the Alien and Sedition Act, the Fugitive Slave Act, and alcohol prohibition laws, among others.

Now that the Supreme Court ruled that federal prosecutors can continue to arrest medical marijuana patients, and given the Drug Enforcement Administration's continued prosecution of pain patients and the doctors who treat them, we're likely to see more outrages like those perpetrated against Ed Rosenthal and Richard Paey.

A common question I get from people disturbed by these kinds of cases is, "What can we do?" Well, here's one thing the average citizen can do: Serve when you're called to jury duty, and while there, refuse to enforce unjust laws. If a defendant is guilty of harming someone else, certainly, throw the book at him. But if he's guilty of violating a bad law, or if you feel the law has been unjustly applied to him, by all means, come back with "not guilty," no matter what the judge, the prosecutor, or the evidence says.

Not only is this your right as a juror, some would say it's your obligation.

This article originally appeared on FoxNews.com on August 1, 2005.
 
Michael jackson Jury

I just read something on Yahoo that apparently a third juror from the Wacko Jacko case came out and said that she felt she helped give an unjust verdict, only she felt it was unjust as she felt he was guilty of child molestation but it was never proven beyond a reasonable doubt to her. Jacko's lawyer (of course) stated that the three jurors who wanted to convict are only trying to get publicity for selling their story. (I am sure that if he was convicted, said lawyer would say that the juror convicted Wacko for publicity).
 
Another jury story (this time it's personal)

About two weeks before moving out of the people's republik of Feinstein, I was called for jury duty. It was (fortunately) a very slow day, and we sat around waiting to be called. (This was after they implemented the one day or one case rule which allowed one to go home if one was not placed on a jury).

After lunch, they finally had a case. It was a multiple rap sheeted, shaved head lowlife, aka L.A. gangbanger. The judge went through the juror pool asking us how we felt about the case. Apparently, said lowlife, was arrested for making terrorist threats with a gun. It was revealed that when police picked him up, a gun was found on him. Low and behold, said scum was on felony probation, and was (obviously) headed back to jail.

When the question got to me as to how I felt about such a case and if I could make a fair and imapartial juror, I said that, as a legal gun owner, I would have to hear a lot of evidence that might give me reasonable doubt. (i.e. Rafael Perez-Rampart Division, had been the one to arrest him). By the time the prosecutor and defense got through all of us, I was let go by the public defender. God how I wanted that trial!!
 
There is one fundamental "ism" about the courts that has gone by the wayside, more or less:

There's only ONE party in the courtroom that has absolute power over the outcome: the Jury.

This flies in the face of the "common wisdom," as it were, of the Judge being in charge of things. He's not, but many seem to forget this, and lots of 'em are emphatically AGAINST the concept of jury nullification for "usurping the rule of law," even a large number of what we might otherwise consider "good" judges.

They need to take themselves a little less seriously. When there's a jury involved they are absolutely NOT the ruling authority. It's just their position of routine courtroom control goes to their heads, they forget their duties and Oath of Office during the course of "doing good for the benefit of society," and challenges to their percieved authority get taken personally.

And in the case of "bad" judges, (which are admittedly few and far-between,) these tinpot little courtroom dictators regard jury nullification as usurping the authority in their personally-owned micro-kingdoms. These are the guys that'll throw contempt charges at defense lawyers for so much as trying to bring the subject up. The proper response to this is "Off the Bench, NOW!!" That's 'not rule of law,' that's 'rule of judicial arrogance,' a summat well-documented and -developed problem in today's courts.

More weight on the wrong side of the balance of the Law of Accumulated Grievances, soon to be the subject of a very unpleasant house-cleaning action unless something fixes it.

Guns make lousy brooms. And worse mops.
 
butch50 wrote:

Next time I get jury duty I am going to print that out and take it with me, just in case.....

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I suppose that you could do just that. I also expect that doing so, and making mention of it, or waving it around would serve to see you "excused from service" on that particular jury. Might prove "interesting" though.
 
The bottom line of being a juror is this; you have the right to judge the facts and the law together.

As a juror, you are not required to tell anyone why you found a defendant guilty or not guilty.
 
Here in Michigan the judges sure hate the very thought of Jury Nullification. Mentioning it in court could and has gotten people sent to jail for contempt of court. But if J/N was mentioned there would be a lot of people not going to jail for crimes that should never be crimes.
 
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