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A RIGHT OF JURY NULLIFICATION IN SOUTH DAKOTA?
findlaw.com ^ | Wednesday, Oct. 09, 2002 | By SHERRY F. COLB

Posted on 10/09/2002 8:33:08 PM PDT by USA21

A RIGHT OF JURY NULLIFICATION IN SOUTH DAKOTA?

Why Amendment A Should Be Rejected

On next month's ballot, the voters of South Dakota will have the opportunity to amend a portion of their state constitution. Amendment A, if adopted, will permit a defendant in a criminal case to make a novel argument to her jury. She can, if she chooses, admit that she is guilty as charged but ask the jury to acquit her anyway, because the law that she violated is wrong or unduly harsh.

This Amendment might seem attractive or relatively minor at first blush. But upon closer examination, it is quite pernicious and should be rejected by the citizens of South Dakota.

Juries Judge Facts, Not Law

At the end of a criminal trial, a judge ordinarily tells the jury to bring back a guilty verdict if, but only if, it finds beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendant violated the law in question.

Most of the time, we lawyers focus on the part that tells the jury to acquit if the evidence falls short. That's the portion that protects innocent people from being mistakenly convicted, even at the cost of acquitting some guilty people. The jury may find that a particular witness is not credible, for example, and acquit accordingly - even if it suspects that the defendant is actually guilty.

But another part of the instruction deserves attention as well. This portion tells jurors of their obligation to convict the defendant if the evidence convinces them beyond a reasonable doubt that he is guilty. If jurors believe in guilt beyond a reasonable doubt, they do not have the right to acquit. Whether they like it or not, jurors must apply the law as instructed.

Amendment A would relieve jurors of this obligation.

Jury Nullification: Nothing New

In one respect, Amendment A would merely formalize a power that all U.S. juries already have.

The jury normally receives an order from the court telling it to accept the laws as they are. Nonetheless, it retains the power to judge those laws, a power sometimes known as jury nullification.

The reason it has this power is that no one can force a jury to convict a defendant. No matter how convinced the jurors are of a defendant's guilt, in other words, they can choose - in violation of the law - to acquit him anyway, and nobody can do anything about that. Nullification is a byproduct of the robust right of criminal defendants to a trial by jury.

The proposed Amendment A to the South Dakota constitution would permit a criminal defendant to inform her jurors explicitly of their power to nullify the law and would permit the defense to invite them to exercise this power. It would thus transform the de facto power to nullify the criminal law into an express right to do so - one that could be argued by counsel and referred to in court.

What a Right to Nullify Would Look Like In Practice

Under a regime in which jurors have the right to nullify, a judge could no longer tell them that they must convict a defendant they find guilty of an offense. To ignore the law would no longer constitute an abuse of the jury's power, as long as that disregard inured to the benefit of the defendant.

Under these circumstances, the jury instruction about convicting people when the prosecution proves every element of the offense would become a recommendation rather than an order. If the jury likes the criminal law at issue, it can apply it to the defendant. If it does not, it can acquit the defendant without even considering the evidence.

Sometimes, in an individual case, nullification could yield the best possible result. When a law is patently unjust, but a prosecutor nonetheless chooses to apply it, a jury can use its power to protect a particular defendant from injustice.

Prior to the Civil War in this country, for example, a jury believing the fugitive slave law to be morally repugnant could acquit a defendant charged with its violation, no matter how overwhelming the evidence. It might have been desirable for a defendant to be able to ask explicitly for such an acquittal, rather than having to hope that the jury would, on its own, reject an unjust law.

But consider a much more common scenario involving nullification in the antebellum period. A white man would murder a black man. An unusual prosecutor might charge the white man with the crime and present his evidence to an all-white (and all-male) jury. The jurors - white supremacists who believe that white men should not be prosecuted for killing black men - would find the white defendant not guilty.

Imagine an Amendment A antebellum regime. The defense lawyer could now explicitly say to the jury that it is unduly harsh and draconian to convict a white man of "murder" when he kills a black man. Instead of representing an abuse of its absolute discretion to acquit, the jury's disregard for the law would have become an officially sanctioned act of condoning interracial homicide.

Why the Legal Status of Nullification Matters

Though a judge's order to convict a guilty defendant is ultimately unenforceable, most jurors who receive such an order feel obligated to follow it. Indeed, over the years, some jurors have reported that although they felt uncomfortable about convicting a sympathetic defendant, they did not feel they had a choice: the injustice of the law was a matter for judges and legislators, not for them.

Inviting nullification, however, would liberate such jurors to nullify those laws that they did not like, and the phenomenon would become more common. Many people, for example, feel that drug laws are unjust, and would acquit defendants charged with such offenses, regardless of the evidence. Others approve of the drug laws and would gladly convict a guilty defendant.

Rather than turning on the strength of a prosecutor's case, the outcome of a drug trial would begin to turn primarily on the ideological commitments of the particular jurors. The same would hold true for gun control laws and laws against the harassment of people entering abortion clinics.

In general, fairness dictates that criminal prohibitions should be the same for everyone. Routine acquittals of obviously guilty people would quickly breed contempt for the law. Indeed, because much of the population perceived the O.J. Simpson acquittal as a product of jury nullification, the verdict triggered disrespect from many quarters and yielded racial tension between those who liked the outcome and those who did not.

To make jury nullification an explicit right would be to embrace a species of vigilantism within the halls of justice.

Even though the law tells us not to commit crimes, there are and always will be people who disregard that command and who manage to evade capture. Under these circumstances, they exercise a power that is partly a byproduct of living in a free society where much of our behavior escapes the notice of the government.

But just because we have the power to violate the law does not mean that we should be invited to do so. The invitation to follow only those laws of which we approve could increase the crime rate, because many individuals disapprove of laws that a majority of the population supports.

A jury's right to decide, on a case by case basis, that some laws are not worthy of respect, sends the message that every law is up for grabs and that each individual is entitled to decide for himself or herself whether to follow the law. Official nullification, in other words, condones and propagates vigilantism.

Independent of its practical consequences, moreover, the invitation for jurors to be a law unto themselves runs contrary to the long-held ideal in this country of a government of laws, not of men. A law that people are invited to disregard is no law at all.


TOPICS: Constitution/Conservatism; Government; Miscellaneous; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections; US: South Dakota
KEYWORDS: 3kindsofboxes; judicialtyranny; jurynullification; jurytampering; lawlobby; racecard; ruleoflawyers; trialbyjudge
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1 posted on 10/09/2002 8:33:08 PM PDT by USA21
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2 posted on 10/09/2002 8:33:51 PM PDT by Anti-Bubba182
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To: Anti-Bubba182
bump
3 posted on 10/09/2002 8:39:21 PM PDT by USA21
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To: USA21
I absolutely disagree.

Jury nullification is an essential, fundamental right.

4 posted on 10/09/2002 8:50:36 PM PDT by The Other Harry
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To: USA21
The author uses the word 'she' is this amendment only for women?
5 posted on 10/09/2002 8:51:19 PM PDT by Mike Darancette
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To: USA21
"She can, if she chooses, admit that she is guilty as charged but ask the jury to acquit her anyway, because the law that she violated is wrong or unduly harsh."

She? What the heck is this? Is this some sort of ridiculous PC? I thought most criminals were He's, by far.

6 posted on 10/09/2002 8:52:08 PM PDT by Neanderthal
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To: Neanderthal
Hmmmmm....methinks husband killings must be on the rise in SD.
7 posted on 10/09/2002 8:58:49 PM PDT by thescourged1
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To: USA21
Juries are there to provide justice. If it was just a matter of law and facts a judge or multiple judges are perfectly capable of handling law and facts. Citizen juries of your peers are there to provide justice.
They are better able to provide justice in a specific case than the legislature. Its the jury that prevents the law from being just cold and hard words.
8 posted on 10/09/2002 9:05:46 PM PDT by Arkinsaw
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To: USA21
Rather than turning on the strength of a prosecutor's case, the outcome of a drug trial would begin to turn primarily on the ideological commitments of the particular jurors. The same would hold true for gun control laws and laws against the harassment of people entering abortion clinics.

And the problem with that is......???????

9 posted on 10/09/2002 9:07:11 PM PDT by Uncle Fud
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To: USA21
“The jury has a right to judge both the law as well as the fact in controversy.” --John Jay, 1st Chief Justice, U.S. Supreme Court, 1789

“The jury has the right to determine both the law and the facts.” --Samuel Chase, U.S. Supreme Court Justice, 1796, Signer of the unanimous Declaration

“The jury has the power to bring a verdict in the teeth of both law and fact.” --Oliver Wendell Holmes, U.S. Supreme Court Justice, 1902

“The law itself is on trial quite as much as the cause which is to be decided.” --Harlan F. Stone, 12th Chief Justice, U.S. Supreme Court, 1941

If a judge will not tell this to a jury before they deliberate, I have no problem with a law that requires the judge to do so.

10 posted on 10/09/2002 9:15:41 PM PDT by A44MAGNUT
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To: USA21
Prostitutors errr prosecutors base their careers on brownie points earned by locking people up for whatever reason. Anything that threatens their ability to to this upsets their career track. Bogus laws that are routinely applied to convict, fine, and incarcerate people are good for the lawyering business - anything that threatens this must be avoided. This is simply more whining and condescension from the elites that think that they know better about what's good for the people than the people do.
11 posted on 10/09/2002 10:01:59 PM PDT by agitator
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To: USA21
Without the power to decide what facts, law and evidence are applicable, JURIES cannot be a protection to the accused. If people acting in the name of government are permitted by JURORS to dictate any law whatever, they can also unfairly dictate what evidence is admissible or inadmissible and thereby prevent to WHOLE TRUTH from being considered. Thus if government can manipulate and control both the law and the evidence, the issue of fact becomes virtually irrelevant. In reality, true JUSTICE would be denied leaving us with a trial by government and not a trial by JURY!

Think about it!

12 posted on 10/09/2002 10:08:15 PM PDT by A44MAGNUT
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To: Arkinsaw
So if someone is innocent of a crime they are accused of should the jury be able to convict them anyway because they think there should be a law against whatever it is they did?
13 posted on 10/09/2002 10:12:22 PM PDT by Dat
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To: USA21
Everyone in a courtroom has been informed of their rights and has professional legal counsel.....except the jury. The defendent had his Miranda warning, search warrant, right to stay silent and right to call an attorney. The prosecutor is a lawyer and the judge is a lawyer.

The jury has the right the be fully informed of their legal rights, including the right to judge the law, as well as the facts. Basta, end of story. You have to do somersaults to argue against this.

14 posted on 10/09/2002 10:21:49 PM PDT by Jabba the Nutt
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To: A44MAGNUT
That is nuts. Juries can short-curcuit a bad law with this. There's nothing wrong with that. It has served to check bad law in the past and has a place as it always did in law and justice. You build your conclusion partly on the following:
they can also unfairly dictate what evidence is admissible or inadmissible and thereby prevent to WHOLE TRUTH from being considered.
Hey, I got one for ya... A jury can disregard sworn, first-hand testamony and even direct physical evidence. Juries are not now, nor have they ever been perfect. They can't deliver where an inadequate prosecution or defense hasn't. Ever hear of OJ?

Jury Nullification is one component of the jury process.

RDS
not a Libertarian, but a Republican who'd probably never vote for a Libertarian.
15 posted on 10/09/2002 10:25:12 PM PDT by Rate_Determining_Step
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To: USA21
Independent of its practical consequences, moreover, the invitation for jurors to be a law unto themselves runs contrary to the long-held ideal in this country of a government of laws, not of men. A law that people are invited to disregard is no law at all.

On the contrary, our justice system is hopelessly messed up, not by the citizens, but by the lawyer folks themselves. The legislative and judicial offices at all levels is predominated by this particular group of people, and they have twisted "the law" beyond perversion to enrich themselves, and deny the citizens of life, liberty, and property. The prison industry is a money-making enterprize which benefits only the legal profession.

There's an old joke about a lawyer moving to a one-horse town out west. As the only lawyer in town, he could not make ends meet and had to clean the stable to buy food. Finally, another lawyer moved to town, and they both got filthy rich.

16 posted on 10/09/2002 11:09:04 PM PDT by meadsjn
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To: Rate_Determining_Step
Juries can short-curcuit a bad law with this. There's nothing wrong with that. It has served to check bad law in the past and has a place as it always did in law and justice.

I agree with you.

they can also unfairly dictate what evidence is admissible or inadmissible and thereby prevent to WHOLE TRUTH from being considered.

I think you missed the entire meaning of this sentence by forgetting the clause in front of this.

17 posted on 10/09/2002 11:25:17 PM PDT by A44MAGNUT
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To: A44MAGNUT
I believe I did. I don't think that Jury Nullification ever meant to, nor ever has, messed with process, but rather the law.

I also said they could dismiss testamony and evidence already - which is the same as making a piece of evidence inadmissable.

In fact, to make a peice of evidence inadmissable, it would have the exact process as hearing it and discarding it. Which is what they can (and do) do now.

Perhaps I'm still missing something, but I think this particular issue is a non-starter.
18 posted on 10/09/2002 11:55:01 PM PDT by Rate_Determining_Step
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To: Dat
So if someone is innocent of a crime they are accused of should the jury be able to convict them anyway because they think there should be a law against whatever it is they did?

The jury is there to apply the law and at the same time prevent a miscarriage of justice under color of law. Your situation would not apply.
19 posted on 10/10/2002 12:01:09 AM PDT by Arkinsaw
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To: Arkinsaw
Depending on what you define "miscarriage of justice" as.
20 posted on 10/10/2002 12:11:09 AM PDT by Dat
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