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175 lines
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Plaintext
175 lines
8.9 KiB
Plaintext
NEW HOPE FOR FREEDOM: FULLY INFORMED JURORS DON DOIG
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America's Founders were worried that the government they
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created might someday grow too powerful, and begin to pass laws
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which would violate the rights of the very people the government
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was supposed to protect: ordinary, peaceful, productive
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Americans. But they had an "ace in the hole" which they believed
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would suffice to hold the government in check. That was the
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right to a trial by a jury of one's peers.
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Since when, you might ask, can a jury protect people from
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arbitrary and unjust prosecutions, or from bad laws? The
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legislature creates laws. Aren't we supposed to obey them, and
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lobby our legislatures for any changes that need to be made?
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Traditionally, Americans have had more substantial and
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direct means by which to protect against governments grown too
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ambitious, and by which to resist oppressive laws. America's
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Founders realized that the temptations of power were too great to
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leave it to the legislature, to the executive, and to the
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judicial branches of government to define what the rights of the
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citizens of this nation were. Ultimately, citizens at the local
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level, acting according to the dictates of individual conscience
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were to have the final say, the final check and balance. The
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people would need veto power over bad laws.
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And they provided just such a veto, a centuries-old
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tradition carried over from England to the colonies, which holds
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that jurors could judge whether a law was a good law, a law that
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did not violate the rights of free men and women. If, according
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to the dictates of conscience, jurors did not think a law was
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just, or if they thought the law had been misapplied, they could
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refuse to convict an otherwise "guilty" defendant. Even a single
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juror could prevent a conviction, by voting not guilty.
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And if the jury as a whole decided to acquit the defendant,
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that decision was and is final. A verdict of innocent cannot be
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overturned, nor can the judge harass the jurors for voting for
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acquittal. Jurors cannot be punished for voting according to
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conscience.
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These principles date back to the time of the Magna Carta.
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In 1670, Willian Penn was arrested for preaching a Quaker sermon,
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and in so doing breaking the law of England, which made the
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Church of England the only legal church. The jurors in his
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trial, led by Edward Bushell, refused to convict him, and were
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themselves held without food, water, tobacco or toilet
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facilities. Four were put in prison for nine weeks. When they
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were finally released by court order, the decision established
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that jurors could no longer be punished for their verdicts. This
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case helped establish freedom of religion, and the right to a
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trial by a jury of one's peers, a jury free from government
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coercion.
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The trial of John Peter Zenger, in the American colonies,
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was another landmark case. Zenger had been arrested for
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publishing materials critical of the Royal Governor of New York
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colony and his cronies, accusing them of corruption. While the
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charges were true, under the law, truth was no defense. Zenger's
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attorney, Andrew Hamilton, argued to the jury that they were
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judges of the merits of the law, and should not convict Zenger of
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violating such a bad law. The jury agreed. Zenger was
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acquitted, and this case helped establish the right to freedom of
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speech.
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The Founding Fathers were clear about where they stood on
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the issue of the rights of jurors:
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"The right of the jury to decide questions of law was widely
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recognized in the colonies. In 1771, John Adams stated
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unequivocally that a juror should ignore a judge's instruction on
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the law if it violates fundamental principles:
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'It is not only...[the juror's] right, but his duty, in that
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case, to find the verdict according to his own best
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understanding, judgment, and conscience, though in direct
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opposition to the direction of the court.'
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There is much evidence of the general acceptance of this
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principle in the period immediately after the Constitution was
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adopted." Note (anon.) The Changing Role of the Jury in the
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Nineteenth Century, Yale Law Journal, 74, 174, (1964).
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Thomas Jefferson said in a letter to Thomas Paine in 1789:
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"I consider trial by jury as the only anchor ever yet imagined by
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man, by which a government can be held to the principles of its
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constitution."
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And yet, during the nineteenth century, judges chipped away
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at this fundamental right of free citizens, transferring more and
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more power to themselves, contending that jury review of law was
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no longer necessary, now that democratic elections had replaced
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Monarchy. By the end of the century, the Supreme court had
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decided to leave it up to the judge to decide if the jury should
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be told of its right to judge law as well as fact. Today, jurors
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are generally told that they must accept the law as the judge
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explains it, and may not decide to acquit the defendant because
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their consciences are bothered by what seems to them an unjust
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law. Judges falsely tell them that their only role is to decide
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if the "facts" are sufficient to convict the defendant. Defense
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attorneys are not allowed to encourage jurors to vote to acquit
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because they believe the law is unjust or unconstitutional, and
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defendants are generally not allowed to even discuss their
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motives.
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In plain words, in what comes down to a power struggle
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between the people and the judicial system, the people have been
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losing.
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In fact, jurors still, to this day, have the right to
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veto, or "nullify" bad laws. They are just not told this by the
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courts. And judges and prosecutors exclude people from serving
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on juries who indicate a willingness to nullify the law. This
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violates the protections jurors were supposed to be able to give
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their fellow citizens against unjust prosecutions. A jury is
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properly a cross-section of the community as a whole.
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What can be done? The Fully Informed Jury Amendment (FIJA)
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was designed to return to the people this basic and very
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important right.
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The idea of the Fully Informed Jury Amendment is to amend
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state constitutions, or enact statutory changes, to require
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judges to inform jurors that if they think a law is unjust or
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unconstitutional--or just misapplied-- they need not convict an
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otherwise "guilty" defendant.
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FIJA does not give jurors the right to act as a legislature,
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since their decisions affect only the case at hand and do not set
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precedents for future cases. Nor can jurors create new offenses.
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If a jury convicts a defendant unjustly, the judge may set aside
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the conviction, and in addition the defendant has the right of
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appeal.
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People from all walks of life and from across the political
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spectrum are organizing to put FIJA on the election ballot, in
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states that permit the initiative process. To date FIJA has been
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filed as an initiative in Montana, Idaho, Colorado, California,
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Nevada, Utah, Arizona, Arkansas, Florida, Nebraska, and
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Washington, with more states soon to follow. In other states,
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FIJA activists are lobbying state legislators to support FIJA
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legislation or referendums. FIJA legislation has been submitted
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to the legislatures of Alaska, Arizona and Wyoming. And in all
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areas of the country, people are spreading the word.
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The judges and others within the government's courts
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have long been waging a campaign of disinformation, so that
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jurors won't even know what their rights are. We think it's past
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time that the people themselves begin to demand that their rights
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as jurors be respected. It's not just jurors whose rights are
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being denied. Defendants, too, have the right to a fair trial by
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a jury of their peers, and they have not been getting fair trials
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because government judges have been systematically misinforming
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jurors. In fact, this campaign to deny juror's rights has been
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going on for so long now that many attorneys (and probably some
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judges) are not even aware that these rights exist.
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We have the opportunity to take back control of this country
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and return the ultimate safeguard of the rights of the people
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back where it belongs, to the people. Please join us in the
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campaign to pass the Fully Informed Jury Amendment.
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If a juror accepts as the law that which the judge states
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then that juror has accepted the exercise of absolute authority
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of a government employee and has surrendered a power and right
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that once was the citizen's safeguard of liberty,--For the
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saddest epitaph which can be carved in memory of a vanished
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liberty is that it was lost because its possessors failed to
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stretch forth a saving hand while yet there was time." 2
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Elliot's Debates, 94, Bancroft, History of the Constitution, 267,
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1788.
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Don Doig is National Coordinator for the Fully Informed Jury
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Amendment, P.O. Box 59, Helmville, Montana 59843. Phone (406)793-
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5550.
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