From: JNugent73@mail.com
On 21/08/2025 09:01 AM, Norman Wells wrote:
> On 20/08/2025 18:56, Pancho wrote:
>> On 8/20/25 13:05, Mark Goodge wrote:
>>> On Wed, 20 Aug 2025 08:24:29 +0100, Pancho
>>> wrote:
>>>
>>>> There is also another important category, where the defendant doesn't
>>>> know if they are guilty, or not. It is quite often that essential facts
>>>> are undisputed, and it is for a jury to interpret the law.
>>>
>>> That's completely the wrong way round. In a trial, it's the judge's
>>> role to
>>> interpret the law, and the jury's role to decide on the facts.
>>
>> It is the jury's duty to decide upon a verdict, based upon their
>> conscience.
>
> No, that's not its duty. Each juror is sworn onto a jury taking an oath
> promising to "faithfully try the defendant and give a true verdict
> according to the evidence". If they don't do that consistently and
> properly then we have no rule of law, so it has to be followed in the
> vast majority of cases.
>
> Of course, since jury reasoning cannot be questioned subsequently and no
> juror can be held to account for any verdict, it is theoretically open
> to any jury to ignore the evidence, ignore the law, and bring in a
> verdict base solely on conscience or even serendipity.
Indeed. Think "Ponting".
> That effectively
> negates the law under which the trial was conducted, and is called 'jury
> nullification'. It's a serious business, and it's important that the
> ultimate right to do that is used very infrequently as it undermines the
> whole legal system.
>
> Most jurors I think accept their responsibilities under the law and have
> no desire to overturn or negate it except in wholly exceptional
> circumstances. If someone will be hanged for stealing a sheep, it's
> okay to take a stand and acquit regardless of the evidence. Otherwise
> generally it's not.
>
> If you take your civic responsibilities even semi-seriously, it's not a
> free-for-all, decide however you like, in a jury room.
>
>> Now, I understand authoritarian people don't like this, as it
>> undermines their authority. Hence, authoritarian people try to limit
>> the jury system in every way they can. Inventing some nonsense about
>> limiting jury duty to deciding on the facts is part of that. In
>> reality, the single fact the jury decide upon is guilty or not guilty.
>
> Those who maintain that a jury should decide any case according to
> conscience rather than the law are in fact advocating anarchy to secure
> their own selfish ends. In general it is not being hanged for stealing
> a sheep territory.
>>>> As I said, I'm pretty sure I would have acquitted her. My politics are
>>>> centrist. I have no sympathy with targeting immigrants. I think there
>>>> are a lot of Reform voters who would have been more sympathetic than
>>>> me.
>>>
>>> I think Ricky Jones was lucky. A different jury could well have found
>>> him guilty. I think Lucy Connolly was unlucky. A different judge could
>>> well have given her a shorter sentence and suspended it.
>
>> Yes, trials can be very arbitrary.
>
> They are certainly more arbitrary if decided on such fluffy notions as
> conscience rather than the law.
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