Printer Friendly
The Free Library
14,678,552 articles and books
Member login
User name  
Password 
 
Join us Forgot password?

Jury nullification. (Editor's Note).


I WAS DISMISSED from the only jury on which I've ever been seated.

To be fair, I asked for it. I was in my early 20s, and the case was about a fender bender on that greatest of all roads All Roads is a 2001 interactive fiction game by Jon Ingold that placed first at the 2001 Interactive Fiction Competition. It also won the XYZZY Awards for Best Game, Best Setting and Best Story and was nominated for Best Individual Puzzle and Best Writing. , the New Jersey Turnpike
This article is about the 19th century turnpike. For the modern freeway, see New Jersey Turnpike.
The Jersey Turnpike was a turnpike in New Jersey, running west-northwest from New Brunswick to Phillipsburg.
. (It is great, some natives joke, because it lets you get out of the Garden State quickly and at a bargain price.) After the jury had been selected and sworn in, the judge turned to us and said, "This is going to take about a week. When it comes time for you to deliberate, you have to agree to apply the law as I define it. If I tell you that black is white, or that wrong is right, that's what you have to believe in reaching your decision."

We dutifully du·ti·ful  
adj.
1. Careful to fulfill obligations.

2. Expressing or filled with a sense of obligation.



du
 mumbled in agreement and went home for the day. Then I started thinking about what the judge had told us. It wasn't the threat of spending a week listening to the nuances of a wreck that bothered me. There are worse places to kill a few days than a courtroom, especially if you're not the one on trial and if you're working a crummy crum·my also crumb·y  
adj. crum·mi·er also crumb·i·er, crum·mi·est also crumb·i·est Slang
1. Miserable or wretched: a crummy situation in the family.

2.
, low-paying job like the one I had at the time. It was the other thing the judge had said that put me on edge, the stuff about black being white and wrong being right.

The next morning I interrupted the judge as he started the trial and handed him a note that I'd typed up the night before. It laid out my discomfort with his insistence that jurors should put aside their personal morality in rendering a verdict. I just couldn't do that, I wrote. It just didn't seem right. There I was--the Antigone of auto accidents!--taking my principled stand in a county courtroom.

The judge was plainly annoyed when I approached the bench. As he read my note, I saw his face turn red from a mix of anger and frustration. He looked up at me, glaring with utter contempt, the likes of which I hope never again to have directed my way in a court of law, especially as a defendant. "What in hell is wrong with you?" he asked rhetorically before balling my note up in his hand and waving me away. "Get out of here already!"

I was perhaps guilty of thinking too much (that, and youthful exuberance). Longtime Contributing Editor A contributing editor is a magazine job title that varies in responsibilities. Most often, a contributing editor is a freelancer who has proven ability and readership draw.  Walter K. Olson's brilliant cover story, "Courting Stupidity" (page 22), exposes how plaintiffs' attorneys routinely seek out jurors who think too little. The motive is plain enough: Trial lawyers dream of scoring a "runaway verdict" in which a sympathetic jury will award a massive amount of cash.

Olson, author of the important new book The Rule of Lawyers: How the New Litigation An action brought in court to enforce a particular right. The act or process of bringing a lawsuit in and of itself; a judicial contest; any dispute.

When a person begins a civil lawsuit, the person enters into a process called litigation.
 Elite Threatens America's Rule of Law (St. Martin's St. Martin's or St. Martins may refer to:
  • St. Martins, Missouri, a city in the USA
  • St Martin's, Isles of Scilly, an island off the Cornish coast, England
  • St Martin's, Shropshire, a village in England
), argues that such machinations do more than generate scandalous MATTER, SCANDALOUS, equity pleading. A false and malicious statement of facts, not relevant to the cause. But nothing which is positively relevant, however harsh or gross the charge may be, can be considered scandalous. 4 Bouv. Inst. n. 4163.
     2.
 miscarriages of justice and shocking headlines. By inverting "the once widely held premise that the courts should draw on jurors who are civically engaged and aware of the events of the day," current trends injury selection undermine one of the great institutions of our legal system. In a society as litigious litigious adj. referring to a person who constantly brings or prolongs legal actions, particularly when the legal maneuvers are unnecessary or unfounded. Such persons often enjoy legal battles, controversy, the courtroom, the spotlight, use the courts to punish  as ours, that's nothing less than a national outrage.
COPYRIGHT 2003 Reason Foundation
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2003, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

 Reader Opinion

Title:

Comment:



 

Article Details
Printer friendly Cite/link Email Feedback
Author:Gillespie, Nick
Publication:Reason
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Jan 1, 2003
Words:544
Previous Article:30 years ago.(nation-building in the South Pacific)(Brief Article)(Column)
Next Article:A challenge to parents who would never dream of buying insurance online: have nearly two decades of dogged determination and relentless attention to...
Topics:



Related Articles
We, the Jury.
Jury nullification: when jurors leave the law behind.
Waking up jurors, shaking up courts. (Arizona Superior Court Judge B. Michael Dann)(Interview)
Federal judges can remove jurors who refused convict. (Connecticut, Vermont and New York)
Jury Nullification.(laws passed by minority can be subverted using jury nullification)(includes related article on a humanist society)(Brief Article)
The Hidden Wound.(Review)
LETTERS.
MONKEY BUSINESS : What really happened in Tennessee.(the so-called 'Monkey Trial,' that took place in Dayton, Tennessee, was a 'set-up' trial,...
A lawyer's view from the jury box.(lawyers as jurors)
Testifying in the theater of the courtroom.

Terms of use | Copyright © 2009 Farlex, Inc. | Feedback | For webmasters | Submit articles