Upload
delphia-walters
View
220
Download
1
Tags:
Embed Size (px)
Citation preview
CLN4U
The Jury
The Jury
People who are charged with a certain serious indictable offence have the option of trial before a judge and jury.
In a jury trial, findings of fact are made by the jury. Judge lays out the law and any legal test that has to
be met in order to find the person guilty. The jury will apply the facts as they find them and
determine if those facts meet the legal test for guilt or innocence.
The Jury
“The jury through its collective decision making, is an excellent fact finder; due to its representative character, it acts as the conscience of the community; the jury can act as the final barricade against oppressive laws or their enforcement; it provides a means whereby the public increases its knowledge of the criminal justice system and it increases, through the involvement of the public, societal trust in the system as a whole”
-The Supreme Court of Canada-
Facts
There are 12 members
Must be a good cross section of society and good fact-finders
Chosen by both Crown and defenceExemptions: recent duty over 70 physical disability interfering with capacity to act as a juror
Juries and Jury Selection
Let the public see conflict resolved by peers
Reflect the conscience of the community
Expensive
Used in most serious indictable offences
Accused may choose a jury in a less serious indictable offense
Juries: Pros / Cons
Advantages - Juries
Educates the publicFresh perspectives
rather than that of the judge alone
Decision must be unanimous
Decision based on values and empathy rather than strict legal precedent
Advantage – Judge Alone
Less prejudicedTrained to make
decisions based on fact not lawyer’s eloquence
Judge provides reason for their decision
Jury Array
pool of potential jurors assembled under provincial legislation; also called jury panel or jury roll
This process occurs in the early part of jury selection
Who is eligible? Generally people 18 years of age and older
Who is NOT eligible? Lawyers, doctors, law students, veterinary surgeons,
medical doctors, people in the legal profession.
Empanelling a jury
Once the jury array has been assembled by the Sheriff, groups of potential jurors are convened for selection.
The jury array may be challenged by the Crown or the defence, but only on the grounds of partiality, fraud, or willful misconduct by the sheriff.
Jury Challenges
Peremptory Challenge: The procedure by which the defence
or Crown can reject a potential juror without giving reasons
Authorized by the Criminal Code s. 634. (1)
Number predetermined by the charge (example: high treason on Murder 1, 20 challenges)
Jury Challenges
Challenge for Cause: Here potential jurors are challenged if either
the Crown or the defence believes they will not fulfill the responsibilities of jury duty.
The grounds justifying a challenge for cause are set out in the Criminal Code s. 638. (1).
The most frequently used example is the Crown or defence say that the jury (jurors) are not impartial.
Other Reasons for a Challenge for Cause
Question establishing or confirming the identity of the juror;
a juror has a personal connection to the Crown or the accused;
a juror has been convicted of an offence for which he was sentenced to a term of imprisonment exceeding twelve months;
a juror is an alien; does not speak the official languages of Canada
a juror is physically unable to perform properly the duties of a juror
Jury Duty
Sworn in and take their seat in the jury box
Informed of their duties by judge
must not: Discuss the case with non-jury members Follow media reports about the case Disclose any information from jury discussions
Usually you can go home at the end of each day unless sequestered – housed until they reach a verdict
Jurors may be discharged for valid reasons. If jury falls below 10 – new trial
EVIDENCE
Trial Procedures
What is the point of Evidence?
Evidence is the way in which the Crown and the defence try to reconstruct the chain of events.
The evidence tries to convey the facts to the court so that a judgement can be announced.
Only relevant evidence is usually admissible
Evidence can be excluded from the trial if proper procedures during the investigative process are not followed.
Types of Evidence:
Circumstantial, Direct, PhysicalDemonstrativeHearsay
Circumstantial Evidence
Indirect evidence that links the accused to the crime. allows a judge or jury to infers or accept a fact based on a set of known circumstances. Example: A child is found standing by an open
cookie jar with cookie crumbs on his face. The circumstantial evidence would indicate the child ate a cookie. However, he was not actually seen eating the cookie.
For example, something belonging to the accused may have been left at the crime scene but there is no direct evidence to prove that the accused actually committed the crime.
Direct Evidence
Evidence given by a witnessusually a verbal description of what
the witness knows about the events. Example: Someone sees a child eat a cookie out of
the cookie jar.
Direct Evidence
The way a witness describes and interprets the event depends on the individual’s personal filters (what they saw, heard, smelled or felt about an event) How Reliable is direct evidence from a
witness? Eye Witness Reliability
Direct Evidence cont…
The witness first tells his/her story (testimony)to the court in examination in chief.
Examination in chief: oral examination of
witness by the lawyer who summonsed the witness to testify
The witness is then subject to cross examination by the opposing lawyer.
Cross examination: oral examination of a
witness by a lawyer who did not summons the witness to testify, designed to challenge the witnesses’ evidence
Physical Evidence
A.K.A.- Real Evidenceevidence that consists of physical objects that
can be offered into evidence. Example: The cookie jar with the child’s fingerprints
on it.
Other typical examples… weapons, tools, tool markings, fingerprints, blood, hair, skin samples
Demonstrative evidence: evidence that assists in presenting or demonstrating a fact.Example: A map of the kitchen showing the child’s proximity and access to the cookie jar.Other typical examples…
charts, maps, photographs, crime sketches
Demonstrative Evidence
Hearsay
Hearsay: Evidence consisting of matters that a witness was told and did not witness themselves
Witnesses cannot testify about indirect knowledge. Their testimony will not be admissible
Example: Dan assaults Dylan. Paul was there to see it. If Jesse, testifies that Paul told her that Dan assaulted
Dylan it is deemed second hand information and therefore hearsay.
Voir Dire
a mini-hearing held during a trial on the admissibility of challenged evidence.
Example: a defendant and his/her counsel may object to a plaintiff's witness. The court would:
1. Suspend the trial, 2. Excuse the jury (if it is a jury trial)3. Immediately preside over a hearing on the
standing of the proposed witness, and then,4. Resume the trial with or without the witness, or
with restrictions placed on the testimony of the witness