Juries Flashcards

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1
Q

Types of cases a juror can serve on

A
  • Civil: breach of contract or claims of harm (6-8 Jurors - verdicts do not have to be unanimous)
  • Criminal: act allegedly committed as per the Criminal Code of Canada (12 Jurors at least)
  • Both can be heard by a judge alone or judge and jury*
  • Most highly serious criminal causes require both a jury and a judge
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2
Q

The Juries Act

A

Provincial and territorial legislation that outlines eligibility criteria for jury service

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3
Q

What factors cause you to be excused from jury duty in Ontario

A
  • You are under 18
  • Physically or mentally unable
  • Have conflict of interest
  • you are working in law enforcement
  • you have been convicted of a criminal offense
  • you are a judge, lawyer, or law student
  • You are a member of senate, house of commons or the assembly
  • You are a medical practitioner, vet surgeon or coroner
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4
Q

Jury Sommons

A

Court order that states a time and place to go for jury duty
- does not guarantee you will be a juror
- Legal penalties if you don’t show up

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5
Q

Elements that each compiled jury should have

A
  1. Representativeness: Composition represents the community in which the crime occurred as well as the defendant
  2. Impartiality: lack of bias within the jury
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6
Q

What does it mean to be impartial?

A
  1. St aside pre-existing biases and prejudices
  2. Ignore information that is not part of admissible evidence
  3. Have no connection to the defendant
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7
Q

R. v. Guess: lack of impartiality case

A
  • Peter Gill was tried for 2 gang-style murders in 1995 in Vancouver
  • Gillian Guess was a juror
  • Gill and Guess ran into each other outside of court and started a sexual relationship that ran throughout the trial
  • Both charged with obstruction of justice and found guilty
  • Guess sentenced for 8 months and served 3
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8
Q

Challenge for cause

A

A request that prospective juror be dismissed due to specific or forceful reason to believe the person cannot be fair, unbiased, and capable of serving as a juror

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9
Q

R. v. Find: Impartiality sexual assault case

A
  • Karl Find tried on 21 counts of sexual assault on child victims
  • Defense proposed that potential jurors being challenged for cause based on their answer to 3 questions
  • Judge dismissed the proposal
  • When selecting jury, one man said “ i just don’t think I could separate myself from my feelings towards his children and separate the case” - he was removed by the defense, renewed proposal and dismissed again
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10
Q

The role of the Media in impartiality

A

Emotionally charged headlines can sway jury members. As negative pretrial publicity increases, so does;
- The likelihood of guilty verdicts
- Beliefs about deserved severity of sentence
- Beliefs about the suspect’s maliciousness
- Errors in jury members’ memory
-Discussions about information for the media within jury deliberations
* positive media pretrial has the opposite effect*

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11
Q

Male Jurors and Rape cases

A
  • More likely to endorse rape myths (e.g. way women dress shows they want sex, lying about what happened to get ahead)
  • Assign less responsibility to the accused and more responsibility to the accuser
  • On these cases, want women> men
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11
Q

Jury Functions

A
  • Apply the law, as provided by the judge, to the admissible evidence
  • Use the wisdom of 12 to reach a verdict
  • Act as a conscience to the community
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12
Q

Jury verdicts and race

A
  • Mock jurors more likely to render guilty verdicts for ‘other-race’ defendants than for defendants of their own race
  • Effect is small and can be reduced by making defendant’s race salient (discussion in court cues jury to set aside bias)
  • May not be as influential for Canadian jurors (larger in US)
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13
Q

Authoritarianism

A

Conservative, rigid thinkers who acquiesce to authority
- Right-wing political views

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14
Q

Dogmatism

A

Rigid and close-minded
- No political undertones

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15
Q

How does authoritarianism and dogmatism effect rate of guilty verdicts

A

High authoritarianism and dogmatism render more guilty verdicts

16
Q

Cognitive-Experiential Self-Theory (CEST)

A

Information can be processed through two modes
Rational processing (R-processors): analysis of fact and logic - focus on hard evidence and harder to influence by biases
Experiential processing (E-processors): emotion and personal experiences - influenced by biases

17
Q

What are some trends observed in convictions between E-processors and R-processors

A
  • Both convict attractive defendants at similar rates
  • E-processors are more likely to convict less-attractive defendants and deliver harsher sentences