The Jury's Role In Criminal Cases Flashcards

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1
Q

When are juries used in the Crown Court?

A

for cases where the defendant has pleaded not guilty

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2
Q

how many times are a jury used in the Crown Court per year?

A

a jury is used in about 20,000 cases each year

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3
Q

What is the split function?

A

the trial is presided over by a judge and the functions split between the judge and the jury

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4
Q

What do the judge and jury do in a split function ?

A

The Judge decides points of law

The Jury decides the facts

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5
Q

At the end of the prosecution case, what power does the judge have to do ?

A

Judge has the power to direct the jury to acquit the defendant if he decides that, in law, the prosecutions evidence has not made out a case against the defendant

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6
Q

What is directed acquittal?

A

This is where the judge has the power to direct the jury to acquit the defendant if he decides that, in law, the prosecution evidence has not made out a case against the defendant

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7
Q

In what percentage of cases does directed acquittals occur?

A

in c10% of cases

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8
Q

If there is no need for a directed acquittal, the trial continues and the judge will sum up the case at the end, directing the jury of any law involved. What does the jury then do?

A

The jury then retires to a private room and makes the decision on the guilt or innocence of the accused in secret

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9
Q

How must the jury come to a decision?

A
  • must try to come to a unanimous verdict, all agree

- Judge must accept decision

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10
Q

What case does the long-established principle go back to for judges accepting the juries decision even if he does not agree with it ?

A

Bushell’s Case 1670

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11
Q

What happens if after 2 hours the jury have not reached a verdict ?

A

The judge can call them back into the courtroom and direct them that he can now accept a majority verdict

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12
Q

From what year have majority verdicts been allowed?

A

1967

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13
Q

Where there is a jury of 12, what can the majority be?

A

10-2 or 11-1

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14
Q

What happens to the decision if one jury member has left due to death or illness?

A

then only one can disagree with the verdict

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15
Q

What number can a jury not go below?

A

a jury can not go below nine

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16
Q

Why were majority verdicts introduced?

A

because of the fear of ‘jury nobbling’ through bribes or intimidation by associates of the defendant

17
Q

What could happen when a jury ad to be unanimous?

A

only one member had to bribed to cause a ‘stalemate’ in which the jury was unable to reach a decision

18
Q

What did majority voting stop other than bribes of verdicts?

A

stopped high acquittal rates in jury trials

19
Q

What must the jury foreman do if a verdict is reached through a majority verdict?

A

must announce the numbers both agreeing and disagreeing with het verdict in open court

20
Q

What is the provision in 17(3) of the Juries Act 1974 aimed at?

A

aimed at making sure that the jury has come to a legal majority and not such as 8-4 which is not allowed

21
Q

What did the Court of Appeal hold in the case of R v Pigg 1983?

A

That provided the foreman announced the number who had agreed the verdict was within the number allowed fro a majority verdict then the conviction was legal . It does not matter if the foreman was not asked how many disagreed

22
Q

What percentage of cases are by majority verdicts?

A

20%

23
Q

What power makes disclosure of anything that happened in the jury room a contempt of court which is a criminal offence ?

A

s 8 of the Contempt of Court Act 1981

24
Q

What does s 8 of the Contempt of Court Act 1981 do?

A

makes disclosure of anything that happened in the jury room a contempt of court which is a criminal offence

25
Q

What is it a contempt to do ?

A
  • to obtain
  • disclose or solicit any particulars of statements made, opinions expressed or votes cast by a jury in the course of their deliberations
26
Q

Why was s 8 of the Contempt of Court Act 1981 brought in?

A

because newspapers were paying jurors large sums of money for ‘their story’

27
Q

What is a disadvantage of s 8 of the Contempt of Court Act 1981 which creates secrecy for jury deliberations?

A

it is difficult to discover whether the jurors have understaff the evidence in complex cases