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by splat
3912 days ago
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What the legal profession believes to be "beyond a reasonable doubt" and what the members of a particular jury consider "beyond a reasonable doubt" are two very different things. Judge Alex Kozinski wrote very well on the matter in a great article [1]: "Juries are routinely instructed that the defendant is presumed innocent and the prosecution must prove guilt beyond a reasonable doubt, but we don’t really know whether either of these instructions has an effect on the average juror. Do jurors understand the concept of a presumption? If so, do they understand how a presumption is supposed to operate? Do they assume that the presumption remains in place until it is overcome by persuasive evidence or do they believe it disappears as soon as any actual evidence is presented? We don’t really know. Nor do we know whether juries really draw a distinction between proof by a preponderance, proof by clear and convincing evidence and proof beyond a reasonable doubt. These levels of proof, which lawyers and judges assume to be hermetically sealed categories, may mean nothing at all in the jury room. My own experience as a juror certainly did nothing to convince me that my fellow jurors understood and appreciated the difference. The issue, rather, seemed to be quite simply: Am I convinced that the defendant is guilty?" [1] http://georgetownlawjournal.org/files/2015/06/Kozinski_Prefa... |
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I think this specific flavor of jury trials, gun ownership and the second amendment, this insanely broad free speech thing, they all are consequences of the same fact:
America optimizes for resilience against a hypothetical future totalitarian regime and happily sacrifices acceptable outcomes in the present.
I'm not convinced it achieves even the former, but that's obviously highly controversial.