Selecting a jury - Criticisms of selection Flashcards

1
Q

Why is the use of electoral registers open to critique?

A

as it does not always give a representative sample of the population such as homeless people who cannot register to vote

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2
Q

Who are not represented by electoral registers?

A
  • homeless people
  • many young people
  • those who change address frequently
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3
Q

What did studies in the 1970’s&80’s find about juries?

A

that juries in some areas were not truly representative in gender, fewer women, age , fewer young people, and race, under representative of ethnic minorities

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4
Q

What did a study, “Diversity and Fairness in the Jury System’’ published in 2007 looking at juries in 2003 and 2005 find?

A

that juries are now representative of gender, race and age , having only the lower classes and unemployed people underrepresented

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5
Q

What study published in 2007 looking at juries in 2003 and 2005 found that juries are now representative of gender, age and race?

A

“Diversity and Fairness in the Jury System”

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6
Q

What is a criticism of disqualified jurors?

A

Although many checks are carried out, many disqualified people fail to disclose the fact and sit on juries

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7
Q

What did one survey of Inner London juries estimate?

A

that 1 in every 24 jurors were disqualified

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8
Q

What happened in one instance at Snaresbrook Crown Court?

A

a man with 15 previous convictions sat as a juror in 3 cases and was the jury foreman in two of them later admitting that as far as his concern, all defendants were not guilty unless they ‘had been molesting children’

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9
Q

What can too many discretionary excusals lead to?

A

can lead to an unrepresentative jury

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10
Q

Why is there criticism of the Prosecutions right to stand by?

A

because the prosecutions right to stand by was kept even when the defences peremptory challenge was withdrawn

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11
Q

Why is the Prosecutions right to stand by seen as giving the prosecution an advantage due to the withdrawal of the defences peremptory challenge ?

A

seen as ‘rigging’ the jury particularly combined with vetting

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12
Q

What case demonstrates that even when a jury has been vetted it does not always give the prosecution an advantage ?

A

Ponting’s Case 1985

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13
Q

What happened in Ponting’s Case 1985

A

the defendant was charged with an offence against the Official Secrets Act and the jury was vetted. Despite the vetting the jury return a not guilty verdict

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