Psychology of the Jury Flashcards

1
Q

The Jury

Definitions

A

More than an instrument of justice it is the lamp that shows that Freedom lives.

A better instrument could scarcely be imagined for achieving uncertainty, capriciousness, lack of uniformity, disregard of former decisions - utter unpredicatability.

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2
Q

Jury Facts

A

18-75 years old
Electoral register
Include judiciary members

12 good men & true…
effects for 6-person juries

Input of psych to jury system.

Factors to consider:
social psych
types of case

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3
Q

Studying Jury Processes

A

Problems: hampered by the law

Kalven & Zeisel (1966)

Different Methods:

1) archival research
2) questionnaire surveys
3) post-trial juror interviews
4) books by ex-jurors
5) mock jury trials
6) shadow jury trials

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4
Q

Questionnaire Surveys

A

How and Why?

  • currently almost impossible in UK but…
  • Zander & Henderson (1993)
  • Thomas (2007/2010)

Who?

  • Kalven & Zeisel 1966
  • Asked jurors seemed to have decided on verdict before deliberation
  • findings flawed:
  • represented only 3% of jury trials
  • changed wording of questionnaire halfway through
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5
Q

Questionnaire Surveys

Advantages & Disadvantages

A

Valuable insights into jury process
Process with questionnaires

British studies e.g.
- McCabe & Purves (1972b)

12.5% of perverse acquittals

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6
Q

Post-Trial Juror Interviews

A

Where?
USA but generally not UK

Limitations

  • social desirability
  • memory unreliability
  • hindsight bias

Advantages
e.g. Doob (1977) judicial instructions

97% said judicial instructions
25% couldn’t define ‘burden of proof’

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7
Q

Mock Jury Trials

A

Most common method
Basic methodology

Some methodological issues have been identified:

e.g.
- Bornstein (1999)
Looks at samples of mock jurors & trial medium
- Diamond (1997)
Looks at the extent to which jury simulations actually reflect jury decision-making.

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8
Q

Mock Jury Trials

Issues of Validity

A
Research Setting 
Trial Medium
Mock Juror Sample
Trial Elements 
Measures 
Consequences
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9
Q

Mock Jury Trials

Conclusions

A

More realistic simulations?
- But Diamond (1997) - Stage I vs Stage II testing

More areas need testing?
- Juries as opposed to jurors

Components for inclusion
- Combination of more elemets

Evidence needs to be accepted by courts

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10
Q

Shadow Jury Trials

A

How?
Parallel juries when court in session

Why?
Subjected same stimulus as real jury.
Closest can get to real jury.

Who?
McCabe & Purves (1974)
60% agree / 20% disagree / 20% hung

Problems?
Lack of consequences

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11
Q

Policy Implications

A

Do the court accept the findings?

NO e.g. Rehnquist (1986)

  • tentative fragmentary evidence
  • did not involve actual jurors
  • failed to simulate deliberations

YES

  • changes in way jury instructions given
  • procedural changes re: conduct of trial (e.g. note-taking)
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12
Q

Factors Affecting Jury Decision Making

A
  • evidential factors
  • extralegal factors
  • categories of research:
    jury research
    juror research
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13
Q

Juror Research - Physical Attractiveness

A

Folklore or something more?

Methodology & Results

Efran (1974) 
- methodology (Vignette - type of case) 
- Effect for attractiveness:
Less certainty of guilt
Milder punishment 
But... finding only for males!
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14
Q

Juror Research - Physical Attractiveness

Studies

A

Sigall & Ostrove (1975)

  • methodology (no measure of perception of guilt: # years imprisonment!)
  • type of crime interacts with attractiveness, but generally misreported!

Stewart (1980, 1985)

  • courtroom observational studies
  • attractiveness correlated significantly and negativelty with severity of punishment
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15
Q

Juror Research - Physical Attractiveness

Meta-analysis 25 studies

A

Attarctiveness played a part in guilt assignment, but effect size small.

Less punishment for ‘attractives’, but again effect size small.

e. g. robbery, rape but not negligent homicide
- no effect of attractiveness for victim

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16
Q

Juror Research - Ethnicity

Daudistel, Hosch, Holmes & Graves (1999)

A
  • archival analysis (non-capital felony)
  • texas juries: decide guilt and sentence
  • no link twixt ethnicity & conviction / acquittal
  • but anglo-americans received sentences nearly twice as severe as hispanics
17
Q

Juror Research - Ethnicity

Meta-analysis

A

Overall, no effect of race on judgements of mock jurors.

An effect for punishment, but moderated by type of crime.

18
Q

Juror Research - Ethnicity

Sommers (2007)

A

Research clearly demonstrates that race has the potential to impact trial outcomes.

Thomas 2007 / 2010

19
Q

Credibility Assessments by Jurors and Judges

A

Are jurors / judges biased by their initial judgments of defendants / witnesses?

We do need to be wary about our credibility assessments in the courtroom:
- judges hold false stereotypes about deception and are vulnerable to dangerous biases in evaluating witness evidence

20
Q

Juror Research - Other Factors

A

Socio-economic status (SES)
- low ses more guilty than high ses

Gender
Overall no effect of judgements of guilt. may depend on crime.

Jury Foreperson
who gets selected?

21
Q

The Jury Foreperson

A
  • Male
  • 40+
  • Managerial / professional occupation
  • Better educated
  • Higher status
  • Seated end of table
  • Experienced jury service
  • First to speak
  • Mention need for foreperson
22
Q

The Jury Foreperson

Influences

A
  • tend to participate more than others
  • account for 25-35% of the speaking during the deliberation
  • strongly influence speaking time and order
  • overall more influential than others

Foley & Pigott 1997 - forepersons are influential but other members of the jury also wield influence

23
Q

Juror Research - Other Factors

Many other areas e.g.

A
Jury size
Prior service
Persuasive jurors
Judicial instructions 
Juror characteristics 
Pre-trial publicity
24
Q

Controversies

A

Death qualified juries
- evidence of an effect for type of juror

Judicial Instructions
- judges instructions can have an effect

The Trial of Suspected Terrorists
- can they get a fair trial?

25
Q

For and Against the Jury

A

Nietzel et al (1999)

  • realism
  • competence
  • active

Viable alternatives?

  • trial single judge
  • inquisitorial vs adversarial system
  • jury reform?