Time to replace the foundation

Trial by Jury has long been considered one of the cornerstones of law, certainly British based law. Many people date juries back to the time of the Magna Carta, but…

Trial by Jury has long been considered one of the cornerstones of law, certainly British based law. Many people date juries back to the time of the Magna Carta, but in truth it’s origins go back even farther than that. The right to a trial by jury is entrenched in Section 11 of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms.

They are an impediment to justice.

Now, I’m not someone who advocates change for change sake, but neither am I a person who feels we should keep something around because that’s how it’s always been done, or even that it is one of the core bases of an institution. Clearly trial by juries a problematic in the pursuit of justice.

The recent conviction of Robert Picton for six counts of second degree murder is an example. I suppose a primer of Canadian law concerning homicide is in order. (and I realize that this is a simplified explanation of  a complex law).  Essentially any death of a person at the hand of another is homicide, but the law further divides homicide into culpable and non-culpable homicide. An example of a non-culpable homicide could be, say a police officer shooting someone in a justified police shooting. Non-culpable equals non-criminal homicide.  Culpable homicide is further divided into three categories, manslaughter, 2nd degree murder and 1st degree murder. Here is where things get a little muddier and sometime the distinctions can be hard to grasp. 

Manslaughter, essentially, is homicide in which there was no intent to kill. An example would be where someone got in a fight with someone, pushed them, they fell and hit their head and died. Intent, essentially what is inside someone’s head, can often be difficult to determine.  Sometimes crimes of passion fall into this category.

That leaves murder, and the distinction between 2nd and 1st can be rather nebulous.  There are certain statutory types of first degree murder, the murder of a police officer or prison guard engaged in the lawful execution of their duties is one example of those. Killing someone during the course of committing another indictable act is another (or was anyway I’m not sure if it still is). The logic being that when you’ve planned and committed an armed robbery (for example) you have to know that someone might die during it as a logical extension of the crime.

But apart from the statutory examples the difference between 2nd and 1st degree murder is essentially one of planning.  If, for instance, you come home and find someone in bed with your husband and you grab a shotgun and kill them (intending them to die) that is probably 2nd degree murder.  But if you run out of the room and a week later start putting poison in your husbands food, or hire a hitman to kill them that would be first degree murder.  Planning can sometimes be shown by what you do afterwards to hide your crime.

It is beyond me how participating in the murder of six women (remember the court could not consider the other twenty murders he is accused of, nor the others he is suspected of and rightly so), at six different times, and then going to elaborate means of disposing of their bodies and the evidence, can possibly be thought of as anything other than first degree murder.

We ask an incredible amount of our citizen’s chosen for jury duty (a task that I’ll, as a retired police officer, will never be asked to do).  Trials are getting increasingly complex, as technology and case law progress.  Trials can last for months now, the Picton trial lasted for 10 months and would have lasted much longer had the judge not severed the other 20 murder charges. Jurors, ordinary people such as you, have had to put much of their lives on hold during the trial, and are supposed to avoid all conversation and media reports of the crime so as to not taint their judgment. It is a lot to ask.

We ask even more of jurors in small isolated community, and it is here that trial by jury fails almost completely to serve justice. Imagine living in a community of 400 people and being asked to sit in judgement of someone else from that community. Chances are you are somehow related to either the accused or a victim and you most certainly know everyone involved.  In one community I was in not a single jury trial ended in conviction.  Now I know the arguement would be made that that is because all the accused were innocent, but you think the police would have the wherewithal to gather evidence against at least one person who did what he was accused of.

Tellingly every single accused charged with an indictable sexual offense in that community chose trial by jury, where in the south it is rarely chosen (which in itself speaks volumes about the problems with jury trials. It is not chosen because it is an emotional issue and accused persons don’t want their trials prejudiced by a jury upset about the nature of the crime). Several women who I interviewed regarding sexual assaults on them said to me words to the effect of "What is the point of doing this Clare, he’s just going to be acquitted." I would then give them all the arguments at my disposal about why it was important that they go through the process, all the while knowing that they were right. They would testify in court and relate this horrible, embarrassing, personal incident to all and sundry, and they would be right in their prediction.

It isn’t the juror’s fault.  They are put in a horrible spot (yes I know, one of our responsibilities as citizens of the country. But we don’t ask people in Toronto to carry the same burden, they don’t know the people involved intimately, and if they do they are excused) In sitting through these trials you can feel the tension they are under.  And then comes the charge to jury and the explanation of reasonable doubt and the relief is palpable. You can see it in them and feel it in the room, as they take "reasonable doubt" and turn it into "any doubt whatsoever". They may believe the accused is guilty but there is a chance he’s not and that lets them go from having to judge someone they know.

I could go on about how complex charges to the jury are, and how fine a line judges charging the jury walk to try and avoid the inevitable appeal based on their charge.  But what is the point? It is a flawed system, long removed from it’s purpose to remove undue influence from the state in criminal trials. One can hardly argue that that separation doesn’t already exist these days of a professional judiciary, at least here in Canada. But really, Trial by Jury is such a sacred cow that we’ll never get rid of it, and unfortunately justice, for the innocently charged and for the victims of crime, will continue to be poorly served by it.

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