The Jury System Notes (Unit 1 Module 2)
The Jury System Notes (Unit 1 Module 2)
Edu Level: Unit1
Date: Jul 13 2025 - 7:07 PM
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The Jury System Notes (Unit 1 Module 2)
Dajanae Dawkins
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What is a jury?
a body of people (typically twelve in number) sworn to give a verdict in a legal case on the basis of evidence submitted to them in court.
Challenges to a Jury
Peremptory challenge- when the prosecution/defence lawyer challenges a juror without stating a reason
Challenge for cause- where you state a valid and legitimate reason for challenging a juror
Advantages
1.Public confidence in the justice system
-People are more likely to trust a system that involves a cross-section of their peers in decision-making, rather than just legal experts.
-learning experience
-once this is missing there will be a collapse in law and order
2.Check on judicial power
-Having a group of citizens decide a case can help protect against potential overreach or bias from the government or legal system, acting as a check on state power.
3.Scrutiny of evidence
-Since the case is presented to a jury of ordinary citizens, attorneys must present evidence and arguments in a clear and understandable way. This can encourage more thorough preparation and can help ensure that justice is not hidden behind overly technical legal language.
-judge of the facts
4.Representation of the community
-When people from different walks of life come together to deliberate a case, it can strengthen bonds within society. The process of working together toward a common goal helps build mutual respect and understanding.
5.Fairness
-The jury is taken from various places, occupations, statuses, etc thus the since it isn’t one group in the jury, there is a sense of impartialness and prejudices are likely to be neutralised
6.Allows accused to be judged by his own peers
Disadvantages
1.Potential Bias
-Jurors may bring their personal bias or prejudice to the case and thus may influence the verdict
2.Unpredictable Outcome
-Jurors bring different interpretations and analysis of the evidence and some may reach a particular verdict in one case, and another set reach a different verdict given the same facts. This is due to different interpretations, analyses and dynamics
3.Low Juror Turnout
-A major problem in Jamaica
-this leads to delays
-causes back lag of cases
-unwillingness of persons to volunteer to be jurors
-fear
4.Costly and Time Consuming
-The government has to pay the jurors a stipend to cover lunch and parking
-they have to give up time from work, family
-affects GDP
5.Jurors lacks legal expertise
-Not trained in the law and therefore can be challenging for them to analysis facts with law
-Not exposed to the law thus won’t come to the right verdict
6.Jurors are likely to pervert the course of justice
-Vybz Cartel Case
-Cane case
-likely to try to obstruct justice for example accepting bribes to lean a certain way.