President's Perspective
The Jury - Down But Not Out
"Representative government and trial by jury are the heart and 
lungs of liberty. Without them we have no other fortification against 
being ridden like horses, fleeced like sheep, worked like cattle and fed 
and clothed like swine and hounds."
- John Adams
of Massachusetts (1774)
By David A. 
Saichek
Enemies of civil liberties will always disparage our heritage of 
trial by jury. Those who would weaken the right of trial by jury are in 
two  categories:
categories:
- Purveyors of propaganda. These people are capable of 
understanding the Constitution but they rail against it because it 
affects the predictability of their bottom line ("runaway juries") or 
they cannot accept that the least powerful of citizens are entitled to 
the same rights as the mighty ("criminals get off on 
technicalities").
 
 
- Poorly educated or apathetic citizens. These are people who 
enable the propagandists to poison the attitudes of potential 
jurors.
Both civil and criminal lawyers can see the damage done. We are 
discouraged by the ascendency of hardened attitudes and indifference to 
personal rights and suffering.
We must not despair. Shame on us if we fail to persevere in our 
defense of freedom and justice. To use a contemporary phrase, we want to 
encourage citizens to "buy in" to our constitutional form of government 
established by the founders. If it involves "marketing" techniques, so 
be it. Foes of the system have not hesitated to use their own marketing 
resources.
"The jury system has come to stand for all we mean by English 
Justice. The scrutiny of twelve honest jurors provides defendent and 
plaintiff alike a safeguard from arbitrary perversion of the 
law."
-- Sir Winston Churchill  (1956)
 
When democracy is your goal it is not quite so important that the 
juries be unfailingly reliable and efficient. Nobody seems to question 
free elections although they do not always result in the best possible 
public policies. The purpose of marketing the ideas of justice in a free 
nation are succinctly put by Henry Louis Gates Jr.: "As a symbol of 
popular and local sovereignty, citizen juries confer legitimacy upon the 
most invasive thing a state can do: strip a person of life, liberty or 
property. By interposing itself between crime and punishment, the 
citizen jury - when it works as it was intended to - makes the state's 
actions something ordinary people feel they own."1
Both trial and appellate courts can help, suggests Gates, by backing 
off on the effort to turn juries into bodies of disinterested judgment. 
"Trying to turn a jury into a vehicle of efficient managerial justice is 
like converting a school bus into a racing car; it no longer serves its 
community purpose, and it won't break any speed records, either."2
There are quite a few ideas to be explored:
"I consider trial by jury as the only anchor ever yet imagined by 
man, by which government can be held to the principles of the 
constitution."
--Thomas Jefferson (1788)
 
- Let jurors, even potential jurors, ask questions.
 
 
- Reduce or eliminate peremptory strikes.
 
 
- Eliminate complex instructions about the law.
 
 
- Emphasize that the jury should do what is right and just.
 
 
- Permit the jurors to write down consensus statements of their 
findings.
 
 
- Let the jurors know the effects of their findings, including who 
will win or lose.
 
 
- Accept evidence on the issue of fairness where it can be 
demonstrated that conviction and imprisonment are disproportionately 
inflicted against minorities.3
 
 
- Grant changes of venue in only the most extreme cases of prejudicial 
pretrial publicity.
 
 
- Give genuine answers to questions from the jury room, rather than 
simply repeating incomprehensible instructions.
 
 
- Let trial judges worry less about being "wrong" in their answers to 
jury questions.
In other words, "Put the citizen back into the citizen jury."
"It is essential that the right of trial by jury be scrupulously 
safeguarded as a bulwark of civil liberty. Out duty to preserve the 
Seventh Amendment is a matter of high constitutional 
importance."
-- Justice Hugo Black (1939)
 
Nobody suggests that courts will change rapidly or with glee; but we 
must all be open to new ideas. Neither the people nor the system is 
served by refusal to reexamine long-held tenets intended to reduce bias 
but which may have "cleansed" the process to the point that only the 
most indifferent citizens survive jury selection.
Attacks on trial by jury are not likely to go away. But we can 
constantly remind the public what the jury system is for and what a free 
nation wants from it. We want to preserve the peace, punish offenders 
and enjoy a civil society. Serving as a juror should be a pleasant and 
participatory experience. It can be that way if lawyers and courts treat 
jurors with courtesy, friendliness, straight talk and respect.
Emphasizing the participation and legitimacy of citizen juries will 
go a long way toward restoring the American people's faith in our system 
of justice.
Endnotes
1 Comment, The New Yorker, 
Feb. 24 and March 3, 1997, at 11, 12.
2 Id. at 12.
3 Facts About the American 
Criminal Justice System, ABA, at 4, 6 (1997).
Wisconsin 
Lawyer