Document Type
Chapter of Book
Publication Date
2006
Abstract
This chapter explores issues in jury trials involving persons accused of committing acts of international terrorism or financially or otherwise supporting those who do or may commit such acts. The jury is a unique institution that draws upon laypersons to decide whether a person charged with a crime is guilty or innocent. Although the jury is instructed and guided by a trial judge and procedural rules shape what the jury is allowed to hear, ultimately the laypersons deliberate alone and render their verdict. A basic principle of the jury system is that at the start of trial the jurors should have open minds and regard the accused innocent until proven guilty.
The chapter raises issues about jurors' assumptions of innocence in the aftermath of terrorist bombings in the United States, England, Bali, Spain and elsewhere when persons are persons accused of committing acts of terrorism or indirectly supporting terrorists through financing organizations associated with terrorism. A study of a United States trial involving charges of supporting terrorism is used to illustrate the problem, but the thesis of this chapter is that the basic issues apply to trials that might be held in England, Australia, Canada or other countries with jury systems.
Citation
Neil Vidmar, Trial By Jury Involving Persons Accused of Terrorism or Supporting Terrorism, in Law & Psychology 318-337 (Belinda Brooks-Gordon & Michael Freeman eds., 2006)
Library of Congress Subject Headings
Trials, Crime in mass media, Mass media, Qaida (Organization), Jury selection, Public opinion, Prejudices, Jury, Terrorism
Included in
Comparative and Foreign Law Commons, Criminal Law Commons, Criminal Procedure Commons, Social and Behavioral Sciences Commons
Available at: https://scholarship.law.duke.edu/faculty_scholarship/2811
Comments
This is a pre-print of the article that appears in Law & Psychology.