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CHAPTER 10 Pretrial Activities and the Criminal Trial 1 Pretrial Activities 2 Pretrial Activities First appearance Pretrial release and bail The grand jury The preliminary hearing Arraignment and plea 3 First Appearance ** Defendants are brought before a judge and: Formally notified of the charges Advised of their rights Given the opportunity to retain a lawyer or have one appointed to represent them May be afforded the opportunity for bail 4 First Appearance ** …must be held “without unnecessary delay”. Based on McNabb v. U.S. (1943), the standard is 48 hours. …may include a probable cause hearing. 5 Pretrial Release ** Most defendants are given the opportunity for pretrial release. Pretrial release decisions consider risk of flight or nonappearance in court and risk to public safety. Decisions focus on: Seriousness of pending charges (offense) Prior criminal record Information about the defendant’s employment Available supervisory options if released 6 Pretrial Release Mechanisms ** Bail – cash deposit Deposit bail – courts act as bondsman (percentage of bail deposited w/ court) Release on recognizance (ROR) – written promise to appear (no cash or property) assessed for danger Property bonds – items of value substituted for $$ Conditional release – requirements imposed Third-party custody – agency supervises defendant and ensures return to court Unsecured bonds – defendant agrees to forfeit assigned bond if they fail to appear – like credit Signature bonds – written promise (for misdemeanor offenses) no assessment for danger 7 State and Federal Defendants Released Before Trial 8 Pretrial Release and Public Safety ** There’s a movement seeking to reduce the number of defendants granted pre-trial release. Based on a growing concern of future crimes Some states enacted danger laws, which limit the right to bail to certain kinds of offenders. (safety risk is assessed to protect the community) 9 Grand Juries ** Approximately half of states use grand juries. Grand juries are made of private citizens (usually 23). They hear evidence only from prosecutors. Are held in secret, and generally the defendant is not there. They serve as filters to eliminate cases without sufficient evidence. If the majority of grand jurors agree to forward the indictment, it be comes a “true bill.” May initiate prosecution independent of the prosecutor. 10 Preliminary Hearing ** Used instead of Grand Juries. They give the defendant an opportunity to challenge the legal basis of his detention. A lower court judge summarizes the charges and reviews the rights of criminal defendants. Competency to stand trial may be determined. Preliminary hearings have many of the same characteristics as a trial. 11 Arraignment ** Arraignment is the first appearance before the court with authority to try the case. Two purposes: Inform suspect of specific charges • Allow defendant to enter a plea • Types of pleas: Guilty • Not guilty • Nolo contendere – protects defendant in the event of civil suit. • 12 Plea Bargaining ** The process of negotiating an agreement among the defendant, the prosecutor, and the court as to an appropriate plea and associated sentence in a given case. (The process involves the prosecutor, defense attorney and defense) * Plea bargaining circumvents the trial process and dramatically reduces the time required for the resolution of a criminal case. 13 Plea Bargaining ** Negotiated pleas are guilty pleas and result in conviction. Some surveys have found that 90% of all criminal cases prepared for trial are eventually resolved through a negotiated plea. ** (most common resolution of a criminal case is through plea bargaining) After a guilty plea has been entered, it may be withdrawn with the consent of the court. 14 Criminal Trials 15 The Nature and Purpose of the Criminal Trial: The trial process is highly formalized and governed by rules of evidence and other procedural guidelines, as well as informal rules and professional expectations. The purpose is to determine the defendant’s guilt or innocence. 16 Factual vs. Legal Guilt Factual guilt The defendant is actually responsible for the crime of which he is accused. Legal guilt The defendant is found guilty as charged. 17 Adversarial System The philosophy of the adversarial system is that the most just outcomes will occur when both sides are allowed to argue their cases effectively and vociferously before a fair and impartial jury. 18 Stages in a Criminal Trial ** 19 Trial Initiation and the Speedy Trial The Sixth Amendment guarantees that in “all criminal prosecutions, the accused shall enjoy the right to a speedy and public trial.” 20 The Speedy Trial: Supreme Court Cases Klopfer v. North Carolina (1967) A speedy trial is a fundamental guarantee of the U.S. Constitution. Baker v. Wingo (1972) The 6th Amendment can be violated even if the defendant does not object to delays. Strunk v. U.S. (1973) Denial of a speedy trial should result in dismissal of all charges. 21 Federal Speedy Trial Act (1974)** Prosecution must seek indictment or information within 30 days of arrest. Trial must begin within 70 days after indictment. Trial start can extend to 180 days if the defendant is not available or if witnesses cannot be called within the 70 day limit. 22 Federal Speedy Trial Act Cases U.S. v. Taylor (1988) Court ruled that when delay is the result of actions by the defendant, the 70 day rule does not apply. Doggett v. U.S. (1992) “Even delay occasioned by the Government’s negligence creates a prejudice that compounds over time, and at some point, as here, becomes intolerable.” 23 State Speedy Trial Acts Many states have enacted their own speedy trial legislation. Most set a limit of 90 or 120 days as a reasonable period of time for a trial to begin. 24 Jury Selection The Sixth Amendment guarantees the right to an impartial jury. Jurors are expected to be unbiased and free of preconceived notions about guilt or innocence. Prosecution and defense attorneys question potential jurors during the process of voir dire. 25 Jury Selection: Ensuring Impartiality ** Both the prosecution and defense can use challenges to remove prospective jurors from jury pool. Challenge to the array Challenge for cause Peremptory challenge 26 Challenge to the Array ** Claims that the pool from which potential jurors are to be selected is not representative of the community. Argued in a motion before voir dire. 27 Challenge for Cause Claims that a prospective juror cannot be impartial or fair. Typically, each side has an unlimited number of such challenges. 28 Peremptory Challenge … removes potential jurors without the need to give a reason. Typically, each side has a limited number of such challenges. Federal government and states vary in the number of such challenges allowed. 29 Scientific Jury Selection …seeks to take advantage of peremptory challenges by using social science research techniques to select members of a jury. Focus groups and surveys are used to assess the likelihood that an individual will be predisposed to a particular outcome. Some people criticize this. 30 Sequestered Jury … is a jury that is isolated from the public during the course of a trial and throughout the deliberation process. 31 Jury Selection and Race Batson v. Kentucky (1986) the use of peremptory challenges for purposeful discrimination constitutes a violation of the defendant’s right to an impartial jury. 32 Opening Statements The initial statement of the prosecution or the defense attorneys, describing the facts that he or she intends to present during trial to prove the case. 33 The Presentation of Evidence Evidence—anything useful to a judge or jury in deciding the facts of a case. First, prosecution presents its evidence. The defense follows. 34 Types of Evidence ** Direct evidence Facts that need not be interpreted (photographs, testimony) Circumstantial evidence Requires judge or jury to make inferences or draw conclusions Real evidence Physical material or traces of activity, introduced by means of “exhibits” (weapons, DNA, tire track impressions) ** 35 The Evaluation of Evidence Judges decide which evidence can be presented to the jury. Evidence must be relevant. The probative value must be weighed against the potential inflammatory or prejudicial qualities of the evidence. 36 The Testimony of Witnesses ** Testimony—oral evidence presented by witnesses, including victims, police officers, the defendant, and specialists. Witnesses must be competent to testify. th The defendant has the 5 Amendment right not to take the stand. Witnesses are subject to direct and cross examination. Witnesses who lie under oath commit perjury. (false statement made by sworn witness) 37 Child Witnesses 37 states allow the use of videotaped testimony. 32 states allow the use of closed circuit television. 38 The Hearsay Rule ** Hearsay is anything that is not based on the personal knowledge of a witness. ** The hearsay rule prohibits the use of “secondhand evidence” Exceptions to the hearsay rule: Dying declarations Spontaneous statements Out-of-court statements (“past recollection recorded”) 39 Closing Arguments An oral summation of a case presented to a judge, or to a judge or jury, by the prosecution or by the defense in a criminal trial. 40 Judge’s Charge to the Jury After closing arguments, the judge charges the jury to: Select a foreperson Deliberate Return with a verdict Judge may remind juries of statutory laws and requirement of impartiality. 41 Jury Deliberations and the Verdict Deliberations may take minutes; some take weeks. Many jurisdictions require a unanimous verdict. Some juries are unable to reach a verdict. These deadlock juries are called hung juries. 42 Problems with the Jury System Many jurors are ignorant of the law and legal precedent. Some jurors personal opinions, biases, and emotions interfere with objectivity. Some jurors fear personal retaliation. Some critics of the jury system call for professional juries. 43 Improving the Adjudication Process Improving the process may involve: Greater unification and reducing the number of jurisdictions. A growing number of court-watch citizen groups. More accurate statistical measurement of court performance. 44