Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byJesse Bradley Modified over 9 years ago
1
C9: Pretrial Procedures and Criminal Trial Who is Susan Polk? What were the issues with her trial? What do you think happened to her?
2
C9: Pretrial Procedures and Criminal Trial Define: Initial appearance p.221 Bail p.221 Release on Recognizance p.222 Bail Bondsperson p.223 Preventive detention p.223
3
C9: Pretrial Procedures and Criminal Trial Purpose of Bail Bail is guaranteed under 8 th Amendment Not all jurisdictions have the same guidelines for bail Prohibited in capital crimes Reasonable compared to the crime, not compared to defendant’s ability to pay
4
C9: Pretrial Procedures and Criminal Trial Purpose of Bail Bail also protects community from the defendant
5
C9: Pretrial Procedures and Criminal Trial Gaining Pretrial Release Release on recognizance (ROR) was introduced by Manhattan Bail Project in 1960s Less than 5% fail to show for trial Not used for felonies
6
C9: Pretrial Procedures and Criminal Trial Gaining Pretrial Release Defendants may post bail with property Property must be double the cost of the bail Bondsperson can be used, but the defendant must have collateral
7
C9: Pretrial Procedures and Criminal Trial Preventive Detention Judges are allowed to act “in the best interests of the community” Bail Reform Act of 1984: Can set bail high to keep suspects in jail 16% of released are rearrested before trial Federal offenders can be held without bail Is this fair under the Constitution? Page 224: Innocent on Bail?
8
C9: Pretrial Procedures and Criminal Trial Define: Discovery p.225 Information p.225 Indictment p.225 Case attrition p.226
9
C9: Pretrial Procedures and Criminal Trial Book Questions: Copy and Answer on separate paper using pages 220 – 228 1. After an arrest and booking has been made, what is the next step towards determining guilt or innocence? 2. At what stage does a judge or magistrate decide if there is sufficient evidence to proceed to trial? 3. What is the formal investigation, prior to trial, where the defense obtains information from the prosecution?
10
C9: Pretrial Procedures and Criminal Trial Book Questions: Copy and Answer on separate paper using pages 220 – 228 4. Find the word “perfunctory” on page 225. Write what you think it means. 5. How long does a preliminary hearing usually last? 6. What states REQUIRE Grand Jury indictment to charge an individual with any type of crime? 7. What is an indictment called if it comes from a Preliminary Hearing?
11
C9: Pretrial Procedures and Criminal Trial Define: Nolo Contendere p.228 Acquittal p.232 Venire p.234 Voir Dire p.235 Challenge for Cause p.236 Peremptory Challenge p.236
12
C9: Pretrial Procedures and Criminal Trial Prosecutorial Screening Process After an initial charge, prosecutors can add more charges P. 227, fig. 9.4: How many arrests? How many prosecuted? How many incarcerated?
13
C9: Pretrial Procedures and Criminal Trial Case Attrition About half of felony cases are dismissed through a nolle prosequi Why? Resources.
14
C9: Pretrial Procedures and Criminal Trial How do you decide when to prosecute? Look at pages 226 – 228 and put the 5 deciding factors for prosecution into your own words
15
C9: Pretrial Procedures and Criminal Trial Prosecutorial Charging and the Defense Attorney The pretrial motions are a defense attorney’s tools to help their client. In your notes, copy the list of motions on page 228 and write an expected effect of each motion.
16
C9: Pretrial Procedures and Criminal Trial Steps to a Trial Diagram Using the flow chart on page 222, create your own Steps Leading to a Trial on a white sheet of paper Summarize or paraphrase the steps in your own words Create illustrations for 5 of the steps that you think are most interesting / important
17
C9: Pretrial Procedures and Criminal Trial Define: Real Evidence p. 237 Direct Evidence p. 237 Circumstantial Evidence p. 237 Relevant Evidence p. 238
18
C9: Pretrial Procedures and Criminal Trial Define: Lay Witness p. 237 Expert Witness p. 237
19
C9: Pretrial Procedures and Criminal Trial Jury Selection Requirements: 1.U.S. Citizen 2.18 y.o. 3.No felony convictions 4.Sufficiently intelligent 5.Read, write, comprehend English
20
C9: Pretrial Procedures and Criminal Trial Jury Selection Jurors come from a master jury list, or jury pool, created with DMV or voter records Step 1: Venire – Bring potential jurors to the courthouse Step 2: Voire Dire – Jurors are given written and oral questions to determine bias Step 3: Challenging potential jurors – For cause: Don’t speak English, have link to defendant, etc.
21
C9: Pretrial Procedures and Criminal Trial Jury Selection Step 3: Challenging potential jurors: Peremptory: Given a limited number of them Issues: Race – Minorities were often excluded from earlier juries Women – Allowed to serve since the 19 th Amendment, but given a choice until the 1970’s
22
C9: Pretrial Procedures and Criminal Trial Assignment (Part 1) p. 235: On a sheet of paper: Write the name of the trial People v. Carter(2011) Create a list of 5 potential Yes/No questions that would be on a juror questionnaire for this trial
23
C9: Pretrial Procedures and Criminal Trial The Trial: Define: Hearsay p. 239 Charge p. 242 Hung Jury p. 243 Allen Charge p. 244
24
C9: Pretrial Procedures and Criminal Trial The Trial: Plea Bargaining Removes the risk for the prosecution Sometimes the best case for the defense Gives the defendant a level of control over their fate
25
C9: Pretrial Procedures and Criminal Trial Special Features of Criminal Trials A Speedy Trial Guaranteed under Sixth Amendment Must prove that delays are prejudicial if you want to claim injustice Federal level: Speedy Trial Act of 1974: No more than 30 days from arrest to indictment Ten days from indictment to arraignment Sixty days from arraignment to trial
26
C9: Pretrial Procedures and Criminal Trial Special Features of Criminal Trials An Impartial Jury Duncan v. Louisiana (1968) guaranteed this for felonies Most juries have 12 people Most votes for acquittal must be unanimous
27
C9: Pretrial Procedures and Criminal Trial Special Features of Criminal Trials Privilege Against Self-Incrimination Fifth Amendment says you cannot be compelled to testify against yourself Jury must not be prejudiced against this Adamson v. California (1947)
28
C9: Pretrial Procedures and Criminal Trial Special Features of Criminal Trials Presumption of Innocence Innocent until proven guilty Media can make this difficult Scott Peterson’s case was moved from Modesto to San Mateo due to fear of bias
29
C9: Pretrial Procedures and Criminal Trial Special Features of Criminal Trials Standard of Proof Guilt beyond a reasonable doubt Prosecution must prove it Is it worse to convict an innocent person or let a guilty person go free?
30
C9: Pretrial Procedures and Criminal Trial The Trial Opening Statements Prosecution Defense Direct Evidence of Prosecution Cross Examination of Prosecution Direct Evidence of Defense Cross Examination of Defense Prosecution Rebuttal Defense Surrebuttal Closing Statements Defense Prosecution
31
C9: Pretrial Procedures and Criminal Trial The Trial Evidence Testimonial Evidence Lay witness v. expert witness Direct evidence v. circumstantial Circumstantial only makes a connection, direct is enough to convict
32
C9: Pretrial Procedures and Criminal Trial The CSI Effect: Read page 244 On a sheet of paper to hand in, answer in one or two paragraphs: What effect has popular culture and TV such as CSI had on the criminal justice process? Are these effects good or bad? Why?
33
C9: Pretrial Procedures and Criminal Trial The Trial Prosecution’s case More difficult task, must present corpus delicti Must utilize witnesses, but cannot lead Witness answers must be based on their own knowledge, not hearsay Sixth amendment allows for cross-examination
34
C9: Pretrial Procedures and Criminal Trial The Trial Rebuttal and Surrebuttal Prosecution can bring forth new witnesses after the defense finishes - rebuttal Defense can then cross examine the new witness and introduce new witnesses - surrebuttal
35
C9: Pretrial Procedures and Criminal Trial Final Steps Jury Deliberation Given instructions by the judge In extreme cases, will be sequestered – removed from the public
36
C9: Pretrial Procedures and Criminal Trial Final Steps The Verdict Commonly, guilty or not guilty Can have varying degrees if instructed Hung jury can lead to an Allen Charge – Allen v. United States (1896)
37
C9: Pretrial Procedures and Criminal Trial Appeals Only available to defense, prosecuting again would put the defendant in double jeopardy Civil suit can be filed against the defendant (Like O.J.) State and Federal trials can be separate
38
C9: Pretrial Procedures and Criminal Trial Why Appeal? 1. Correct an error made during trial 2. Review policy (laws can become outdated)
39
C9: Pretrial Procedures and Criminal Trial Habeas Corpus Latin for “you have the body” A petition that allows a prisoner to challenge treatment during trial or imprisonment as unconstitutional
40
C9: Pretrial Procedures and Criminal Trial Chapter 9 Assignment: Read “Rape Shield Laws” p. 248-250 Answer questions 1-3 in complete sentences Due Tomorrow
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.