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Criminal Justice Process: The Trial Chapter 14
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Due Process of law Constitutional guarantee ▫ that all legal proceedings will be fair ▫ that one will be given notice of the proceedings ▫ and an opportunity to be heard before the government acts to take away one's life, liberty, or property. ▫ that a law shall not be unreasonable, arbitrary, or capricious.
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Definitions Arbitrary -without regard for the facts and circumstances Capricious -unpredictable decisions which do not follow the law, logic or proper trial procedure
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U.S. Constitution Many basic rights apply to people accused of crime and are entitled: ▫to have a jury trial in public & without delay ▫to be informed of their rights & their charges ▫to confront and cross-examine witnesses ▫to compel witnesses to testify on their behalf ▫to refuse to testify against themselves ▫to be represented by attorney
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Right to Trial by Jury Jury Trials in Criminal cases ▫Guaranteed by the Sixth Amendment ▫Applicable in all federal and state courts ▫Jury is not required in all cases. ▫Most are resolved by guilty pleas ▫Not required for certain minor offenses ▫Defendants can waive their right and be heard by a judge (bench trial)
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How are jury panels selected and excused? Voter registration Tax lists Drivers’ license rolls Preemptory challenge - attorney excuses without giving a reason ▫Judge will decided the validity of the reason
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Right to a Speedy and Public Trial Guaranteed by Sixth Amendment Federal court & some states have a specific time limites If accused does not receive a speedy trial, case may be dismissed ▫Some defendants waive their rights to a speedy trial ▫Courts will consider cause and reasons for the delay, free on bail or in jail during pretrial period
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Right to Compulsory Process and to Confront Witnesses Right to compulsory process for obtaining witnesses ▫Defendant can get a subpoena (court order) to have witness appear to testify Right to confront ▫be face-to-face with witness against them and cross- examination Right to be present during all stages of trial ▫Can be restricted for disorder & disruptions ▫Judge has power to remove defendant from court, to cite for contempt of court or bound and gagged. ▫Modified for child witnesses
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Freedom From Self-Incrimination Right under Fifth Amendment ▫You cannot be forced to testify against yourself ▫Prosecutor forbidden to draw attention to the defendant’s refusal to testify. ▫Right to take the stand & testify if you wish ▫Immunity – witness cannot be prosecuted based on any information proved in a testimony Must answer all the questions, even those that incriminate you.
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Right to an Attorney Sixth Amendment ▫“Accused shall enjoy the right to…have the Assistance of Counsel for his defense.” ▫Criminal trial Represented by a prosecutor
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Criminal Appeals “Not guilty” Verdict ▫Prosecution cannot appeal “Guilty” Verdict ▫Sentencing will follow Wrongly convicted – defendant can: ▫Ask judge to overturn jury’s verdict ▫Declare a mistrial, and ask for a new trial ▫Appeal to higher court Can challenge the conviction / sentencing decision
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Cont. Criminal Appeals Defendant must file a notice to appeal ▫Appellate court sets a schedule ▫No new information is presented at appeal ▫Appellate court determines questions of law ▫Defendant = petitioner / appellant In addition to appeals ▫Defendant can apply to court for help by seeking a writ (an order from higher court to lower court or gov’t official – warden) ▫Writ of habeas corpus – “to produce the body” claimes defendant is being held illegally and requests release DNA testing
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Quiz – next class on basic concepts Know key terms Main concepts
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The End
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