THE LAST DITCH

Heathrow robbery trial breaks with 400-year tradition of trial by jury | UK news | The Guardian.

I despair. The right to trial by jury has protected Englishmen from an over-mighty state since long before democracy was born. Combined with the Great Writ of habeas corpus, it meant you could not be detained without trial and that your trial must be by 12 independent jurors. For most of the last 400 years, those jurors were required to decide unanimously that you were guilty. If they couldn't, you were acquitted. The odds were loaded against the state and in favour of the citizen. Guilty men went free, that's true. But (though nothing human is perfect) the odds of an innocent man being convicted were reassuringly small.

In the last century, in the wake of jury-nobbling scandals, majority verdicts were introduced. Even then, some thought that the state should do more to protect jurors, rather than implicitly accept that criminals could intimidate them. The efficiency of the justice system was put before the ancient rights of free Englishmen. Those who saw it as "a slippery slope" were dismissed as old fashioned.

Now, jury nobbling is again the excuse, but this time to hold trials with no jury at all. Again, those who object are dismissed either as friends of organised crime or as old buffers. Let's not forget however that the jury was designed to prevent it from being nobbled – by the state. The odds of 12 good men and true all being subverted by plain bribery, or by nods and winks or hopes of preferment from the government, were calculated as being too small to worry about. To put it at its lowest, it was assumed that a random sample of 12 Englishmen would contain at least one who couldn't be bought. It's not the highest of national praise, but it's practical.

As for criminals doing the nobbling, that is clearly a smaller problem. Even the mightiest of them does not have anything like the state's resources for corruption or intimidation. That's not to say the problem should not be addressed. Such conduct undermines justice and should therefore be a very serious crime. I suggest that jury-nobbling should carry double the combined maximum sentences for the offences under trial. Even a crime lord will find it a big ask to get men not themselves on trial to risk that.

What are the odds of a fair trial after repeated mistrials for alleged jury-nobbling? The judge hearing the case without a jury, so far from knowing nothing of their criminal history, knows full well that they are considered to be dangerous organised criminals capable of bribing or intimidating a jury. Is he likely to approach the case with an open mind?

Once one such trial has ended in a successful conviction (and the convicted men prove to have been just such thugs) how often will it be argued that there is a risk of the jury being nobbled? After all, there is always such a risk. When Mrs P. served as a juror, the accused's family hung about in the court car park smirking meaningfully as they noted jurors' car registration numbers. The jurors simply decided to arrive by public transport. They went on to convict. I would not be surprised if the family's conduct helped the prosecution. Nobbling is often as likely to misfire as not.

We can be sure that this current trial has been hand-picked to support the government's view that jury trial is not an essential right. I will be astonished if it ends in an acquittal. Then we will proceed yet further down that slippery slope. Such trials will become more and more frequent. One day a future Home Secretary will stand smilingly to tell the Commons that so many trials are conducted "efficiently" without a jury that the cost can be saved for all trials.

Personally, if forced to the choice, I would prefer the right to trial by jury to the right to vote. My lone voice against the pathetic multitudes who cling to Nanny's teat is as nothing. 400 years of history have proved, however, that when the state has the wrong victim in its sights (intentionally or otherwise) a jury is a free man's best hope. One day my dissent from the consensus that economic value grows on state trees will, I am sure, become a crime. At my trial, I would like a jury of my fellow citizens to look me in the eye before condemning me.

Never forget which political party brought you this tragic day. If the next Conservative government does not immediately restore your absolute right to jury trial, never forget that either.

10 responses to “Another step toward the abyss”

  1. pedant2007 Avatar
    pedant2007

    Yes, and again yes. How is it that people still support this Government?

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  2. Moggsy Avatar

    Well they already did away with the jury with smaller crimes in Magistrate’s Court, thou I think you are allowed to insist on trial by jury.
    If the government/police are so useless they can’t protect a jury from intimidation why can’t they have anonymous jurors.
    It is not perfect, but better than no jurors at all.
    I figure the really scary thing is your comment “One day a future Home Secretary will stand smilingly to tell the Commons that so many trials are conducted “efficiently” without a jury that the cost can be saved for all trials.” rings very plausibly true.

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  3. mike Avatar
    mike

    I agree, although it is a tad extreme to say you’d rather live under a dictatorship than a juryless legal system. Juries do have their faults too remember, although are overall a force of good

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  4. DrJohnson Avatar
    DrJohnson

    I’m very troubled by this. I’m no law expert (and also not British for that matter) but it seems to me that the right to be judged by your peers is one of the most critical pillars of the adversarial system of Common Law. But if they insist on not having a jury, at least there could be a separate judge (or a group of judges) deciding whether the suspects are guilty or not and another doing the sentencing if they are.
    I don’t like the direction this country is heading to. Democracy and freedom are not something that are once achieved and then stay around; they’re have to be continuously reproduced otherwise they fade away.

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  5. Tom Paine Avatar

    I would certainly prefer to have both, as I made clear, but democracy is not a good per se. It is only a method to strive for good. It was democracy that gave Labour a mandate to confiscate my grandfather’s life work in 1946. It was democracy that gave Labour a mandate to destroy my educational prospects. After all they introduced (and governments since have retained) comprehensive schools precisely so the democratic majority can pretend their children aren’t stupid. Crap schools are the peoples’ choice.
    Finally, of course, democracy has allowed government to take most of my life earnings by force to bribe their voters with. The total income tax take now goes on benefits for (mostly) Labour voters. A decisive proportion of British voters are now state-dependent, so I have no reasonable hope of democracy doing me any good for the rest of my life.
    I do however have a very realistic prospect of further encroachment on my liberties. When I finally find myself a criminal for not agreeing with every word Harriet Harman utters, I would certainly rather have a jury than a vote. There are free countries without a jury system, of course. They have other mechanisms (written constitutions entrenched in more liberal times, for example). All WE have is the jury. It is not perfect, but it is the only British institution in which I retain any confidence. And, of course, it is under attack.

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  6. Guthrum Avatar
    Guthrum

    Yet again, a loss of Liberty dressed up as protecting the people.

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  7. Young Mr. Brown Avatar

    Good piece.
    However, it has to be said that there is a precedent in the the system of Diplock courts which was introduced in Northern Ireland in 1972.
    They have not just been used against suspected loyalists and republicans. A suspected Islamic terrorist, Abbas Boutrab, was tried by a Diplock Court in 2007. This surely set an worrying precedent.
    I believe that the most recent use of a Diplock court was the case of Manmohan ‘Johnny’ Sandhu who went on trial last year.

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  8. Andrew Duffin Avatar
    Andrew Duffin

    Frankly I don’t think the next conservative government will backtrack on any of NuLab’s illiberal tyrannies.
    I am just waiting for Call-me-Dave to announce that actually, awfully sorry chaps, we can’t in fact stop the ID Card project because it’s required by EU Law.
    Something about the Lisbon treaty, no doubt.
    They are a shower of shits, and their only advantage is that they’re a different shower of shits from the present lot.
    Excuse me if I sound cynical.

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  9. Alfred Avatar

    But we are already circumventing the Common Law protections by introducing the European Arrest Warrant (EAW). No longer is the evidence tested before you are extradited to an EU State whose standard of Justice is often well below that of England and which uses the Napoleonic, State Biased, Code.
    Just watch the increasing number of English people incarcerated in EU jails, on very dubious evidence eg Andrew Symeou has now been in a disgusting Greek jail for 6 months and from the evidence, it seems he has been fitted up.
    Forget trial by jury, Habeas Corpus etc, they are things of the past for victims of the EAW.

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  10. FreedomFighter Avatar
    FreedomFighter

    Spot on mate! Cynical. No.

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Tom is a retired international lawyer. He was a partner in a City of London law firm and spent almost twenty years abroad serving clients from all over the world.

Returning to London on retirement in 2011, he was dismayed to discover how much liberty had been lost in the UK while he was away.

He’s a classical liberal (libertarian, if you must) who, like his illustrious namesake, considers that

“…government even in its best state is but a necessary evil; in its worst state an intolerable one.”

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