Learning Objectives
- Describe types of offences and those heard by juries in Canada.
- Describe the jury selection process.
- Distinguish among the characteristics, responsibilities, and functions of Canadian jurors.
- Describe how we study juror and jury behaviour.
- Outline the stages to reaching a jury verdict.
- Describe the categories of variables examined to predict a verdict.
Types of Offences in Canada
In Canada, criminal cases are classified into three types of offences:
- Summary Offences:
- Punishable by less than six months in prison.
- Fines of less than $2000 (s. 787[1] of the Criminal Code).
- Tried by a judge alone; no right to a jury trial.
- Indictable Offences:
- More serious cases, can be tried by a judge and jury.
- Categories:
- Less serious (e.g., theft) heard by a judge alone (s. 553).
- Serious offences like treason and murder are mandatory to be tried by jury.
- For some offences, defendants may choose trial by judge or jury.
- Hybrid Offences:
- Punishable by up to five years in prison if proceeded by indictment or 6 months if summarily.
- Crown decides if the case proceeds as summary or indictable.
Jury Selection Process in Canada
- Governed by the Juries Act - provides guidelines for eligibility and selection.
- Prospective jurors receive a jury summons to appear. Failing to comply may lead to penalties.
- Eligibility criteria can vary by province (e.g., age, occupational exemptions).
- Typically, criminal juries in Canada consist of 12 members.
- Changes to how jurors can be challenged:
- Peremptory challenges (removed under Bill C-75): lawyers could reject jurors without reason.
- Challenges for cause: requires a valid reason presented by the lawyer.
- Now decided by the judge under Bill C-75.
- Limited information about jurors is available to lawyers, mostly their name, occupation, and demeanor.
Characteristics and Responsibilities of Juries
Fundamental Characteristics (R. v. Sherratt, 1991):
- Representativeness: Jury must reflect the community where the crime occurred.
- Drawn from local voter rolls or telephone directories.
- Challenges might be raised if the jury is unrepresentative (e.g. based on gender or race).
- Impartiality: Jurors must judge based solely on admissible evidence without bias.
- Must avoid influence from prior knowledge about the defendant or pretrial media coverage.
- Connection to the defendant may lead to disqualification.
Studying Juror and Jury Behaviour
Research Methodologies:
- Post-Trial Interviews: Understanding juror decisions after trials. In Canada, this is restricted.
- Archives: Analyzing trial transcripts to discover patterns and relationships without establishing causality.
- Simulation: Mimicking trials to analyze juror responses, yields high internal validity but may not represent real jury dynamics.
- Field Studies: Involves real jurors, allows for observation of behaviour in situ but is difficult to conduct due to legal restrictions.
Stages of Reaching a Jury Verdict
- Listening to Evidence: Jurors listen to admissible evidence; proposals for allowing note-taking or asking questions for better understanding are examined.
- Deliberation: Closed discussion among jury members to contemplate the evidence and reach a verdict. Structure and biases can affect the process (e.g., polarization or leniency bias).
- Final Verdict: Must be unanimous; if not reachable, considered a hung jury.
Variables in Predicting Verdicts
- Demographic variables: Age, gender, socio-economic status can influence decisions but relations are often inconsistent.
- Personality traits: Authoritarianism and dogmatism may correlate with a tendency to render guilty verdicts.
- Attitudes: Specific attitudes related to case topics (e.g., rape myths, capital punishment) show predictive power in verdict outcomes.
- Defendant characteristics: Previous criminal record, attractiveness etc. affect juror decisions.
- Victim characteristics: In cases of sexual assault, the perceived credibility of victims can significantly influence jury decisions, at times being unfairly affected by past sexual history.
- Expert testimony: Complexity and coherence of expert evidence plays a crucial role, with jurors sometimes processing gender biases regarding expert credibility.
Summary
- Jury process is integral in the justice system influencing outcomes through structured methods while facing numerous biases and challenges.