CHAPTER 10: PRETRIAL ACTIVITIES AND CRIMINAL TRIAL
2 purposes bail serves?
1. Helps to ensure reappearance of the accused 2. Prevents unconvicted individuals from suffering imprisonment unnecessarily
3 types of challenges are recognized in criminal courts:
1. Challenges to the array 2. Challenges for cause 3. Peremptory challenges
PROPERTY BOND
The setting of bail in the form of land houses stocks or other tangible property in the event that the defendant absconds prior to trial the bond becomes the property of the court
Judicial officers are concerned about 2 types of risks:
1. The risk or flight or nonappearance for scheduled court appearances 2. The risk to public safety
A professional jury system offers these advantages:
Dependability Knowledge Equity
In Griffin v. California (1965), the U.S. Supreme Court declared that
If a defendant refuses to testify, prosecutors and judges are enjoined from even commenting on this fact
The 6th Amendment guarantees the right to
Impartial jury
PLEA
In criminal proceedings the defendants formal answer in court to the charge contained in the complaint information or indictment that here she is guilty of the offense charged is not guilty of the offense charged or does not contest the charge
TESTIMONY
Oral evidence offered by a sworn witness on the witness stand during a criminal trial
The Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure require judges to
1. Inform the defendant of the various rights he or she is surrendering by pledging guilty 2. Determine that the plea is voluntary 3. Require disclosure of any plea agreements 4. Make sufficient inquiry to ensure there is a factual basis for the plea
Arraignment is generally a brief process with 2 purposes
1. Once again to inform the defendant of the specific charges against him or her 2. To allow the defendant to enter a plea
The review of the arrest proceeds in a relatively informal fashion, with the judge seeking to decide whether, at the time of apprehension, the arresting officer had reason to believe both
1. That a crime had been or was being committed and 2. that a defendant was the person who committed it.
In Witherspoon v. Illinois, the Court ruled that a juror opposed to the death penalty could be excluded from such juries if it were shown that
1. The juror would automatically vote against conviction without regard to the evidence 2. The juror's philosophical orientation would prevent an objective consideration of the evidence
Pretrial service programs (early-intervention programs) perform 2 critical functions:
1. They gather and present information about newly arrested defendants and about available release operations for use by judicial if deciding what conditions are to be set for the defendants release prior to trial 2. They supervise defendants who are released from custody during the pretrial period by monitoring their compliance with release conditions
In Ohio v. Reiner, the U.S. Supreme Court extended the
5th Amendment protections to witness who deny any and all guilt in association with a crime for which another person is being prosecuted
SPEEDY TRIAL ACT
A 1974 federal law that proceedings against the defendant in the federal criminal case begin with the specified period of time such as 70 working days after indictment some states also have speedy trial requirements
In the 1990 case of U.S. v. Montalvo-Murillo,
A defendant who was not provided with a detention hearing at the time of his first appearance and was subsequently released by an appeals court was found to have no "right" to freedom because of this "minor" statutory violation
BAIL BOND
A document guaranteeing the parents of a defendant in court as required and recording the pledge of money or property to be paid to the court if he or she does not appear which is signed by the person to be released and anyone else acting on his or her behalf
COMPETENT TO LAW
A finding by a court that the defendant has sufficient present ability to consult with his or her attorney with a reasonable degree of rational understanding and that the defendant has a rational as well as factual understanding of the proceedings against him or her
DANGER LAW
A lot intended to prevent the pretrial release of criminal defendants judge to represent a danger to others in the community
NOLO CONTENDERE
A plea of no contest no contest plea is used when the defendant does not wish to contest conviction because the plea does not admit guilt however it cannot provide the basis for later civil suits that might follow criminal conviction
FIRST APPEARANCE
An appearance before a magistrate during which the legality of the defendants arrest is initially assessed and the defendant is informed of the charges on with here she is being held at this stage in the criminal justice process bail may be set for pretrial release of arranged
CLOSING ARGUMENT
An oral summation of a case presented to a judge or two a judge and jury by the prosecution or by the defense in a criminal trial
EVIDENCE
Anything useful to a judge or jury in deciding the facts of the case evidence may take the form of witness testimony written documents videotapes magnetic media photographs physical objects and so on
RULES OF EVIDENCE
Court rules that govern the admissibility of evidence at the criminal hearings and trial
REAL EVIDENCE
Evidence that consists of physical material or traces of physical activity
DIRECT EVIDENCE
Evidence that if believe directly proves a fact eyewitness testimony and video tape documentation accounts for the majority of all direct evidence heard in the criminal court
CIRCUMSTANTIAL EVIDENCE
Evidence that requires interpretation or that requires a judge or jury to reach a conclusion based on what the evidence indicates from the proximity of the defendant to a smoking gun. FOR EXAMPLE THE JURY MIGHT CONCLUDE THAT HE OR SHE PULLED THE TRIGGER
The 1984 federal Bail Reform Act allows
Federal judges to assess the danger of an accused to the community and to deny bail to defendants who are thought to be dangerous
The harmless error rule?
Places the burden on the prosecution to show that the jury's decision would most likely have been the same even in the absence of the inappropriate evidence
HEARSAY
Something that is not based on the personal knowledge of a witness witnesses who testified about something they have heard for example are offering hearsay by repeating information about matter of which they have no direct knowledge
VERDICT
The decision of the jury in a jury trial or of a judicial officer in a non jury trail
PROBATIVE VALUE
The degree to which a particular Item of evidence is useful in, and relevant to providing something important in a trial.
OPENING STATEMENT
The initial statement of the prosecutor or the defense attorney made in a court of law to a judge or jury describing the fact that you she intends to present during trial to prove the case
PERJURY
The intentional making of a false statement as part of the testimony by a sworn witness in a judicial proceeding on a matter relevant to the case at hand
SEQUESTERED JURY
The jury that is isolated from the public during the course of a trial and throughout the deliberation process
HEARSAY RULE
The long-standing precedent that hearsay cannot be used in American courtrooms rather than accepting testimony based on hearsay" last of the person who was the original source of the hearsay information be brought into be questioning cross-examined exceptions to the hearsay will may occur when the person with direct knowledge is dead or is otherwise unable to testify
RELEASE ON RECOGNIZANCE
The pretrial release of the criminal defendant on his or her written promise to appear in court as required our property bond is required
PLEA BARGAINING
The process of negotiating an agreement among the defendant the prosecutor and the court as to inappropriately and associate a sentence in a given case plea-bargaining circumvents the trial process and dramatically reduces the time required for the resolution of a criminal case
JURY SELECTION
The process whereby according to law and precedent members of a trial jury are chosen
Cross-examination
The questioning of a witness by someone other than the direct examiner
CONDITIONAL RELEASE
The release by executive decision of the prisoner from a federal or state correctional facility who has not served his or her full sentence in his freedom is contingent on obeying specified rules of behavior
PRETRIAL RELEASE
The release of an accused person from custody for all a part of the time before or during prosecution on his or her promise to appear in court when required
PEREMPTORY CHALLENGE
The right to challenge a potential juror without disclosing the reason for the challenge prosecutors and defense attorneys routinely use preparatory challenges ceremony from Juries individuals who although they expressed no obvious bias Are thought to be a capable of swaying featuring in an undesirable direction
ADVERSARIAL SYSTEM
The two-sided structure under which American criminal trial courts operate that first-served real system fits the prosecution against the defendant in theory Justices then when the most effective adversary is able to convince the judge or jury that his or her perspective on the case is the correct one
In the case of Sell v. U.S., the court ruled that
The use of anti-psychotic drugs on a non-violent pretrial defendant who does not represent a danger while institutionalized must be in the defendant's best medical interest and must be "substantionally unlikely" to cause side effects that might compromise the fairness of the trial
SCIENTIFIC JURY SELECTION
The use of correlation techniques from the social sciences to gauge the likelihood that potential jurors will vote for a conviction or for acquittal
Purpose of cross-examination?
To test the credibility and the memory of the witness
In the case of Henderson v. Morgan,
the U.S. Supreme Court permitted a defendant to withdraw a plea of guilty nine years after it had been given.