That sounds ok in theory. But in practice, it means that you get a bunch of people who are very much part of the system. They see villains day after day, and end up believing that if the police or DPP saw fit to bring a case, you are just another villain, like all the others.Blind groper wrote:I agree with Mr. Jonno
Having a jury of blithering idiots selected at random from the general unwashed off the street is totally ludicrous. You would not run a company that way. To get effective decision making, you need trained, experienced, educated, and intelligent people. In other words, you choose them really, really carefully, and then you train them to within an inch of their lives. The current court system does the opposite. Duh!
It happens, I've seen it happen to me. I got found guilty in a magistrates court, even though the police completely fucked up, and everyone in the court but the magistrates could see that I had to be found not guilty. Not only that, I saw a little ''nod'' go between the head magistrate, and the prosecutor, when they got up to go out and ''consider'' the case.
When they came back and said guilty, you could hear amazed whispering go round the court, and my solicitor said ''you have to appeal this straight away, it's ridiculous''.
And I did appeal it, and it was thrown out before my defence had said a word.
That's what you get with magistrates, or professional full time jurors. They get cosy with the police and prosecutors. That's why proper juries are better.