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2 Crim. L.F. 1 (1990-1991)

handle is hein.journals/crimlfm2 and id is 1 raw text is: Autumn 1990

Acquitting the Guilty: Two Case Studies
on Jury Misgivings and the
Misunderstood Standard of Proof
H. Richard Uviller*
INTRODUCTION
W hile most verdicts in criminal cases are probably true or nearly so,1
jurors occasionally err. Counting, or even estimating, the number of
jury mistakes is virtually impossible, however, since we know of no means
of validating verdicts that is more reliable than the jury trial itself.2 For the
* Professor of Law, Columbia University, New York, New York, U.S.A.; B.A.,
Harvard University 1951; LL.B., Yale University 1953. The author expresses ap-
preciation for helpful comments from Professors Albert Alschuler, Joseph Grano,
Henry Monaghan, and Lloyd Weinreb. Useful work was also contributed by my
student research assistants, Nicholas Connon and Jack Yoskowitz. Research for
this article was supported in part by the Walter E. Meyer Fund.
' I offer a working definition of true and false verdicts infra pp. 3-6. By
nearly true, I mean those verdicts in which the grade or degree of the crime of
which a defendant is convicted does not match the statutory definition of the act
the defendant actually committed. Not infrequently, the jury's processes of ac-
commodation, if not outright misunderstanding, lead it to return a verdict of
guilty that accurately reflects the involvement of the defendant in the crime but
mislabels the crime the defendant's actions constitute-generally by understating
the level of culpability.
2 In some cases, and perhaps increasingly as technology is refined, we have scien-
tific evidence linking a defendant to a crime or clearing the defendant. But even
in those cases we will never be in a position to measure human verdicts against
laboratory results. Forensic science is an element of the traditional trial process,
not an independent means of validation. Some students of the jury process have

1

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