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12 Panel 1 (1934)

handle is hein.journals/panelmbu12 and id is 1 raw text is: To increase the efficiency of the Grand jury Systen

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PANbL

A Publication Devoted to the Exchange of Views of Public Oficials and Citizens in the Effort to Prevent Crime
and Secure the True Administration of Justice
PUBLISHED BY THE
ASSOCIATION OF GRAND JURORS OF NEW YORK COUNTY
The contributions and letters in The Panel are either credited to their authors or signed with the names or initials of their
writers and the Editor assumes no responsibility for the opinions contained therein beyond expressing the views that the
subjects they treat of are worthy of the attention of Grand Jurors.
VOL. 12                                  JANUARY-FEBRUARY, 1934                                             NO. 1
WORKING PROGRAM FOR IMPROVING CRIMINAL LAW AND PROCEDURE
OFFERED BY ASSOCIATION OF GRAND JURORS AND THE PANEL
By ROBERT APPLETON
President, Association of Grand Jurors of New York County

Lynchings are primarily due to loss of
faith in the certainty and celerity of the
criminal law and procedure.
Strengthening criminal law and expedit-
ing procedure are the best means for pre-
venting lynchings and form, next to re-
lief from the economic depression, the
most important problem confronting the
people of the United States.
Defects in the criminal law and delays
in procedure which all too often allow an
offender backed by gangster terrorists, by
political influence or by wealth to escape
the consequences of a serious criminal
act when obviously guilty, or to have
punishment deferred until its deterrent
effect upon others is lost, stimulate pre-
meditated crime, endanger the lives and
property of every person in the commu-
nity and provide the basic cause for lynch-
ings or private vengeance.
No progress is possible in strengthen-
ing the criminal law and in expediting
procedure unless lay and legal organiza-
tions and newspapers have definite pro-
grams of concrete proposals to urge upon
legislators and to put forward as major
political issues in elections to State Legis-
latures and to Congress.
Having learned that from experience,
the Association of Grand Jurors of New
York County, publisher of THE PANEL,
submits herewith a program of thirty-two
points. It was read at the annual meeting
of the Association in the Hotel Astor,
New York City, on December 7, 1933,
was approved on December 14 by the
Board of Directors and was released to
the newspapers of December 22, receiving
extensive notices in news and editorial
columns.
The program does not profess to cover
more than a fraction of the deficiencies in
criminal law and procedure which enable
the guilty to escape, and with every such
escape incite weak characters to crime.

Fifteen of the proposals or recommen-
dations, constitute the program of the
Association of Grand Jurors of New
York County before the annual session of
the New York Legislature which opened
on January 3, 1934, and before subse-
quent sessions.
Twelve of the proposals or recommen-
dations are general, applicable in many
States, including New York, and to a
certain extent in the Federal jurisdiction.
Five of the recommendations are for
action by Congress.
All of the fifteen recommendations to
the New York Legislature could be sub-
mitted with equal force to the Legisla-
tures of some States. A few of them
have been met in some States. Those
which have not been met in other juris-
dictions should be as carefully considered
in other States as if not segregated in
the New York program of the Associa-
tion of Grand Jurors of New York
County.
The need for such a definite program
of concrete proposals was demonstrated
after the publication in the November-
December, 1933, issue of THE PANEL
of an article entitled, Twenty Proposals
for Improving Criminal Law and Pro-
cedure, by Thomas S. Rice, LL.B., asso-
ciate editor of THE PANEL, nationally
known newspaper man and criminologist
who served as a Governor's appointee on
the statutory Crime Commission of New
York State from 1926 to 1931. Mr. Rice
had first submitted the proposals to
Chairman Royal S. Copeland of the U. S.
Sub-Committee on Racketeering as a wit-
ness on August 15, 1933, in New York City.
Several recommendations in that article,
of which the present thirty-two point pro-
gram of the Association is an enlarge-
ment, have been adopted in the annual
report of U. S. Attorney General Homer
S. Cummings, published on January 5,

1934. Others will appear in the report
of Robert Daru, of the New York Bar,
volunteer counsel to the U. S. Subcom-
mittee on Racketeering, composed of
Senator Royal S. Copeland, New York,
Chairman, and Senators Arthur H. Van-
denberg, Michigan, and Louis Murphy,
Iowa.
The program is as follows:
PROGRAM OF ASSOCIATION
OF GRAND JURORS OF NEW
YORK COUNTY BEFORE THE
NEW YORK LEGISLATURE OF
1934.
1. Simplify perjury prosecutions but do
not make perjury a misdemeanor.
2. Pass a false swearing law which
would make false swearing a misdemeanor,
to be joined, if advisable, as a second count
in a perjury indictment or to be prosecuted
as an independent offense.
3. Alibi Defense Law. Compel accused
intending to offer an alibi defense to present
to the prosecutor a bill of particulars of the
alibi defense five days before trial as in
Michigan, or three days before trial, as in
Ohio, in both of which States the law has
been highly effective in preventing perjured
alibis and has wrought no injustice.
4. Simplify prosecutions of receivers of.
sto!en goods.
5. Deny bail to accused persons caught
with strong prima facie cases against them
and having previous convictions of serious
offenses.
6. Give defendant in criminal case right
to waive jury trial, as Canada and some
States of the Union, notably Maryland, do
with satisfactory results.
7. Allow each side to impeach its own
witness.
8. Reduce number of mandatory jury
exemptions.
9. Reduce number of peremptory jury
challenges.

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