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25 Panel 1 (1956)

handle is hein.journals/panelmbu25 and id is 1 raw text is: THE. PANEL
To Increase the effectiveness of the Grand Jury System
PUBLISHED BY
GRAND JURY ASSOCIATION NEW YORK COUNTY FUND CORPORATION
VOL. 25                                JANUARY, 1956                                   NO. 1

Hits Resubmission
of Charge to
Second Jury
Justice Gavagan Dismisses
Indictment, Frees Prisoner
By MANUEL LEE ROBBINS,
Association Counsel
Recently a prisoner in the City
Prison sought his release on the
ground that the charge against
him had been invalidly presented
to a second grand jury after a
prior grand jury had dismissed it,
While the validity of his deten-
tion could have been tested in the
Court of General Sessions, the
Supreme Court also had jurisdic-
tion since its writ of habeas corpus
inquires into the regularity of all
detentions or imprisonments. Ap-
parently because the Court of
General Sessions in a number of
precedent decisions had already
ruled against the prisoner's con-
tentions, he brought an action of
habeas corpus in the Supreme
Court and the matter ultimately
came on before Justice Joseph A.
Gavagan who, in the course of his
opinion, had to review the deci-
sion of Judge Abraham N. Geller,
of the Court of General Sessions,
who had refused to release the
prisoner.
Judge's Order
The facts of the case were not
in dispute. The charge against the
prisoner had originally been dis-
missed by the grand jury which
heard the matter and instead of
approving the filing of the dismis-
sal, Judge Geller ordered it re-
submitted to another grand jury
without any application on the
part of the District Attorney and
without any certification by the
latter that there was new evidence
at hand. The order provided that
the direction of the court for re-
submission be not exhibited to
the second grand jury.
(Continued on page 9)

DUAL GRAND JURY ROLE 1S
STRESSED IN HOCAN REPORT
Grand Jury Indicts 5 in Track Fix
. . . Accused of $100,000 Fur Theft
by Grand Jury. . . . Grand Jurors
Charge Official Lied on Graft.. .
Newspaper headlines like these get
considerable notice and help spread the
idea that a grand jury is a body that
confines itself to bringing in criminal
charges against various defendants. In
the popular mind, it is almost strictly
an accusing body.
The true picture, of course. is far
from that. District Attorney Frank S.
Hogan of New York County has out-
lined most successfully the grand jury's  HON. FRANK S. HOGAN
real function in his report describing the activities of his office
in the last six years.
The grand jury's role is a dual one-accuser and defender.
The grand jury . . . not only guards the liberties of the in-
dividual, the report notes, It also protects his reputation. It
has been described as 'the great bulwark of the innocent
(Continued on page 5)
Grand Jurors Given
18-Month 'Breather'
The combined efforts of the County Jury Board,
Deputy County Clerk James McGurrin and this
Association have achieved success in the long cam-
paign to increase the number of men and women on
the New York County Grand Jury Panel and thus
pave the way for establishment of a reasonable limit
to the amount of time these civic-minded persons
must devote to jury service.
For the first time, the New York County Jury Board
has formally set such a limit. Letters from County
Clerk Archibald R. Watson, secretary of the board,
inform 1956 Panel members that pursuant to Court
Rule, Grand Jurors who have heretofore served as
such will not again be called for service until the ex-
piration of 18 months from the date when they last
served.
The 18-month breather is the result of a 60 per-
cent increase in the Grand Jury Panel since 1949.
The Association will continue its opposition to a
State bill that would allow the Federal Court to call
persons for grand or trial jury service immediately
after they finish their duties on county grand juries.
The Association has helped beat this bill three times.

Bleownell Thanks Assn.
For Stand Against
Jury 'Tapping'
Grand .T)   Group Pushing
Broad Legislative Program
Our U. S. Attorney General,
Herbert Brownell, Jr., has con-
veyed his thanks to the Grand
Jury Association of New York
County for its support of his ef-
forts to outlaw jury tapping.
Following the disclosure that a
microphone had been concealed
in a Wichita, Kansas Federal
Jury room and recordings of sup-
posedly secret jury deliberations
had been made in connection with
a University of Chicago jury
study project, Mr. Brownell de-
clared he would ask Congress for
a law to prohibit any future in
trusions on Federal jury privacy.
Proposed Amendment
The Grand Jury Associatin
picked up the ball in this state.
It is pressing for action by the
Legislature to ban jury tapping
in the state's judicial establish-
ment Proposed for adoption by
the 1956 session is this Associa-
tion-written amendment to Sec-
tion 686 of the Judiciary Law:
Any person who directly or
indirectly operates or causes to
be operated any device or in-
strument by which the secret
deliberations of any jury in a
jury room are recorded, or who
unlawfully eavesdrops such de-
liberations for the purpose of
publishing or recording them or
who publishes or causes to be
published in any form or man-
ner whatsoever any recording
of such secret deliberations,
shall be guilty of a felony.
When the jury bugging story
broke, the Association quickly
(Continued on Page 10)

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