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20 Harv. J. L. & Pub. Pol'y 489 (1996-1997)
Making Juries Better Factfinders

handle is hein.journals/hjlpp20 and id is 503 raw text is: MAKING JURIES BETTER FACTFINDERS
DANIEL P. COLLINS*
Tocqueville once commented that the jury was, above all, a
political institution.' That belief has, to a large degree been
part of the conventional wisdom about juries. They are
democracy in action. Indeed, those commenting on the history
of the jury have tended to emphasize the trials in which the jury
acted politically by rendering a just verdict despite the law and
despite the evidence of guilt. Every high school student learns,
for example, about the trial of John Peter Zenger, the 18th-
century New York publisher who was acquitted of seditious libel
by a nullifying jury that ignored the judge's instructions. There
have been many other examples throughout American history-
for example, cases involving fugitive slaves and anti-Vietnam
War protesters.2
My view is quite different. As I see it, the most important
reason for preserving trial by jury in criminal cases is not to
promote      democracy      or    to   encourage      appropriate
nullifications; rather, the reason is to promote accurate
determinations of guilt. It might be argued that juries are not
well able to produce accurate decisions. But a look back at
history-around the time the Constitution was adopted-will
show that the Framers' belief in the accuracy of jury
decisionmaking was one of the primary reasons given for
protecting the right to ajury trial.
* Associate, Munger, Tolles & Olson, Los Angeles, California. This article is a revision
and extension of the remarks I made at the 1996 Federalist Society Symposium. At the
time of the Symposium in February 1996, 1 was an Assistant U.S. Attorney for the Central
District of California. However, the views expressed herein are solely my own and do not
represent the views of the U.S. Department ofJustice or any other federal agency, nor
do these remarks represent the views of my current employer.
1. ALEXIS DE TOCQUEVILLE, 1 DEMOCRACYIN AMERICA 283 (Phillips Bradley ed., Alfred
A. Knopf 1945).
2. See, e.g., Paul Butler, Racially Based Juy Nullification: Black Power in the CriminalJustice
System, 105 YALE L. J. 677, 703 (describing abolitionist jury nullification); David N.
Dorfman & Chris K. Ii ima, Fictions, Fault, and Forgiveness: Jury Nullifcation in a New
Context, 28 U. MICH. J.L. REFORM 861, 876-77 (1995) (discussing to jury nullification in
cases involving prosecutions of Viemam War protesters and resisters).

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