Forensics Journal - Stevenson University 2010 | Page 20

STEVENSON UNIVERSITY The Future of the American Petit Jury System A Look at the Problems in the American Jury System and the Use of Professional Juries Lauren Maxwell Within the American judicial system, justice is intended to be the single most important and steadfast principle, and it is expected to withstand the pressure of all human ills and evils. Within that structure of justice, criminal defendants are constitutionally guaranteed the right to have a panel of their “peers” determine their innocence or guilt with regard to the commission of a crime. Unfortunately, the number of innocent people who have wrongly been convicted under the current system is alarming; instead of the members of a jury acting as the final safeguard to ensure that an innocent person’s freedom is not erroneously taken away, a jury’s decision is often the final step in guaranteeing that someone who has wrongly been accused of a crime has essentially lost all ability to prove his innocence. The American petit jury system is broken, and the very people the system is designed to protect are the ones who are paying the price. The time has come for Americans to consider adopting a system of paid, professional jurors in order to ensure that the fairness and liberties guaranteed to all citizens are distributed and applied as equally as possible. without stating the cause for dismissal. In Batson v. Kentucky, the United States Supreme Court handed down a decision that an attorney could not use peremptory challenges to dismiss jurors solely on the basis of race (476 U.S. 79 (1986)). Since an attorney need not state the reason for a peremptory challenge, this standard is difficult to uphold. The Batson decision has made the “science” of jury selection even more imperfect, and has caused race to be seen more as a card to play within the system than simply the human characteristic of skin color. With prosecutors now depending on more sophisticated types of evidence—such as deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA), physics-based blood spatter analysis and forensics, computer-based crime scene re-enactments, and other complicated advances in science and biology—to obtain convictions, the need for jurors to be able to separate, analyze, and arrive at accurate conclusions based on the evidence presented at trial is becoming arguably more demanding and difficult for the lay juror. DNA has essentially replaced the fingerprint as the primary type of evidence that is used to prove guilt beyond a reasonable doubt, and its consistent appearance in the media has considerably heightened the public’s expectation of its appearance at trials. This is not necessarily a bad thing, as DNA evidence helps to reduce the number of innocent people who are convicted by witn \