EmperorChrostas the Cruel wrote:Exactly WHAT prevents the "professional jury" from becoming one more branch of the government? (A difference, that makes no difference, IS no difference)
Nothing. So what? Are you saying that the entire government and all of its branches should be assumed to conspire against a defendant? That's fucking ridiculous.
There was a VERY good reason the jury system was started.
Road to hell. Good intentions.
The system assumed ALL called would serve, exept for real hardluck cases, like caregivers for invalids, and equaly important excuses. The random selection factor makes for the least bias.
Too bad the selection is not random then. Kind of blows your argument out of the water, doesn't it?
Also, profesional jurists would become a political force in and of themselves. The selection process would be subject to the same gerrymandering that voting is done by. This goes to the same reasoning why we don't have a selection process for screening voters for education.
Oh right, and there's no selection process now, right?
No matter how well meaning the idea, and how many upsides, the downsides are always worse. (State controle over one more citizen's check on government power."
Prove this conjecture.
Then there is the empathy factor. Some profesional jurist is unlikely to understand the real world pressures on the lower half of the income spectrum.
Empathy is utterly irrelevant to the question of whether somebody committed a crime. It does, however, make itself a huge factor in court cases anyway; this is not a good thing.
Case and point, do you want to be tried in a case of what you consider self defence, but the state thinks is murder, by folk who live in a gated community? To live in the vulnerable position of apartment dweller in the projects or downtown is to be missing a HUGE set of options for avoiding trouble. Guess what, you HAVE to shop at the store around the corner, (The one where that crazy bastard who claims "This is MY corner! You need to pay some 'taxes' to use MY corner!) because to go farther on foot only increases the risk. (same thing on some OTHER corners too)
When confronted, you need only convince ONE person you felt in danger of you life, and this is much easier if the jury has to deal with this type of person too.
Ah yes, because middle-class people cannot comprehend the concept of being afraid of an armed man
A professional jury would have to pay enough to be competative with OTHER jobs, and the "living wage" standard now so prevalent with cities, that the jurist wouldn't have to live with the poor people, and thus, lose the empathy/understanding that is the WHOLE PERPOSE of jury by your peers.
Professional jurors would be better off, and live in better neighborhoods, loosing the valuable perspective that made then important.
See above.
They would become ONE MORE class of overpaid, arrogant, self important public servants, with unions, strikes and everthing else bad with government.
Ah yes, better to have an ignorant, uneducated, lawyer-selected class of self-important temporary public servants. As for unions and strikes, they can simply be outlawed by legislation, over which they have no say. That's what they do with the police.
Think of their strike potential. We have a law in our state, called the speedy trial law, which states, if you do not waive your right to a speedy trial, and you are not brought to a trial in 30 days, the state LOSES it's case by default.
One week into this strike, and criminals start being declared innocent by defalt.
This actualy HAPPENED in LA, caused by a budget crisis. They were letting convicted criminals go because they couldn't afford the cost of housing them.
See above.
Also, where is the money to pay for these jurists coming from? Out of the police's budget? DA's budget? PD's budget? Court's budget?
More tax money. Or don't you realize that their lost time and wages are
already being taken out of the economy?