Juror Case Study

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Factors of Improper Juror Conduct In relation to this issue, a research had been conducted by the UCL Jury project, as part of the 2010 study Are Juries Fair? The research showed that problems such as this arise because a small minority of jurors does not follow the rules on juror internet use. Most jurors feel that they needed more information about how they should be conducting deliberations, and many jurors are uncertain or do not know what to do if something improper happens during the trial. There are some factors of improper juror conduct occurred: jurors do not understand that they should not search for information from internet or elsewhere about the case they are hearing on during the trial; jurors do not know that they should not find such information and share it with other jurors; and even if other jurors know this behaviour is wrong, they do not know what to do to ensure that any verdict they return is fair. Why the jury would choose to use the internet during the deliberation when they are told they are not allowed to? Jurors definitely think that they are trying their best to do their job by doing their own research. Sometimes they do not understand the meaning of terms or information about the jury service so they look up from internet to clear their doubts. Sometimes the juror has no basic knowledge about that particular case they are hearing on, so they discuss it with their friends to make sure their decision is right. A research conducted with juries at Crown Court in 2012-13 showed that almost three-quarters of jurors do understand the contempt rule in relation to how the internet can and cannot be used when they are serving on a trial whereas almost a quarter of jurors are clearly confused about the rule on... ... middle of paper ... ...defendant will be convicted or acquitted, not on the evidence, but on unchallenged and untested material discovered by the juror.” Another example is R v Karakaya, after the jury had delivered their verdict, some downloaded documents from the internet were discovered by the jury bailiff in the retiring room. The appellant appealed against his convictions on the ground that the introduction of extraneous materials into the jury room, once the jury had begun to deliberate, constituted an irregularity. The Court of Appeal held that downloading the internet material breached the fundamental rule that no evidence was to be introduced after the jury had retired. The materials not only impact on the decisions, it also might have undermined the confidence of the jury in fairness of the summing up and the accuracy of the judge’s direction in law. Therefore, the conviction

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