Double jeopardy: the effects of retrial knowledge on juror decisions

Author:

Munro James,Motson Fred,Turner Jim,Frumkin Lara A.,Curley Lee John

Abstract

Purpose Since the passage of the Double Jeopardy (Scotland) Act 2011, mirroring changes in other jurisdictions, a person who has been acquitted in Scotland can, under certain circumstances, be retried for that offence. Jurors could have knowledge of the previous acquittal verdict (whether not guilty or not proven) through media sources, potentially biasing the new jury in their decision-making. The purpose of this study is to detemine the influence of knowing a trial is a retrial, on conviction rates. Design/methodology/approach The current study invited 253 participants to give a verdict to a mock murder trial after either receiving pretrial information about the original verdict or no information about the case being a retrial. Findings Significantly more acquittal verdicts were given when the participants were told that it was a retrial, compared to the control condition, irrespective of whether the prior verdict was not guilty or not proven. Originality/value Findings are discussed in light of jurors’ knowledge of legal concepts and acquittal verdicts and the increasing exposure of the general Scottish public to the not-proven verdict due to increased media coverage.

Publisher

Emerald

Reference37 articles.

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4. Crown Prosecution Service (2022), “Assessing the public interest in cases affecting the media”, available at: www.cps.gov.uk/legal-guidance/media-assessing-public-interest-cases-affecting-media (accessed 5 May 2023).

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