SmarterthanYou
rebel
Double Jeopardy clause deleted from constitution
This case is about a technicality fault of the trial judge to enter the verdict as determined by the jury, unanimously, that the defendant was 'not guilty' of committing murder. Because the trial judge failed to do so, means that he can now be tried again for the same crime.
The Supreme Court ruled that Arkansas is not barred by the Constitution’s double jeopardy clause from retrying a man for murder even though the first jury had announced it was unanimously against the charge.
The Founders were well familiar with the habit of British Kings of repeated trials for the same offense. The British Parliament had established different courts with concurrent jurisdiction. Thus, an acquittal before the “Queen’s Bench” in London did not bar a trial for the same offense before the “Admiralty Court” in Boston. It was against this backdrop that the bar on double jeopardy was written into the Fifth Amendment. It’s very purpose was to prevent the very event that the Court has permitted today.
The Arkansas trial judge must have been a dope or a fool or a prosecutor in black robes. Once the jury foreperson stated that the jury unanimously rejected the capital murder charge, it was the judge’s affirmative duty to enter a verdict of not guilty formally on the record (orally) and then eventually, but quickly, in writing. His failure to do that is the hook in which the Supreme Court hung its hat for this profoundly unconstitutional, anti-historical, Stalinesque decision. As a matter of law, the defendant was acquitted of capital murder the moment the jury foreperson announced the jury’s verdict, whether the verdict was properly recorded or not.
This case is about a technicality fault of the trial judge to enter the verdict as determined by the jury, unanimously, that the defendant was 'not guilty' of committing murder. Because the trial judge failed to do so, means that he can now be tried again for the same crime.