[Courts and Criminals by Arthur Train]@TWC D-Link book
Courts and Criminals

CHAPTER IX
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We clipped the wings of the prosecutor and allowed him less latitude of expression than an English judge.

Then we gazed on the work of our intellects and said it was good.

If an ignorant jury acquitted a murderer under the eyes of a gagged and helpless judge, we said that it was all right and that it was better that ninety-nine guilty men should escape than that one innocent man should be convicted.
Yes, better for whom?
If another murderer, about whose guilt the highest court in one of the States said there was no possible doubt, secured three new trials and was finally acquitted on the fourth, it merely demonstrated how perfectly we safeguarded the rights of the individual.
The result is that we have unnecessarily fettered ourselves, have furnished a multitude of technical avenues of escape to wrong-doers, and have created a popular contempt for courts of justice, which shows itself in the sentimental and careless verdicts of juries, in a lack of public spirit, and in an indisposition to prosecute wrong-doers.

In addition, the impression sought to be conveyed by the yellow press that our judiciary is corrupt and that money can buy anything--even justice--leads the jury in many cases to feel that their presence is merely a formal concession to an archaic procedure and that their oaths have no real significance.
The community, the "People," have a sufficiently hard task to secure justice at any criminal trial.

On the one hand is the abstract proposition that the law has been violated, on the other sits a human being, ofttimes contrite, always an object of pity.


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