The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

Jury still out on verdict?

Research into how Scottish juries reach decisions, including their use of the not proven verdict, will be carried out over the next two years in a major new study. reports Michael Alexander

- Malexander@thecourier.co.uk

It is the system that, unlike most of the world’s legal systems, has three possible verdicts in criminal cases: guilty, not guilty and not proven. But could Scotland’s controvers­ial not proven verdict be on borrowed time? The possibilit­y has been raised after it was announced that a “groundbrea­king” study into how juries come to decisions – including their use of the not proven verdict – is to be carried out in Scotland.

The research has been described as the first of its kind in Scotland and will take place over the next two years. The study will involve members of the public sitting on “mock juries” and will examine the size of juries and their decision-making processes.

It will also consider an unusual aspect of Scots law. Jurors have three possible verdicts to choose from in criminal cases in Scotland: guilty, not guilty and not proven.

Justice Secretary Michael Matheson announced that the team will be headed by market research company Ipsos Mori, working with Professor James Chalmers and Professor Fiona Leverick, of Glasgow University, and Professor Vanessa Munro, of Warwick University.

Mr Matheson said: “This important research is a direct result of Lord Bonomy’s post-corroborat­ion safeguards review in which he recommende­d that research should be carried out to ensure that any changes to our jury system are made only on a fully-informed basis, including the impact having a three-verdict system has on decision making.

“The Ipsos Mori team will work in collaborat­ion with three respected academics and will use case simulation­s rather than real jurors. Their findings will help inform any future decisions that may be taken in relation to potential reforms of our criminal justice system.”

Last year Holyrood’s justice committee concluded that Scotland’s not proven verdict was on “borrowed time” and may not serve any useful purpose. In last year’s programme for government, the Scottish Government said it wanted to commission “independen­t jury research to consider the dynamics of decision-making by juries, including the current jury majority and three-verdict system, helping to inform future proposals for the reform of the criminal justice system”.

Responding to the plans, Douglas Thomson, of the Law Society’s Criminal Law Committee, said the not proven verdict was the “logical” one to keep in criminal cases and there was an argument for dropping not guilty.

He said that if the Crown failed to prove a case, the logical verdict was not proven, rather than not guilty.

The legal implicatio­ns of a not proven verdict are the same as with a not guilty verdict: the accused is acquitted and is innocent in the eyes of the law. Not proven is seen by some as offering additional protection to the accused. But critics argue that it is confusing for juries and the public, can stigmatise an accused person and fail to provide closure for victims.

Freelance court reporter Jamie Beatson has covered thousands of court cases in Tayside and Fife over the years. He said the most contentiou­s case he could remember recently involved an award-winning horse breeder in Fife who walked free from court over a head-on smash that killed a man – despite four eyewitness­es telling a jury she was on the wrong side of the road at the time of the collision.

A jury of 10 men and four women took one and a half hours to return a not proven verdict by majority, and the accused was able to walk free from the dock.

Mr Beatson said: “Juries are always made very well aware that not guilty and not proven have the same effect – acquittal – but there is always the perception that not proven means something akin to there being no smoke without fire.

“Certainly, in this case, it appeared the Crown had laid out a compelling case for a conviction. The verdict of acquittal was something of a surprise but perhaps it is hard for a jury to convict a woman who was clearly an otherwise respectabl­e member of society.

“But if you take away not proven, does that necessaril­y mean a guilty verdict is more likely? Probably not.

“If a jury believes there’s not enough evidence to find an accused guilty, the only possible verdict is one of acquittal.

“Removing the not proven option doesn’t remedy a deficiency in a Crown case or in the quality of the evidence led.”

Scottish juries were historical­ly able to return only proven or not proven verdicts A third verdict of not guilty was introduced in the 1700s and became more commonly used than not proven. However, the option of returning a verdict of not proven was never removed.

In more recent years, the general perception has been that a “not proven” verdict suggests a sheriff or jury believes the accused is guilty, but does not have sufficient evidence to convict.

Liam McMonagle, a Fife-based partner with Thorntons Law LLP said: “I tend to agree the verdict is anomalous and undermines the principle of ‘innocent until proven guilty’ by leaving a stigma on an accused where a jury is not persuaded to convict.

“There is a certain logic to it but you can understand why it’s often an unsatisfac­tory outcome for all concerned.

“I think it’s fine for our justice system to be different from other countries if we are satisfied those difference­s are worthwhile. This research will help us decide if the verdict is a useful feature of Scots law or an accident of history that should be dispensed with.”

Last year US lawyer David Rudolf said the not proven verdict would have helped author Michael Peterson who served eight years for the murder of his wife Kathleen before walking free.

She was found dead at the bottom of the stairs in the couple’s North Carolina mansion in 2001.

The lawyer at the centre of America’s notorious Death on the Staircase murder trial said he wished the US had Scotland’s not proven verdict.

Removing the not proven option doesn’t remedy a deficiency in a Crown case

 ??  ?? A two-year study involving members of the public and “respected academics” will look at several areas of Scotland’s judicial system.
A two-year study involving members of the public and “respected academics” will look at several areas of Scotland’s judicial system.

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