Posted on 09/03/2015 4:41:00 PM PDT by Coleus
A state appeals court voiced deep concerns Monday about racial profiling during criminal trials in New Jersey and directed judges in lower courts to instantly remove any jurors who display conscious or subconscious racist beliefs. The directive stems from a case that resulted in the convictions of two black men imprisoned in 2012 for carjacking a luxury sedan. At their trial, one juror had revealed a subliminal and deeply-rooted, latent racial bias against African-Americans, said the appeals panel, which overturned the verdict and ordered new court proceedings for both men.
Racial bias is repugnant to any notion of fairness or impartiality; it is the antithesis of justice under the law, Judge Jose L. Fuentes wrote in an impassioned, 47-page decision issued Monday. The ruling, which legal experts said affirmed minority residents constitutional right to a fair trial, is binding on all New Jersey trial courts. Many openly doubt whether the American system of criminal justice system is infected with racism, said Lawrence S. Lustberg, a lawyer at the Gibbons firm and past president of the Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers of New Jersey. Judge Fuentes uniquely stirring language sends an appropriately strong message: Judges should do everything they possibly can to assure that no verdict is the result of racial prejudice, even if that prejudice is more subtle than overt.
Rashon Brown, 25, and Malik Q. Smith, 24, were both sentenced to prison terms of more than 20 years for carjacking a brand-new Infiniti from a woman in Union County in 2008. They were also convicted of carrying unlicensed firearms and resisting arrest, among other charges.
One of the jurors, who is not named but is described in court papers as an elderly woman, became concerned as she headed to the courthouse for the second day of jury deliberations. She reported seeing two dark black fellas emerging from a park near her home at 7 a.m., what she described as an unusual sight. It brought on fears that the two black defendants might retaliate against her, she told the trial judge, Joseph P. Donohue, during a private conference in his chambers.
I was concerned about my well-being, the juror told the judge. She continued: Its a case that theyre both black, and Im on the case. And I said, gee, thats funny, you know. I wasnt concerned about it when I first went on the case, but I was wondering if they would stalk you if theyre found guilty, whatever, you know, if they would go after any of the jurors. Donohue allowed the juror to remain on the case, as well as several other members of the jury who had spoken with Donohue about her concerns. Another juror had remarked to the judge that the elderly woman lived in an area that was mostly Italian and white people she was kind of nervous.
But writing for the appeals court, Fuentes said the judge should have dismissed the juror on the spot and then questioned other members of the jury as to whether they could still render a fair verdict. Instead, Donohue seemed to excuse the womans remarks, the appeals court said. In her own words, she revealed how she immediately construed the presence of two African-American men in her all-white neighborhood as a menacing sign of possible retaliation by defendants, merely because they were also African-American men, Fuentes wrote. Even more disturbing, however, is the trial judges reaction to [her] revelations. The judge was not only oblivious to the jurors unmistakable racial bias, but he actually endorsed the jurors misguided apprehensions.
When an attorney for Brown asked that two of the jurors be replaced for their remarks, Donohue denied the request and said, We expect to some extent people have developed certain prejudices, some fixed ways of thinking. Fuentes also mentioned New Jerseys checkered history with racial profiling. The state police were under federal monitoring for 10 years, until 2009, after showing a pattern of disproportionately stopping minorities on the states highways.
The essence of racial profiling is to associate criminality or wrongdoing as an aspect of a persons race or ethnic background, he wrote. We have unequivocally condemned this specious and hateful practice when it was used by the law enforcement community in this state to target minority motorists as they traveled our highways. We must adopt the same policy of zero tolerance when a version of such an odious concept contaminates, to any degree, the jurys deliberative process.
Alexander Shalom, senior staff attorney at the American Civil Liberties Union of New Jersey, welcomed the ruling. Everyone who is a part of the criminal justice system from police officers and prosecutors to judges and jurors must confront and address conscious and unconscious biases that have plagued our criminal justice process for too long, Shalom said. Judge Amy OConnor joined Fuentess decision. Judge Victor Ashrafi did not join, but he issued a one-paragraph opinion concurring in the result and also voted to overturn Brown and Smiths convictions. During deliberations, a juror expressed to other jurors and the judge an unjustified fear of retaliation by defendants because of an event unconnected to the trial and an invidious racial stereotype she harbored, Ashrafi wrote. The impartiality of the jury was thus tainted. Public defenders for Brown and Smith declined to comment. The Union County Prosecutors Office may ask the state Supreme Court to review the case. A spokesman there declined to comment.
Why didn’t this get brought up in the OJ trial?
Good luck screening for “subconscious racist beliefs”
The lady juror had the good sense to tell the judge she was being stalked — and the Court of Appeals slams her for it.
More crap and you should see the black racist jurors in inner cities who let black defendants off the hook. They are never held to account.
The court in the OJ case did everything it could to ensure that the jury included black racists.
Maybe minority drivers get pulled over more because they are bad drivers. Most minorities have an entitlement attitude that makes them think a different standard should apply to them. Speeding, weaving in and out of traffic, running red lights, those things are their way of sticking it to the man, and thus they can do those things with impunity.
How is it possible to prove that nobody on any jury is a subconscious racist?
Walks like a duck....talks like a duck.
Could it be, A duck?
No, they already figured that out. All white people have them. Ergo all whites must be excluded from juries. That’s is where this is going.
The day that the verdict of “Not Guilty” came down for OJ I was listening to talk radio and it was the main discussion.
A black woman called in and said she was glad OJ killed the Nicole and Ron because it was payback for white people killing blacks and this woman was dead serious. The radio host was taken aback as was I and I will never forget it.
Anyone wearing an Obama shirt is out!
You mean the jurors throwing “black power” signs might have been racial.... hhmmm
Judge Jose L. Fuentes. Says it all.
Generally the jury system is defended as a composite of the experiences of jurors applied to the facts of the case. I don’t know how you can ever get a jury that does not bring their life experiences to their deliberations. They do not walk into the jury box with a brain that is a tabula rasa.
Attorneys are charged with ferreting out biases and making sure that the juror can put them aside and give the party a fair trial. Otherwise, they get the juror dismissed from the jury. But the emphasis is on ashing them about putting their biases aside to be fair. Otherwise you would never empanel a jury.
This judge seems to be setting a new and impossible standard for jurors if he thinks that ‘latent’ and “subliminal” biases can be found and eliminated from all jurors.
‘e have unequivocally condemned this specious and hateful practice when it was used by the law enforcement community in this state to target minority motorists as they traveled our highways. ‘
Hoax.
http://www.city-journal.org/html/12_2_the_racial_profiling.html
So if you put a ‘Trump’ sticker on your brief case, you can get out of jury duty? LOL !!!
That dizzy feeling you have is from this country slowly spinning down the toilet!
The real question: Do they get to keep the car? (Oh, and did they kill the old woman?)
Easy Peazy, Japanesey.
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