At Sentencing Law and Policy, Doug Berman notes a study questioning why jury verdicts in criminal cases are rendered as general, as opposed to special. When the judge orders the defendant to rise to hear the jury’s verdict, and the lawyer stands as well as the client should never stand alone, they suffer the longest, most intense minutes in a criminal case. Everything up to that point is foreplay. This is the climax. You stand there, frozen, awaiting the jury foreman to utter the words “not guilty.’
But why only the ultimate conclusion and not a finding as to each element of the offense? Continue reading
