A Book from the Library of Defense
Namespaces
Variants
Actions

Library Collections

Webinars & Podcasts
Motions
Disclaimer

Revisited

From OCDLA Library of Defense
< Blog:Main(Difference between revisions)
Jump to: navigation, search
This wikilog article is a draft, it was not published yet.

by: Ryan • May 9, 2012 • no comments

(Importing text file)
m (Text replace - "| Ryan }}" to "| Ryan:Ryan Scott }}")
 
Line 2: Line 2:
  
 
As I have mentioned before, special jury instructions -- if they are accurate -- that the judge declines to give or follow (whether jury or bench trial) puts the defendant in a much more defense-favorable posture on appeal than a denied MJOA. When should you ask for a special jury instruction? Every time, but especially when guilt or innocence depends on an interpretation of a particular word or phrase. See the discussion [https://libraryofdefense.org/Ambiguity_and_Jury_Instructions here.]
 
As I have mentioned before, special jury instructions -- if they are accurate -- that the judge declines to give or follow (whether jury or bench trial) puts the defendant in a much more defense-favorable posture on appeal than a denied MJOA. When should you ask for a special jury instruction? Every time, but especially when guilt or innocence depends on an interpretation of a particular word or phrase. See the discussion [https://libraryofdefense.org/Ambiguity_and_Jury_Instructions here.]
{{wl-publish: 2012-05-09 20:22:04 -0700 | Ryan }}
+
{{wl-publish: 2012-05-09 20:22:04 -0700 | Ryan:Ryan Scott }}

Latest revision as of 12:09, August 10, 2013

For a more complete explanation and discussion of this issue, go to Submitting Jury Instructions in a Bench Trial . In the meantime, today's opinion in State v. Massey is a good reminder why you should get the judge on the record adopting or rejecting jury instructions, even in a bench trial. Though there was enough evidence to survive MJOA, the judge's erroneous adoption of the Miles instruction in a bench trial resulted in the conviction being reversed.

As I have mentioned before, special jury instructions -- if they are accurate -- that the judge declines to give or follow (whether jury or bench trial) puts the defendant in a much more defense-favorable posture on appeal than a denied MJOA. When should you ask for a special jury instruction? Every time, but especially when guilt or innocence depends on an interpretation of a particular word or phrase. See the discussion here.