The Prisoner At the Bar; Sidelights On the Administration of Criminal Justice

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Wickes, Peo. vs. Wooten, Peo. vs. Rothschild, Peo. vs.
Kanter, Peo. vs. Summerfield, Peo. vs. Sam Parks, Peo. vs. Weinseimer, Peo. vs. Burnham, Peo. vs. Gillette, Peo. vs. H. Huffman Browne.
THE TRIAL OF FELONIES 173 it, even thougL it be composed of retail cigar and newspaper dealers and small tailors from the East Side, more safely and with a better expecta- tion of a just verdict than before a "special" panel of bankers and architects with whom he is unfa- miliar. The ordinary panel at its d
...aily task during the last two weeks of every term illustrates the jury system at its best. Cases moved at the beginning of the term usually result in acquittals. Occasion- ally a jury will open a term with a rather unexpected conviction, but it takes three or four days before they realize that a reasonable doubt is not meant to include "a mere guess or conjecture that the defend- ant may, after all, be innocent. ' ' Wily criminal prac- titioners seek if possible to have their cases put on the calendars at the opening of a term, and to secure adjournments at the end of the term in order that they may go over to the beginning of the next.

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