PSYCH 3CC3 Lecture Notes - Lecture 6: Penrod, Physical Attractiveness, Embezzlement

76 views8 pages
Jury Psychology
Lecture 6
Introduction
Jury selection occurs mostly in the US and w/ civil trials. The defence and prosecution
determines which jurors should be accepted/rejected from the jury pool
o Jury consulting firms do this. Usually hired by defendants (especially big
companies) if they can afford it. Firms recommend how evidence should be
presented to sway jury in their favour
Pre-trail publicity also mostly in the US b/c the commonwealth has the publicity ban
Jury decision-making how jurors put together evidence they received and coming to a
conclusion of guilt/innocence
Jury instructions how well they’re understood and how comprehension can be
improved
Jury Research Methods
Mock juries fake juries that are presented w/ trial evidence & all elements of a real
case, asked to make a verdict about the defendant. Reasoning is recorded to variables are
changed to see how it affects verdict
Shadow juries done exclusively by jury consulting firms. Individuals from community
are seated in trial with a real case and are interviewed afterwards so the firm can adjust
their case to meet the needs of the real jury
Community surveys also exclusive to jury consulting firms. Members of the
community who are eligible for jury duty are surveyed to see which sides they would
support
Juror Demographics & Verdicts
A juror’s own demographics such as socioeconomic status, education, age, gender,
race/ethnicity, and religion play no role in biasing them towards a verdict
Some studies find no difference while others show it affects the verdict
positively/negatively
There may be bias based on the suspect’s demographics
Juror Personality & Verdicts
Authoritarianism identified in 1940s, similar to fascism (Nazi mindset). They believe in
strong leadership, there are winners/losers/weak/strong, obedience & respect for authority
is the most important virtues children should learn, discipline, social problems solved by
eliminating immoral people, etc.
o Two scales used to assess authoritarianism:
F-Scale given fascist statements and asked to rate how much they
agree/disagree w/ them
RWA Scale similarly has statements that are rated
o Verdicts
More ready to convict they believe strongly in the accuracy of their
dominant leaders (police) if the police tried them to be guilty, they have to
be guilty
find more resources at oneclass.com
find more resources at oneclass.com
Unlock document

This preview shows pages 1-3 of the document.
Unlock all 8 pages and 3 million more documents.

Already have an account? Log in
Better recall of prosecution than defence evidence immediately biased
towards prosecution
Recommend longer sentences
More punitive toward low-status defendants the poor & weak
Effect small these effects of authoritarianism are larger in real juries than
in mock juries
o Juror Bias Scale used to assess bias in jurors. 22 statements, looks at 2 aspects:
Probability of commission probability they see an individual as being
guilty before evidence is presented. Jurors agreeing w/ statements are high
on the scale
Ex. “A suspect who runs from police most probably committed the
crime” “Generally the police only make an arrest when they are
sure who committed crime”
Reasonable doubt should only convict someone if they are guilty beyond
reasonable doubt
Ex. “If majority of evidence, but not all of it, suggest defendant
committed the crime, jury should vote not guilty” this is good b/c
there is reasonable doubt
Dogmatism strong belief in cultural norms. The big difference b/w dogmatism &
authoritarianism is dogmatism is not associated w/ prejudice & discrimination against
outgroups (racial/religious) they believe strongly that the government is always right
o High dogmatism more likely to convict (believes in right-ness of leadership),
more punitive after conviction (stiffer sentence)
o Reasonable effect but not super strong; some studies found this to be true while
others didn’t
Locus of control how life choices are guided
o Internal individuals that believe everyone has personal control of their own life
choices, they are responsible for the consequences (e.g. one’s misfortunes are d/t
the mistakes they make)
Harsher w/ punishment only (not biased in the findings of guilt), view
defendant as more responsible when actions are ambiguous/injuries are
high
No difference compared to external when defendant clearly at fault or
injuries less severe
o External life is controlled by external forces or pressures outside of themselves
(e.g. one’s misfortunates are d/t bad luck)
Just world beliefs
o High JWB believing that people get what’s coming for them & everything
works in direction of justice. Those who are innocent will be cleared, guilty will
be caught. If something bad happens to you, you did something to deserve it
JWB effects stronger in women than men
High JWB less favourable impression of defendant, recommend
harsher punishment, victim held more responsible (especially w/ rape
cases)
Victims of high moral character are less responsible than those of
questionable moral character
find more resources at oneclass.com
find more resources at oneclass.com
Unlock document

This preview shows pages 1-3 of the document.
Unlock all 8 pages and 3 million more documents.

Already have an account? Log in
o Low JWB things could happen even if you don’t deserve it
o Locus of control has to do w/ the person’s choices while just world beliefs has
how the world works (situation)
Pretrial Publicity (PTP)
Info most often leaked by law officers or prosecutors
Imrich et al (1995) 27% of stories in 14 US papers were prejudicial to defendant.
Mostly about the defendant’s character, behaviour, guilt (negative stuff)
Tans & Chafee (1966) found the more negative information mock jurors received prior
to trail, the more likely defendant is found guilty
Kramer, Kerr & Carroll (1990) compared factual PTP and emotional PTP with or
without delay (~12 days) before trial
o Emotional PTP (irrelevant to guilt/innocence) leads to more convictions than
factual PTP
o Time delay b/w hearing PTP and the actual trial reduces effects of factual PTP but
increases effects of emotional PTP
o Instructions to ignore PTP had no effect; jurors still influenced by it
Steblay et al (1999) meta-analysis of 23 PTP studies
o Negative PTP increases probability of conviction
o Effects greater w/ jury pool than student mock jurors students are better at
ignoring effects of PTP compared to general population
o Larger effects w/ real PTP compared to made-up PTP
o Larger effects w/ murder, sexual abuse, drug cases
o Larger effects when trial is delayed after receiving negative PTP (either no
difference or increase impact especially w/ emotional PTP)
Ruva & Guenther (2015) mock jurors given negative or unrelated PTP before viewing
criminal trial. Those exposed to negative PTP more likely to:
o Vote guilty, misremember trail testimony
o Rate defendant as lower in credibility
o Discuss ambiguous trial evidence in pro-prosecution manner
o Include PTP in discussion even though they were instructed to ignore it. It is hard
to get PTP out of your mind
Juror Decision Making
These are the stages juries go through when making a decision
Orientation meets each other for the first time, elects a foreman, discuss procedures,
raise general trial issues, decide how they will reach a decision as a group
o Verdict driven 30% of cases. They start w/ an initial poll to determine how
many think the defendant is guilty vs. innocent. They then argue back & forth to
try to convince each other
Problem: not all evidence gets considered; only those made by jurors
arguing to support their verdict
o Evidence driven 70% of cases. Jury walks through the evidence piece by piece
and weighs value of evidence (how much it says defendant is guilty/innocent)
very thorough in reaching a verdict this way but takes time. Will still involve
arguing back & forth. Poll taken at the end
find more resources at oneclass.com
find more resources at oneclass.com
Unlock document

This preview shows pages 1-3 of the document.
Unlock all 8 pages and 3 million more documents.

Already have an account? Log in

Document Summary

Introduction: jury selection occurs mostly in the us and w/ civil trials. The defence and prosecution determines which jurors should be accepted/rejected from the jury pool: jury consulting firms do this. Usually hired by defendants (especially big companies) if they can afford it. Jury research methods: mock juries fake juries that are presented w/ trial evidence & all elements of a real case, asked to make a verdict about the defendant. Reasoning is recorded to variables are changed to see how it affects verdict: shadow juries done exclusively by jury consulting firms. Members of the community who are eligible for jury duty are surveyed to see which sides they would support. Juror personality & verdicts: authoritarianism identified in 1940s, similar to fascism (nazi mindset). 22 statements, looks at 2 aspects: probability of commission probability they see an individual as being guilty before evidence is presented. Jurors agreeing w/ statements are high on the scale: ex.

Get access

Grade+20% off
$8 USD/m$10 USD/m
Billed $96 USD annually
Grade+
Homework Help
Study Guides
Textbook Solutions
Class Notes
Textbook Notes
Booster Class
40 Verified Answers
Class+
$8 USD/m
Billed $96 USD annually
Class+
Homework Help
Study Guides
Textbook Solutions
Class Notes
Textbook Notes
Booster Class
30 Verified Answers

Related Documents