Page 4-Friday, July 14, 1978-The Michigan Daily ,michigan DAILY Eighty-eight Years of Editorial Freedom 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, M. 48109 Vol. LXXXVIII, No. 43S News Phone: 764-0552 Friday, July 14, 1978 Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan Young's frankness makes U.S. strong Andrew Young is a man who speaks his mind, and each time he does U.S. politicians are shocked and outraged by his comments; they aren't used to hearing the truth. For Young has a unique ability to cut through the official rhetoric, shrug his shoulders, and openly admit what everyone else denies or fails to appreciate. Wednesday, in response to a question about the current Soviet dissident trials, Young told an interviewer that there are "hundreds, perhaps even thousands of people in the United States whom I could consider political prisoners." Congresspersons were so dismayed that several Senators and Representatives called for Young's resignation or dismissal yesterday, and the House even took preliminary impeachment steps. These politicians are so blinded by patriotism that they can't see the validity of Young's charges. We have had many political prisoners in this country over the last quarter-century. Young describes them as, "Blacks in civil rights movements, anti-war people and those people in the consumers' movement." To be sure, there are vast differences between the plights of American and Soviet political prisoners, a fact which Young recognizes: "I know of no instance in the U.S. where persons have received penalties for monitoring our gover- nment's position on civil or human rights." But there are, nevertheless, abuses in this country, and it was courageous of Young to point them out. His statement comes at a crucial time, when President Carter is chastising the Soviets for trying dissidents Aleksandr Ginzburg and Anatoly Shcharansky. Many nations have viewed our human rights campaign as self-righteous and hypocritical since we have failed to acknowledge abuses in our own nation. Now that Young has spoken out frankly, perhaps the Carter ad- ministration will realize the value of openness on this issue. If we admit to the problems at home, and commit ourselves to eradicating human rights abuses in the U.S. as well as in other nations, our position can only be strengthened. Young did, however, act rashly, blurting this out before mentioning his views to Carter. As a representative of the U.S. government, Young has a responsibility to try to make his views known to policymakers before airing them publicly so as not to undermine confidence in the mechanics of our foreign policy. It makes the administration appear chaotic when the President and Secretary of State are totally surprised by a statement made by the U.N. ambassador. Young is to be praised for his forward-looking attitude and to challenge the administration when he sees fit. He must remember, though, that he is part of a group which is shaping American foreign policy, and that the rest of its members should be enlightened Stream(ined juries short-circuit justice By NAN BLITMAN Reforms in the American jury system reducing jury size and the number of votes necessary to reach a verdict may be undermining one of the most hallowed principles on which the Founding Fathers built the U.S. Constitution, a growing number of lawyers and social scientists believe. Changes in the rules governing juries stem from two U.S. Supreme Court decisions. In 1970, the court ruled that in criminal trials any state could cut the size of the traditional 12-member jury by half. This ruling was later extended to civil cases. TWO YEARS later, the court authorized the states to eliminate the requirement of unanimity in criminal cases and gave approval to convictions by a vote of ten to two or nine to three, with the exact number left to the states. Hostility toward the jury was the reason for the changes, according to Richard Lempert, a professor at the University of Michigan Law School who researched the subject. Proponents of the changes, claimed Lempert, thought "a lesser jury is a better jury because the jury itself isn't very good." Social scientists and other legal scholars who have studied the court's opinions on juries report three significant results:l " In criminal cases the changes work to the disadvantage of one side - the defense. The frequency of hung juries is generally reduced by half. The standard of proof - beyond a reasonable doubt - and protections against erroneous verdicts also are reduced by the non-unanimous verdict, thus increasing the risk of convicting an innocent person. " The representation on the jury of racial minorities is significantly threatened by the changes. Studies conducted at the Universities of Chicago and Michigan show that there is twice the chance of getting minority representation on the 12- member jury when the minority equals 10 per cent of the community population, a factor of special im- portance in cities with a large black population such as Chicago or Oakland, where juries are drawn from a court system organized along county lines. The jury pool isn't 30 to 50 per cent black like the cities, but 10 to 20 per cent like the counties. Non-unanimous verdicts pose a different problem for minorities since they may be included in the panel but lose their effect due to the elimination of unanimous verdicts. Mike Bailey, an Oregon lawyer who has been both prosecutor and defender, said that it is common for the defendant and minority jurors to be black. "Often it's a case," he said, "where the police have gone into a black neighborhood and they say they knocked and showed their badges. My client says they broke down the door. The black jurors know the cop might be lying. They know what hap- pens because they've seen and heard things." " The smaller jury is less accurate than the 12- member jury, according to a forthcoming Columbia University study directed by Dr. Alice Padaver- Singer. The smaller jury is "like a tea party," she concluded. The jurors go to lunch together and engage in more "courtesy dialogue" than arguing about the evidence. The larger jury "gets down to brass tacks," has a more robust discussion and fin- ds it easier to overcome its own biases and corrects more misstatements of facts, concluded the study, which will be presented at the American Bar Association Conference of Judges in August. A rapidly increasing number of states around the country have adopted the jury changes. Almost all of the federal courts and 38 states use the smaller jury in civil cases. No federal court has approved it for criminal cases, but 34 states have. The primary reason given for the changes was that they would save time and money. Statistics compiled by the New Jersey court system show that in that state the changes have effected no rel saving of time or reduction in court delays and backlogs. "SAVING MONEY has its place. but it should American juries and professor emeritus at the University of Chicago Law School. According to Dr. Padawer-Singer, formerly director of the Columbia University Jury Project, "the average cost of the jury is one-tenth of one per cent of the state budget, or an average of five per cent of the judicial dollar. In 1976 Americans spent twice as much on peanut butter as they did on the federal judiciary." A Pacific News Service survey of the court systems in ten states confirmed Dr. Padawer- Singer's assessment, showing that jury costs average 4.6 per cent of the total judicial budget. Melvin Hendrickson, a mathematics professor at Claremont College, investigated jury efficiency af- ter his wife was called for jury duty and sat in a room for four days without ever being sent into a courtroom. HENDRICKSON ESTIMATED that a system that he has developed, which does not call jurors until they're needed, would save $1 million a year for Los Angeles County, the largest judicial district in the country. The Los Angeles court administrator said he would use the system, but hasn't as yet. The non-unanimous verdict has proven much less popular. A trial lawyer from California, a state still requiring unanimity, said, "it's much more of a gut issue" than jury size. Consequently there's strenuous opposition to it. Thirty states use the non- unanimous rule in civil actions, but only six states have approved the rule for criminal cases. No court, state or federal, uses the smaller jury or the non-unanimous verdict in murder cases where the penalty may be either the possibility of death or life imprisonment. Some lawyers believe this implies a concession that the traditional jury is the best way to determine guilt or innocence. "DOES THE state have to be sure when it is jailing you for life," asked one attorney, "and not so sure when it's only taking away ten years of your life?" Some of the new evidence pointing up the deficiencies in the jury changes was recognized by the U.S. Supreme Court ins recent case reviewing a Georgia criminal trial when the court ruled that a five-member jury was unconstitutional. Five-member juries are inferior to six-member ones, the court held - although, ironically, it based its decision on scholarly studies that show six- member juries are inferior to 12-member ones. "Recent empirical data suggest that progressively smaller juries are less likely to foster effective group deliberation. At some point this decline leads to inaccurate fact-finding and in- correct application of the common sense of the community to the facts. SOME LAWYERS see in the recent Supreme Court case a hope that in time the court will fully reverse itself and return to the traditional jury. In 1976, the American Bar Association went on record supporting the 12-member jury and unanimous verdicts in criminal cases.. The following year the Roscoe Pound Trial Lawyers Association, made up of lawyers, professors and judges, recommended the larger unanimous jury in both civil and criminal cases. TheNational District Attorneys Association hasn't taken a position on the changes. Said Patrick Healy, executive director of the association, "I'd ask a prosecutor in a state with one of the changes, 'Do you need the mountain lowered five feet to get over the top?' " Early this year the U.S. Justice Department op- posed a congressional bill to make the smaller jury mandatory in the federal courts. The department cited as its reason for opposing the bill "the greater likelihood of a fair cross-section of community view.points" embodied in the traditional jury. Nan Bitman, a member of the California Bar whose artiles hare appeared in Ms. and several periodicals, is a frequent contributor to the