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Title: Austin Citizens


1
Austin Citizens Grand Jury on
9/11 Crimes
  • Citizens Grand Juries
  • The Shield and the Sword of the People
  • The Cornerstone of our Constitution
  • The Fourth Branch of our Government, The
    Peoples Branch

2
A Note on Grand Juries by George J. Edwards,
Harvard Law Review, Vol 20, No. 8, June 1907
  • The grand jury is an institution of
    English-speaking countries. It is of historic
    interest by reason of the obscurity surrounding
    its origin, its gradual development, and the part
    it has played in some of the most stirring events
    in the history of Anglo-Saxon countries
  • it is of political interest by its protection of
    the liberty of the individual from the arbitrary
    power of the government

3
A Note on Grand Juries by George J. Edwards,
Harvard Law Review, Vol 20, No. 8, June 1907
  • It is of legal interest in that its power and
    action is utterly repugnant to "the experience
    and theory of English law."
  • It has been extravagantly praised as the
    "security of Englishmen's lives," the conserver
    of his liberties, and the noblest check upon the
    malice and oppression of individuals
  • it has been bitterly assailed as "purely
    mischievous" and a "relic of barbarism."

4
Project Goals
  • Indict and Prosecute the criminals responsible
    for 9/11
  • Restore Grand Juries power to protect the people
    from unfounded harassing prosecution by the
    state
  • Restore Grand Juries presentment power and the
    peoples power to initiate and take over criminal
    prosecution when state prosecutors either refuse
    to prosecute or prosecute poorly
  • Restore the peoples right to elect Grand Juries
    have them recognized by the Courts

5
Project Goals
  • Restore the publics access to existing impaneled
    grand juries so the people can bring evidence of
    crimes to these grand juries for consideration
  • Exercise our right to form our own grand juries
    to investigate crimes present charges,
    especially concerning the crimes of 9/11
  • Publicize our presentments and findings in the
    media to educate the public about 9/11 truth and
    to increase pressure on Congress and the Justice
    Department to thoroughly investigate the crimes
    of 9/11 and prosecute those responsible

6
Outline of Topics
  • Grand Juries Their purpose and function as the
    shield and the sword of the people
  • The Magna Carta Grand Juries are born in England
    in 1215
  • Grand Juries become well - established in England
    from 1215-1600s
  • Grand Juries in pre-revolutionary America The
    Golden Years of Grand Juries power and the
    crucial function they served in our Revolution
  • Grand Juries power continues in early
    post-revolutionary America

7
Outline of Topics
  • The imperative role of private prosecution
  • The decline of grand juries power starting in
    themid-1800s and the 1946 Procedure Code
  • 2 modern cases highlighting the importance of
    grand juries power in bringing a halt to govt
    corruption
  • Recent Supreme Court rulings reviving grand
    juries power and function
  • Reform to restore proper grand jury function
  • Citizens Grand Juries - return to historic
    precedent
  • Media pressure needed today for the 9/11
    Citizens Grand Juries to have a serious impact

8
Grand Juries The Cornerstone of Our Constitution
  • The grand jury is the cornerstone of our
    Constitution. When it operates as it was designed
    by the Framers of the Constitution, the Bill of
    Rights cannot be infringed upon by the
    government.

FOR MORE INFO...
  • Mike Brown, Information for Good Citizenship,
  • http//www.home.earthlink.net/dlaw70

9
Grand Juries The Cornerstone of Our Constitution
  • When it acts as a rubber stamp for the
    prosecutor, the Bill of Rights are seriously
    undermined.
  • By educating those called to be grand jurors, we
    can begin to reclaim those rights taken away by
    the federal judiciary.

FOR MORE INFO...
  • Mike Brown, Information for Good Citizenship,
  • http//www.home.earthlink.net/dlaw70

10
Grand Juries The Shield of the People
  • As a shield, grand juries protect the people from
    harassing and capricious prosecution by abusive
    and overreaching power of the executive branch.
  • In order for anyone to be prosecuted for an
    infamous or capital crime, a grand jury must
    determine that there is sufficient evidence to
    bring the accused to trial.

11
Grand Juries The Shield of the People
  • Historically, this protection was mainly put in
    place to prevent the state from railroading
    people into jail or long and expensive court
    ordeals simply for being political dissidents or
    for disagreeing with the state.

12
Grand Jury Shield The Fifth Amendment of the
U.S. Constitution
  • No person shall be held to answer for a capital,
    or otherwise infamous crime, unless on a
    presentment or indictment of a grand jury, except
    in cases arising in the land or naval forces, or
    in the militia, when in actual service in time of
    war or public danger nor shall any person be
    subject for the same offense to be twice put in
    jeopardy of life or limb nor shall be compelled
    in any criminal case to be a witness against
    himself, nor be deprived of life, liberty, or
    property, without due process of law nor shall
    private property be taken for public use, without
    just compensation.

13
True Bill or No Bill of Indictment
  • A grand jury votes on a set of proposed charges
    submitted by a prosecutor and can return charges
    in either of two ways.
  • If the grand jurors decide there is probable
    cause to support the charges, they vote a "true
    bill," that is, they vote to return the
    indictment and initiate a criminal proceeding.
  • If the grand jurors decide there is not probable
    cause to support the charges, they vote a "no
    true bill," which means the indictment is not
    returned and no criminal case ensues.

14
Grand Juries The Sword of the People
  • The original name for a grand jury was The Grand
    Inquisition.
  • As a sword, grand juries act as an accusatory and
    investigative body, mainly into govt corruption.
  • GJs may independently investigate corruption
    apart from a state prosecutor.
  • GJs may conduct proceedings in secret and can
    question witnesses and examine physical evidence.
  • GJs may submit criminal charges and other
    findings according to their own knowledge and
    independent investigation. This is called a
    presentment.

15
Grand Juries The Sword of the People
  • Grand juries NEVER consider any evidence
    whatsoever that may support the innocence of the
    accused.
  • It does not matter one iota if there are
    mountains of evidence to support the innocence of
    the accused. Grand juries ONLY look at
    accusatory evidence.
  • If there is enough accusatory evidence to support
    probable cause, that is all that is needed for
    the grand jury to hand down an indictment or
    presentment. Any evidence to support someone's
    innocence is considered by the trial jury, or the
    petit jury, during the criminal trial.

16
Grand Juries The Sword of the People the 7th
Amendment
  • The 7th Amendment guarantees us all rights
    established through common law.
  • Common law developed under the inquisitorial
    system in England (the Grand Jury system) from
    judicial decisions based on custom, tradition,
    precedent, and a history of jurisprudence.
  • The right and power of grand juries to make
    presentments to initiate prosecution has been
    well established through centuries of
    jurisprudence through common law, therefore this
    right is retained and protected in the 7th
    Amendment of our Constitution.

17
The Seventh Amendment of Our U.S. Constitution
  • In suits at common law, where the value in
    controversy shall exceed twenty dollars, the
    right of trial by jury shall be preserved, and no
    fact tried by a jury, shall be otherwise
    reexamined in any court of the United States,
    than according to the rules of the common law.

18
A Note about Common Law, the 7th Amendment, and
9/11
  • Common law jurisdiction includes criminal cases
    as well as civil cases.
  • Common law deals with property rights.
  • Most crimes involve a controversy which exceeds
    twenty dollars.
  • The crimes of 9/11 certainly inflicted property
    damage exceeding twenty dollars.
  • We are well within our Constitutional rights to
    pursue criminal grand jury investigation
    regarding the crimes of 9/11.

19
Grand Juries The Fourth Branch of Government,
the Peoples Branch
  • It is significant that the grand jury is not part
    of any of the three branches of the U.S.
    government - it is a pre-constitutional
    institution.
  • In the mid-1800s Washington attorney John H.
    Clarke wrote in a motion to the United States
    District Court for the District of Columbia,
    Although today the grand jury is more of a
    prosecutors panel, it is still a
    pre-constitutional institution,

20
Grand Juries The Fourth Branch of Government,
the Peoples Branch
  • and is still a peoples panel, not captive or
    relegated by the constitution to a position
    within any branches And it still serves as a
    vehicle for effective citizen participation in
    government.

21
Grand Juries The Fourth Branch of Government,
the Peoples Branch
  • Citizens often mistakenly believe that because
    the grand jury meets at the courthouse it is
    under the judiciary or because the grand jury
    meets with a prosecutor it is under the executive
    branch.
  • It is actually an independent institution adopted
    by the founders to protect the individual from
    prosecutorial misconduct, as well as to empower
    the people to initiate and pursue prosecution.

22
Grand Juries The Fourth Branch of Government,
the Peoples Branch
  • Antonin Scalia effectively codified the unique
    independent power of the Fourth Branch into the
    hands of all citizens sitting as grand jurors,
    including those sitting as federal grand jurors.
  • In discussing that power and unique independence
    granted to the grand jury, the United States
    Supreme Court, in United States v. Williams, 504
    U.S. 36 at 48 (1992), Justice Scalia, delivering
    the opinion of the Court, laid down the law of
    the land

23
Justice Scalia delivers the opinion of the Court
in U.S. v. Williams, 1992
  • "'Rooted in long centuries of Anglo-American
    history," Hannah v. Larche, 363 U.S. 420, 490
    (1960) (Frankfurter, J., concurring in result),
    the grand jury is mentioned in the Bill of
    Rights, but not in the body of the Constitution.
    It has not been textually assigned, therefore, to
    any of the branches described in the first three
    Articles. It "is a constitutional fixture in its
    own right.'" United States v. Chanen, 549 F.2d
    1306, 1312 (CA9 1977) (quoting Nixon v. Sirica,
    159 U.S. App. D.C. 58, 70, n. 54, 487 F.2d 700,
    712, n. 54 (1973)), cert. denied, 434 U.S. 825
    (1977). ' "

24
Justice Scalia delivers the opinion of the Court
in U.S. v. Williams, 1992
  • Scalia also stated, that "the grand jury is an
    institution separate from the courts, over whose
    functioning the courts do not preside..." Id.

25
Justice Scalia delivers the opinion of the Court
in U.S. v. Williams, 1992
  • "In fact, the whole theory of its function is
    that it belongs to no branch of the institutional
    Government, serving as a kind of buffer or
    referee between the Government and the people.
    See Stirone v. United States, 361 U.S. 212, 218
    (1960) Hale v. Henkel, 201 U.S. 43, 61 (1906)
    G. Edwards, The Grand Jury 28-32 (1906).

26
Justice Scalia delivers the opinion of the Court
in U.S. v. Williams, 1992
  • Although the grand jury normally operates, of
    course, in the courthouse and under judicial
    auspices, its institutional relationship with the
    Judicial Branch has traditionally been, so to
    speak, at arm's length. Judges' direct
    involvement in the functioning of the grand jury
    has generally been confined to the constitutive
    one of calling the grand jurors together and
    administering their oaths of office. See United
    States v. Calandra, 414 U.S. 338, 343 (1974)
    Fed.Rule Crim.Proc. 6(a). 504 U.S. 36, 48 "

27
Treasongate Grand Juries, The Fourth Branch of
Government, by CitizenSpook, August 14, 2005
  • I submit to you that this passage sets the stage
    for a revolutionary new context necessary and
    Constitutionally mandated to We the People", THE
    FOURTH BRANCH of the Government of the United
    States.
  • Besides the Legislative, Executive, and Judicial
    branches, I submit that there is a fourth branch,
    THE GRAND JURY, and We the People when sitting
    as grand jurors, are, as Scalia quoted in US v.
    Williams, a constitutional fixture in our own
    right. That is exactly what the grand jury is,
    and what it was always intended to be.

28
Treasongate Grand Juries, The Fourth Branch of
Government, by CitizenSpook, August 14, 2005
  • We the people have been charged with oversight of
    the government in our roles as grand jurors.
  • And at this critical time in American history, we
    must, for the protection of our Constitutional
    Republic, take back our power and start acting as
    powerful as the other branches of government.
  • The law is on our side. We the people have the
    right and power under the 5th and 7th Amendments
    of the Constitution to charge this government
    with crimes by returning presentments regardless
    of whether the US Attorneys or the federal judges
    agree with us.

29
If Its not a Runaway, its not a real grand
jury - Roger Roots, Creighton Law Review, Vol
3No. 4, 1999
  • A "runaway" grand jury, loosely defined as a
    grand jury which resists the accusatory choices
    of a government prosecutor.
  • Today's "runaway" grand jury is in fact the
    common law grand jury of the past.
  • Prior to the emergence of governmental
    prosecution as the standard model of American
    criminal justice, all grand juries were in fact
    "runaways," according to the definition of modern
    times.

30
If Its not a Runaway, its not a real grand
jury - Roger Roots, Creighton Law Review, Vol
3No. 4, 1999
  • they operated as completely independent,
    self-directing bodies of inquisitors, with power
    to pursue unlawful conduct to its very source,
    including the government itself.

31
The Grand Jury Its Origin, History and
Development - George J. Edwards, 1906
  • The origin of the grand jury has given rise to
    much discussion among legal scholars. Numerous
    and widely differing conclusions have been
    offered.
  • Some have claimed to find traces of the
    institution among the Athenians. But if such an
    institution ever existed in Athens it had become
    extinct before the existence of Britain became
    known to the Mediterranean Countries.

32
The Grand Jury Its Origin, History and
Development - George J. Edwards, 1906
  • Athenian history does mention practices similar
    to the Normans tradition of trial by a large
    number of jurors, however there is nothing in
    Athenian history that mentions an accusatory body
    of citizens.
  • Some writers claim the institution has an
    Anglo-Saxon origin, others urge that juries were
    unknown to the Anglo-Saxons and were introduced
    by the Normans after their Conquest of England in
    1066.
  • The Magna Carta is the first major historical
    document enumerating an accusatory body of the
    people.

33
The Magna Carta, the precursor of our Constitution
  • King John (1199-1216) succeeded his brother
    Richard I. He lacked his brothers military
    prowess and he spent much of his reign attempting
    to recover lost English possessions in France. To
    finance his military campaigns, he resorted to
    harsh taxation of his subjects, which provoked
    growing unrest.
  • The Battle of Bouvines in July 1214 marked the
    end of English hopes of regaining Normandy.
    Opposition to King John intensified, and he was
    no longer able to resist the barons demand that
    their liberties be confirmed.

34
The Magna Carta, the precursor of our Constitution
  • Abuses by King John caused a revolt by barons who
    forced him to sign and enact this recognition of
    rights for both noblemen and ordinary Englishmen.
    It established the principle that no one,
    including the king or a lawmaker, is above the
    law.
  • On June 10, 1215, the barons took London by force
    with their militias and forced King John to
    either sign the document or loose his head at the
    River Thames. In return the barons renewed their
    oaths of fealty, or allegiance, to the king.

35
The Magna Carta, the precursor of our Constitution
  • The constitutional importance of Magna Carta lies
    in the fact that it placed limits upon the
    absolute power of the King and made him subject
    to the law.
  • The most famous of its sixty-three clauses said
    that no free man could be imprisoned, outlawed,
    or exiled except by the lawful judgement of his
    peers, and that justice could not be sold,
    delayed or denied.
  • It also contained clauses relating to the
    treatment of heirs and widows and to the payment
    of debts.

36
The Magna Carta, the precursor of our Constitution
  • It provided for uniform measures of wine, ale,
    corn and cloth throughout the realm.
  • It confirmed the liberties of the Church.
  • It sought to regulate the conduct of all local
    officials such as sheriffs, bailiffs, and
    constables, and to ensure that they knew and
    observed the law.

37
The Magna Carta, Article 61 The First Accusatory
Body of the People
  • The most significant clause for King John at the
    time was clause 61, known as the "security
    clause", the longest portion of the document.
  • This established a committee of 25 barons who
    could at any time meet and over-rule the will of
    the King, through force by seizing his castles
    and possessions if needed.

38
The Magna Carta, Article 61 The First Accusatory
Body of the People
  • This was based on a medieval legal practice known
    as distraint, which was commonly done, but it was
    the first time it had been applied to a monarch.
    In addition, the King was to take an oath of
    loyalty to the committee.
  • In English law, distraint or distress, is a
    remedy for non-payment of rent. It involves the
    seizure of goods belonging to the tenant by the
    landlord to sell them for the payment of the rent.

39
The Magna Carta, Article 61 The First Accusatory
Body of the People
  • Using the practice of distraint as the founding
    principle of the Magna Carta is of significant
    importance. The barons asserted their right to
    seize the kings possessions and overrule the
    king in the event that the king would not make
    redress of grievances to the people.
  • This set the precedent that the king as a ruler
    is a mere tenant, and that the king owed
    payment to the people in the form of redress of
    grievances in return for the people allowing him
    to rule. If redress is not made, the people have
    the right to seize his possessions as payment.

40
The Magna Carta, Article 61 The First Accusatory
Body of the People
  • Up until this time, the right of the monarch to
    rule was considered absolute and unconditional.
    Now, the barons asserted that the kings ruling
    authority was not an inherent right but rather a
    privilege granted by the people, that could be
    revoked by the people, and furthermore a
    privilege that required payment to the people in
    the form of redress of grievances.
  • If payment was not made, the people had the right
    to evict the king from his ruling position as
    well as seize all the kings possessions in lieu
    of payment of redress of grievances.

41
The Magna Carta, the precursor of our Constitution
  • The Magna Carta reversed the tyrannical principle
    that the power to rule is an in-alienable right
    of the elite and that the liberties and rights of
    the people are granted by the ruling elite and
    can be taken from the people.

42
The Magna Carta, the precursor of our Constitution
  • The proper principle was established that it is
    We the people who are the landlords and owners of
    the governmental positions of authority, the We
    the people grant the privilege of authority to
    the tenants of these government positions, this
    privilege can be revoked for non-payment of
    redress of grievance, our tenants can be evicted
    from their positions, payment seized by
    confiscation of our tenants material
    possessions, and most importantly it is the
    liberties and rights of the people that are
    inherent and in-alienable.

43
The Magna Carta, Article 61 The First Accusatory
Body of the People
  • SINCE WE HAVE GRANTED ALL THESE THINGS FOR GOD,
    for the better ordering of our kingdom, and to
    allay the discord that has arisen between us and
    our barons, and since we desire that they shall
    be enjoyed in their entirety, with lasting
    strength, for ever, we give and grant to the
    barons the following security

44
The Magna Carta, Article 61 The First Accusatory
Body of the People
  • The barons shall elect twenty-five of their
    number to keep, and cause to be observed with all
    their might, the peace and liberties granted and
    confirmed to them by this charter.
  • If we, our chief justice, our officials, or any
    of our servants offend in any respect against any
    man, or transgress any of the articles of the
    peace or of this security, and the offence is
    made known to four of the said twenty-five
    barons, they shall come to us - or in our absence
    from the kingdom to the chief justice - to
    declare it and claim immediate redress.

45
The Magna Carta, Article 61 The First Accusatory
Body of the People
  • If we, or in our absence abroad the chief
    justice, make no redress within forty days,
    reckoning from the day on which the offence was
    declared to us or to him, the four barons shall
    refer the matter to the rest of the twenty-five
    barons, who may distrain upon and assail us in
    every way possible,

46
The Magna Carta, Article 61 The First Accusatory
Body of the People
  • with the support of the whole community of the
    land, by seizing our castles, lands, possessions,
    or anything else saving only our own person and
    those of the queen and our children, until they
    have secured such redress as they have determined
    upon. Having secured the redress, they may then
    resume their normal obedience to us.

47
A Side Note The Invisible Government Speaks
  • King John had been forced to agree to the Magna
    Carta, and he immediately attempted to have it
    annulled by the Pope, who issued a papal bull
    saying that it was as unjust and unlawful as it
    is base and shameful.
  • Pope Innocent III annulled the "shameful and
    demeaning agreement, forced upon the king by
    violence and fear." He rejected any call for
    rights, saying it impaired King John's dignity.
    He saw it as an affront to the Church's authority
    over the king and released John from his oath to
    obey it.

48
Civil War Ensues
  • King John had no intention to honour Magna Carta,
    as it was sealed under extortion by force, and
    clause 61 essentially neutered his power as a
    monarch, making him King in name only. He
    renounced it as soon as the barons left London,
    plunging England into a civil war, called the
    First Barons War.

49
Grand Juries are a Second Amendment Issue -
Michael Badnarik
  • The only reason the barons were able to assert
    and enforce their rights was because they were
    armed and the king had squandered his army on
    imperialistic and unsuccessful war campaigns.
  • The only reason we havent had all our rights
    taken away is because we have the right to bear
    arms.
  • We have the power to exercise and enforce our
    rights only as long as we can defend ourselves.

50
Grand Juries are a Second Amendment Issue -
Michael Badnarik
  • Historically, one of the first things that
    tyrannical dictators have done as soon as they
    gain power is to disarm the people. Once the
    populace is disarmed, these tyrants can easily
    take away peoples rights liberties, install a
    police state, and begin the process of genocide.
  • The second amendment was mainly put in place to
    protect the people from abusive and tyrannical
    government taking away not only our rights and
    liberties but our very lives as well.
  • Self-defense from common street criminals is
    secondary to this principle.

51
Development of the Grand Jury from George J.
Edwards, The Grand Jury, 1906
  • In England during the late 1200s early
    1300s,the court the sheriffs established the
    practice of impaneling accusing bodies known as
    inquests or juries.
  • For every group of 100 people, 4-16 people were
    summoned by the court bailiffs to be accusers and
    present offences occurring within that hundred.

52
Development of the Grand Jury from George J.
Edwards, The Grand Jury, 1906
  • This practice was established because the king
    felt there was not a sufficient constabulary and
    more surveillance was needed over the population.
  • The king felt there were too many people and too
    few sheriffs deputies to monitor the
    population, so the people were conscripted to be
    snitches.

53
Development of the Grand Jury from George J.
Edwards, The Grand Jury, 1906
  • These inquest juries of the 100s were
    impaneled to be an arm of the central government,
    acting as a public prosecutor for the purpose of
    ferreting out crime.
  • The members of the inquest were at all times
    bound to inform the court either singly or
    collectively their reasons for arriving at their
    verdict and the evidence upon which it was based.

54
Development of the Grand Jury from George J.
Edwards, The Grand Jury, 1906
  • These inquest juries reported to the court
    evidence of crimes based on personal knowledge.
    The court had the power to interrogate the
    inquest juries concerning their knowledge and as
    to how they arrived at their presentments.
  • These inquest juries were conscripted tattlers.
    If offences were not reported, the jurors would
    be heavily penalized.

55
The Grand Jury Officially defined in 1368
  • Due to increasing population over time, the
    inquest juries of the 100s became impractical.
  • In 1368, during the reign of Edward III, the
    sheriffs began to expand the proceedings of the
    inquest juries to investigate and present
    offences for the entire county at large.
  • The number of jurors for each county inquest was
    increased to 24.

FOR MORE INFO...
  • The Grand Jury Its Origin, History, and
    Development-
  • George J. Edwards, 1906

56
The Grand Jury Officially defined in 1368
  • This body received the name le graunde inquest,
    which means the grand inquisition.
  • This is the first official reference of the
    grand jury.

FOR MORE INFO...
  • The Grand Jury Its Origin, History, and
    Development-
  • George J. Edwards, 1906

57
The Grand Jury starts to gain independence
  • When the grand inquest was established to
    investigate and present for the entire county,
    the jurors personal knowledge of the facts in
    most cases became more limited.
  • Hence, the practice of juror interrogation and
    requiring the grand inquest to divulge to the
    court their knowledge and reasons upon which
    their presentment was based began to fall into
    disuse.

FOR MORE INFO...
  • The Grand Jury Its Origin, History, and
    Development-
  • George J. Edwards, 1906

58
The beginning of Grand Juries secrecy
  • Because the grand inquests presented crimes for
    the entire county, the monarchy became more
    concerned that the actions of the grande inquests
    might become known to the accused and therefore
    would allow for the defendants escape.
  • The inquests were then sworn under oath to keep
    their proceedings secret.

FOR MORE INFO...
  • The Grand Jury Its Origin, History, and
    Development-
  • George J. Edwards, 1906

59
The Grand Jurors Oath
  • "that they will lawful presentment make of such
    chapters as shall be delivered to them in writing
    and in this they will not fail for any love,
    hatred, fear, reward, or promise, and that they
    will conceal the secrets, so help them God and
    the Saints."

FOR MORE INFO...
  • The Grand Jury Its Origin, History, and
    Development-
  • George J. Edwards, 1906

60
Development of the Grand Jury
  • With the arrival of the grand inquest to inquire
    and present for the county at large, combined
    with the disappearance of the accusing bodies of
    the hundreds, we practically complete what may be
    termed the period of formation in the development
    of the grand jury.

FOR MORE INFO...
  • The Grand Jury Its Origin, History, and
    Development-
  • George J. Edwards, 1906

61
The independence of the Grand Jury becomes
established
  • It was in this period that the independence of
    the grand jury became established. Grand juries
    were no longer required to make known to the
    court the evidence upon which they acted nor the
    reasons for their conclusions.
  • They met in secret and were sworn to keep their
    proceedings secret by an oath which contained no
    reservation in favor of the government.

FOR MORE INFO...
  • The Grand Jury Its Origin, History, and
    Development-
  • George J. Edwards, 1906

62
The independence of the Grand Jury becomes
established
  • The three centuries that followed documents grand
    juries freedom of action from all restraint by
    the court.
  • The independence which the institution had
    attained would be put to severe tests.

FOR MORE INFO...
  • The Grand Jury Its Origin, History, and
    Development-
  • George J. Edwards, 1906

63
The independence of the Grand Jury becomes
established
  • However, since grand juries were protected by the
    cloak of secrecy and free from the control of the
    court concerning their findings, they
    successfully thwarted the unjust designs of the
    corrupt monarchical government.

FOR MORE INFO...
  • The Grand Jury Its Origin, History, and
    Development-
  • George J. Edwards, 1906

64
The independence of the Grand Jury becomes
established
  • By the 1600s, grand juries were strongly
    asserting their independence and began
    functioning as the peoples shield from the
    crowns abusive prosecution against political
    dissidents.
  • It was in the reign of Charles the Second that we
    find the two most celebrated instances of the
    fearless action of the grand jury in defending
    the liberty of the individual, although subjected
    to the strongest possible pressure from the crown.

65
The Case of Stephen College, a religious and
political dissident
  • In 1681, during the reign of Charles II, a bill
    of indictment for high treason was submitted to a
    grand jury of the City of London against Stephen
    College, a Protestant joiner.
  • Breaking protocol, Lord Chief Justice North
    compelled the grand jury to hear the evidence in
    open court.
  • Concerning the witnesses who testified it was
    said, "It is certainly true that never men swore
    more firmly in court than they did."

66
The Case of Stephen College, a religious and
political dissident
  • The grand jury then demanded that the witnesses
    be sent to them that they might examine them
    privately. After considering the matter for
    several hours the grand jury ignored the bill.
  • Upon being asked by the Lord Chief Justice to
    give a reason for this verdict, they replied that
    they had given their verdict according to their
    consciences and would stand by it.
  • The jurors exercised their right of secrecy of
    deliberations and refused to be interrogated by
    the court concerning their findings.

67
The Case of Stephen College, a religious and
political dissident
  • The foreman of this grand jury, Mr. Wilmore, was
    afterwards apprehended upon a false charge,
    examined before the Council, sent to the tower,
    and afterward forced to flee beyond the seas.

68
The Case of Anthony Cooper, the Earl of
Shaftesbury, a religious political dissident
  • During the mid 1600s, Anthony Cooper, the Earl
    of Shaftesbury, was a member of Parliament and
    supported a strong Parliament as well as
    religious tolerance.
  • He became suspicious of the king's efforts to
    improve the position of Roman Catholics.
  • Cooper opposed the king and sided with the
    Parliamentarians in the English Civil Wars of the
    mid 1600s.

69
The Case of Anthony Cooper, the Earl of
Shaftesbury, a religious political dissident
  • In 1681, the same year as the College case, an
    attempt was made to indict Cooper for high
    treason.
  • As in College's case, the grand jury desired to
    hear the evidence in private, as was standard
    procedure, but the king's counsel insisted that
    the evidence be heard in open court and Lord
    Chief Justice Pemberton assented.

70
The Case of Anthony Cooper, the Earl of
Shaftesbury, a religious political dissident
  • Just as in the Stephen College case, after
    hearing the evidence in open court the grand jury
    desired that they might examine the witnesses
    privately in their chamber and the court granted
    the request.
  • After again hearing the witnesses and considering
    their verdict they returned the bill "ignoramus,"
    upon which "the people fell a hollowing and a
    shouting.

71
King Charles unsuccessfully tries to retaliate
  • Because of the failure of the king to coerce
    grand juries to his oppressive purpose, the
    king's officials sought a method whereby
    justice might be served with results more
    agreeable to their royal master.
  • A statute was enacted empowering judges and
    justices to reform grand jury panels by taking
    out the names of improper persons and putting
    in others according to their discretion.
  • The sheriff was then to be required to return the
    panel as reformed by the court.

72
King Charles unsuccessfully tries to retaliate
  • The crowns excuse for this statute was an
    alleged abuse of power by the sheriffs regarding
    the selection and returning of grand jurors.
  • They accused the sheriffs of packing the panels
    with those who would carry out any alleged
    nefarious designs of the sheriffs.

73
King Charles unsuccessfully tries to retaliate
  • Through this statute, Sir Robert Sawyer, the
    attorney general, sought to employ to carry out
    the wishes of the crown.
  • The Court of Sessions endeavored to compel the
    sheriffs to return the panels as they directed,
    but the sheriffs refused.

74
The independence of the Grand Jury becomes
established
  • Grand Juries rule of secrecy allowed them to
    function out of the sight of the King's
    prosecutors or other meddlers.
  • It was their secrecy that provided the grand
    juries with their greatest power as an
    independent populist body, equipped with
    oversight power on the government.
  • They were a group of people who stood as a check
    on government, often in direct opposition to the
    desires of those in power.

75
Grand Juries are Brought to America
  • When the settlement of America was begun by
    Englishmen, they brought with them all the civil
    rights which they enjoyed in their native land,
    and with them came the grand jury.
  • The Grand Juries became one of the fundamental
    foundations of common law in the American
    colonies and is the oldest institution in
    Americas criminal justice system.
  • Grand Juries quickly became vehicles for popular
    anti-monarchical ideology for the English
    colonists in America.

76
Grand Juries gain more strength and independence
  • In the early American experience, the grand jury
    became more a part of local government than it
    had ever been in England.
  • A grand jury in Virginia in 1662 would meet two
    times a year "to levy taxes and oversee spending,
    supervise public works, appoint local officials,
    and consider criminal accusations.
  • Connecticut grand juries were elected and were
    levying taxes and conducting local government
    work by the middle of the 1700s.

77
Grand Juries gain more strength and independence
  • In many colonies, grand jurors gathered "from all
    the several Parts of the County to represent the
    State.
  • Pre-revolutionary writers similarly spoke of
    grand juries as representative bodies.
  • The New York Weekly Journal stated in 1734 "Does
    not the grand jury (tho' chose by the Sheriff)
    represent the county? In a manner of speaking,
    yes grand jurymen represented not a group of
    constituents, but local knowledge.

78
Grand Juries gain more strength and independence
  • The grand jury was the initiator of prosecutions,
    acting "in several of the colonies as spokesmen
    for the people . . . and as vehicles for
    complaints against officialdom."
  • in America, the grand jury originally began as a
    defense against the monarchy, and became much
    more independent than the English grand jury of
    the 1600s.
  • American grand juries initiated prosecutions
    against corrupt agents of the British government,
    often in response to complaints from individuals.

79
Grand Juries crucial role in the American
Revolution
  • In pre-Revolutionary America, grand juries took
    on a life of their own.
  • The grand jury that the drafters of the Bill of
    Rights knew was much more powerful than any known
    in England.
  • The actions of grand juries figured prominently
    in the beginnings of the Revolution.

80
Grand Juries crucial role in the American
Revolution
  • In 1765, a Boston grand jury refused to indict
    Colonists who had led riots against the Stamp
    Act.
  • A Philadelphia Grand Jury condemned the use
    ofthe tea tax to compensate British officials,
    encouraged a rejection of all British goods, and
    called for organization with other colonies to
    demand redress of grievances.

81
Grand Juries crucial role in the American
Revolution
  • A Boston Grand Jury in 1769 indicted British
    soldiers for alleged crimes of breaking and
    entering private homes of citizens.
  • Grand Juries refused to indict certain colonists
    who had been charged by the British authorities
    for inciting desertion and other alleged crimes
    against the king.
  • Grand Juries indicted for treason anyone who
    joined or colluded with the British army.

82
Grand Juries crucial role in the American
Revolution
  • Grand juries functioned as patriotic platforms
    and propaganda machines, constantly condemning
    the British government and encouraging
    individuals to support the effort of
    independence.
  • In some cases, "the calls to arms were sounded by
    the grand jurors themselves in others, the
    sparks came from patriotic oratory by the
    presiding judges in their charges to the grand
    jury.

83
Grand Juries crucial role in the American
Revolution
  • The public proclamations of these grand juries
    were drastically different from anything we know
    today.
  • They were often circulated in local and national
    newspapers in an effort to "fuel the
    revolutionary fire."

84
Grand Juries in early America protect Aaron Burr
from false charges of treason
  • Aaron Burr was targeted by the federal government
    in the early 1800s.
  • After a bizarre political career, Burr was
    disliked by both the Federalists and Republicans.
  • The U.S. Attorney for Kentucky, a staunch
    Federalist aligned with President Jefferson,
    moved that a grand jury be summoned to consider
    charges against Burr for his alleged attempt to
    involve the United States in a war with Spain.

85
Grand Juries in early America protect Aaron Burr
from false charges of treason
  • This grand jury from Republican-dominated
    Kentucky returned an "ignoramus bill," declining
    to indict Burr on the evidence.
  • Going even further, the grand jury issued a
    written declaration in its presentment directed
    to the court in which they declared that Burr
    failed to exhibit "any design inimical to the
    peace and well-being of the country."

86
Grand Juries in early America protect Aaron Burr
from false charges of treason
  • A second grand jury proceeding convened in
    Mississippi Territory to consider similar treason
    charges against Burr relating to his expedition
    down the Mississippi River.
  • It was alleged that Burr intended to capture New
    Orleans, a city of nine thousand people protected
    by a thousand United States soldiers, using sixty
    unarmed men in ten boats.

87
Grand Juries in early America protect Aaron Burr
from false charges of treason
  • The Mississippi grand jury not only declined to
    indict Burr in the affair, but returned
    presentments which clearly labeled the
    government's attempted charges as a vindictive
    prosecution.
  • The presentment concluded that "Aaron Burr has
    not been guilty of any crime or misdemeanor
    against the laws of the United States or of this
    Territory."

88
Grand Juries in early America expose political
corruption
  • Furthermore, the grand jury declared that the
    arrests of Burr and his co-travelers had been
    made without warrant, and . . . without other
    lawful authority, and represented a grievance
    destructive of personal liberty.

89
Grand Juries in early America expose political
corruption
  • In resounding condemnation, the grand jury
    pronounced its regret that the enemies of our
    glorious Constitution had rejoiced at the
    attempted persecution of Aaron Burr and expressed
    the opinion that such prosecutorial misconduct
    must sap the vitals of our political existence,
    and crumble this glorious fabric in the dust.

90
Grand Juries in early America expose political
corruption
  • The grand jury's presentment power was used not
    only to accuse wrongdoers when government
    prosecutors refused to do so, but to publicly
    declare the innocence of a targeted suspect in
    the very face of opposition by the prosecution.

91
Grand Juries in early America expose political
corruption
  • The Mississippi grand jury was a "runaway" by
    today's standards.
  • Yet a grand jury acting in such way offered
    precisely the type of protection envisioned by
    the Framers when they included the institution in
    the Bill of Rights as a check on the power of the
    government.

92
Grand Juries in early America expose political
corruption
  • The Mississippi grand jury's presentment included
    a bold attack on the prosecution itself an
    occurrence scarcely imaginable today.
  • It was the grand jury's power over its
    presentments, rather than its indictments, that
    made it so fearsome.

93
Grand Juries in early America expose political
corruption
  • The effectiveness of early American grand juries
    in ferreting out the shortcomings of public
    officials can be gauged from the long lists of
    grand jury presentments of early America.
  • "Very little escaped the attention of the grand
    jurymen, which even took notice of the failures
    of town councils to provide stocks or a whipping
    post to punish offenders.

94
Grand Juries in early America expose political
corruption
  • Throughout the 19th century, grand juries often
    acted on their own initiative in the face of
    direct opposition from a district attorney.

95
Grand Juries in early America expose political
corruption
  • An independently acting grand jury probed and
    "toppled the notorious Boss Tweed and his
    cronies" in New York City in 1872.
  • Without the prosecutor's assistance, the Tweed
    grand jury independently carried out its own
    investigation in a district that had otherwise
    been very loyal to Tweed.
  • The media played a crucial role in this case. The
    NYT highly publicized the case despite being
    offered 5 million to keep quiet.

96
Grand Juries in early America expose political
corruption
  • In 1902, a Minneapolis grand jury on its own
    initiative hired private detectives and collected
    enough evidence to indict the mayor and force the
    police chief to resign.
  • This grand jury virtually governed the city until
    a new administration could be hired.
  • In 1907 in San Francisco, a grand jury indicted
    the mayor and replaced him.

97
The Imperative Role of Private Prosecution
  • In England every private person had the same
    rights as the Attorney General to initiate a
    prosecution.
  • Once a case had been presented to the grand jury,
    it was entirely out of the prosecutor's hands.
  • In the early days of our Republic "prosecutor"
    was simply anyone who voluntarily went before the
    grand jury with a complaint.

98
The Imperative Role of Private Prosecution
  • Until 1853 there was nowhere general organized
    control of Federal prosecution.
  • The Department of Justice was not created until
    June 22, 1870. At the time the only authority the
    Justice Department had was to investigate postal
    crimes and compile crime statistics.
  • Even in 1897 private citizens could still have
    arrest warrants issued.
  • At that time grand jurors themselves were the
    only ones competent to ascertain who was the
    prosecutor.

99
The Imperative Role of Private Prosecution
  • The rise of the "public prosecutor," both at the
    federal and state levels, has drastically altered
    grand jury function.
  • Of 448 cases examined in 1838, there were 80 "no
    bills."
  • In 1976 there were 23,000 federal indictments
    returned but only 123 no bills.
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