For Immediate release

Jury Rights Day September 5, 2008

This Friday, September 5, 2008, marks the 338th anniversary of the day when 
jurors refused to convict William Penn of violating England's Conventicle 
Acts, despite clear evidence that he acted illegally by preaching a Quaker 
sermon.  In refusing to convict Penn, the jurors refused to enforce what 
they knew to be an unjust law.  This is known as jury nullification.

By refusing to enforce what they knew was an unjust law, the Penn jurors not 
only served justice, but provided a basis for our First Amendment rights to 
freedom of speech, religion, and peaceable assembly.  For their refusal to 
obey the judge's instruction to find Penn guilty, the judge sent four of 
Penn's jurors to prison for nine weeks. Their later release and exoneration 
established forever the English and American doctrine that it is the right 
and responsibility of all jurors to decide matters of law and fact in any 
case before them. Jurors stand as the last line of defense for people being 
prosecuted under unjust laws by overzealous government prosecutors and court 
officials.

The founders of this nation intended that jurors in all cases would know of 
their rights and responsibilities to judge the law, its application, and the 
facts in each case, to ensure that justice is served.  The Sixth and Seventh 
Amendments are included in the Bill of Rights to guarantee that every person 
brought to trial has the benefit of the protection of a jury.

It was understood by the founders that all matters brought to the courts 
were to be considered by a jury of independent, free individuals, who were 
not beholden to the courts or government, and who would freely render a 
verdict based on justice, even if in direct opposition to the courts and the 
law.

Jury nullification is an integral part of our judicial system, serving as 
one of the "checks and balances" required by a free society. An individual 
juror has the power to stop an unjust prosecution by refusing to convict. 
This fact is unknown to most jurors today, and has contributed greatly to 
the decline of the authority of the jury in our court system.

Our Founding Fathers accepted the common law principle of jury nullification 
as an important safeguard for a free society: a test that all laws must 
pass. Jury nullification has been used by jurors throughout our history to 
"nullify" unpopular and unjust laws, from laws against free speech to 
slavery to Prohibition.

The Fully Informed Jury Association (www.fija.org) is a non-profit 
association dedicated to educating all Americans about their rights, powers, 
and responsibilities as trial jurors. FIJA publishes and distributes 
educational material but depends upon grassroots activists to inform jurors 
of their rights and to undertake state-level lobbying or ballot-issue 
efforts.

Governors across the nation have signed Jury Rights Day Proclamations 
recognizing this right and authority of the juror to render a verdict based 
on conscience and in the service of justice.  This year, Proclamations have 
come from Connecticut, the State of Washington, and from Alaska's Governor, 
Sarah Palin, who is now a Vice-Presidential candidate.

This September 5, private groups across the nation will hand out educational 
literature, provide interviews, give talks to civic groups, and send letters 
to their local newspapers to encourage people to learn more about the rights 
and responsibilities of jury service, as well as to encourage those on trial 
to demand their right to a trial by jury.



For additional information on juror rights, call the Fully Informed Jury 
Association's toll-free line at 1-800-TEL-JURY, or visit their website at 
www.fija.org. To help spread the word, you can contact your local or state 
FIJA worker through the list of State Contacts on the website.



The Fully Informed Jury Association is a not-for-profit research and 
educational group dedicated to informing all Americans of their right and 
duty to judge both the law and the facts, and to render a verdict based on 
their conscience and their own best sense of justice, even if contrary to 
the directions of the court.

Contact:

Iloilo Marguerite Jones

Executive Director

406-442-7800

[EMAIL PROTECTED]

http://www.fija.org

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