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Title: Man Arrested, Charged with Multiple Felonies for Telling Jurors About Their Rights
Source: Activist Post
URL Source: http://www.activistpost.com/2015/08 ... ted-charged-with-multiple.html
Published: Aug 3, 2015
Author: Carey Wedler
Post Date: 2015-08-04 10:58:09 by Deckard
Keywords: None
Views: 21550
Comments: 92

By Carey Wedler

Last week, a Denver man was arrested and charged with multiple felonies, but not for stealing, committing fraud, or engaging in violent crime. He was targeted for attempting to educate jurors about their rights in the courtroom.

Mark Ianicelli, 56, set up a table outside of Lindsay-Flanigan Courthouse in Denver in order to educate jurors about jury nullification. Jury nullification is the process by which members of juries can nullify unjust laws by finding defendants charged with them not guilty.

Ianicelli is charged with tampering with a jury, a felony in Colorado that carries a minimum bond of $5,000. He was charged by the Denver District Attorney for seven counts of tampering, and has since bailed out of jail. Ianicelli was in the second day of a planned three-day outreach to educate jurors entering the courtroom about the power of jury nullification. He was handing out fliers when he was arrested. His goal was to inform potential jurors about a vital, centuries-old function of juries.

The practice was first used in America in 1735 to exonerate a man of libel charges after he printed unflattering statements about the Governor of New York (a British colony at the time). Though he had undoubtedly printed them, the jury found him not guilty and set the precedent that members of juries could judge the morality and legitimacy of laws.

The United States’ first Chief Justice, John Jay, once told jurors, “You have a right to take upon yourselves to judge [both the facts and law].” Jurors would seize this right to nullify anti-sedition laws in the early 1800s that attempted to stifle free speech criticizing the newly formed United States government.

Judges first began cracking down on the right to nullify in the late 1800s. By that time, jurors had already used nullification to challenge the Fugitive Slave Act, which imposed heavy punishment on Northerners who aided escaped slaves from the South. Though judges came to discourage nullification, the practice went on to be useful in nullifying Prohibition-era laws.

Jury nullification still affects prohibition against outlawed drugs. In 2012, a New Hampshire jury acquitted a Rastafarian man, Doug Darrell, of growing marijuana—though he was technically guilty of the violation. The jurors had been informed of their right to nullify and found the law and charges against Darrell to be unjust. They found him not guilty.

However, this power of the people has not gone unchecked. Though some states allow for the practice, judges often fail to notify jurors of their ability to nullify. Activists have been harassed and jailed for attempting to inform jurors of their right to judge the morality of laws.

The Fully Informed Jury Association (FIJA), a non-profit organization that educates jurors on their rights (and whose pamphlets Ianicelli was handing out when he was arrested), is one group that attempts to counter these suppressions by the justice system.

Kirsten Tynan of FIJA reported on Ianicelli’s case, stating that officials in Denver claimed a juror had complained about Ianicelli’s presence near the courthouse, prompting his arrest. Tynan was told Ianicelli was arrested on charges of jury tampering, which according to Colorado law, consists of:

(1) A person commits jury-tampering if, with intent to influence a juror’s vote, opinion, decision, or other action in a case, he attempts directly or indirectly to communicate with a juror other than as a part of the proceedings in the trial of the case.
(1.5) A person commits jury-tampering if he knowingly participates in the fraudulent processing or selection of jurors or prospective jurors.
(2) Jury-tampering is a class 5 felony; except that jury-tampering in any class 1 felony trial is a class 4 felony.
Though Tynan acknowledged that under some circumstances nullification activism is not legally permissible, it appears Ianicelli was within his rights. He is due back in court on August 11 to face his victimless felony charges.

It is more than alarming that a man attempting to facilitate and strengthen the judicial process is punished with the full force of the law—the very thing Ianicelli sought to educate jurors about. As Harlan F. Stone, the 12th Chief Justice of the U.S. Supreme Court said in 1941, “The law itself is on trial quite as much as the cause which is to be decided.” When the justice system refuses to allow jurors to be aware of their rights, let alone exercise them, the country’s entire system of “law and order” is called into question.

Carey Wedler writes for theAntiMedia.org. Anti-Media Radio airs weeknights at 11pm Eastern/8pm Pacific. If you spot a typo, email edits@theantimedia.org.

Carey Wedler joined Anti-Media as an independent journalist in September of 2014. As a writer and senior editor, her topics of interest include the police and warfare states, the Drug War, the relevance of history to current problems and solutions, and positive developments that drive humanity forward. She currently resides in Los Angeles, California, where she was born and raised. Learn more about Wedler here!
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Begin Trace Mode for Comment # 85.

#85. To: Deckard, tpaine, GrandIsland (#0)

[Article] The United States’ first Chief Justice, John Jay, once told jurors, “You have a right to take upon yourselves to judge [both the facts and law].” Jurors would seize this right to nullify anti-sedition laws in the early 1800s that attempted to stifle free speech criticizing the newly formed United States government.

This out of context quote is applied as legal nonsense. It never purported to apply to any criminal trial context, and only applied in an extremely limited context. Actual, citable precedent was set in 1895 and continues with a line of cases to the present day.

Special jury. A jury ordered by the court, on the motion of either party, in the cses of unusual importance or intricacy. Called, from the maner in which it is constituted, a “struck jury.”

At common law, a jury composed of persons above the rank of ordinary freeholders; usually summoned to try questions of greater importance than those usually submitted to common juries.

Struck jury. A special jury.

Black’s Law Dictionary, 6th Ed.

Georgia v. Brailsford is not citable precedent.

Originally, Brailsford filed suit against one Spalding in 1790 in the federal circuit court in Georgia before Justice Iredell on circuit, and Judge Pendleton. Georgia’s effort to interplead was denied. Georgia filed in equity against Brailsford and Spalding, which was dismissed with instructions to file an action at common law. 2 Dallas 415, 418-19 (1793)

JAY, Chief Justice.—All the Court except the judges who have just delivered their sentiments are of opinion that if the state of Georgia has a right to the debt, due originally from Spalding to Brailsford, it is a right to be pursued at common law.The bill, however, was founded in the highest equity; and the ground of equity for granting an injunction continues the same—namely that the money ought to be kept for the party to whom it belongs. We shall therefore continue the injunction untill the next term; when, however, if Georgia has not instituted her action at common law, it will be dissolved.(a)

(a) An amicable action was accordingly entered and tried at the bar of the Supreme Court, in February Term 1794, (3 Dall. 1), when a verdict was given for the defendant (Brailsford) and the injunction was, of course, dissolved.

As the parties could find no legal basis to proceed at common law, they invented a fictional basis. They stipulated as fact that Brailsford had been paid. As SCOTUS had ordered the Marshal not to disburse the money, it appears the court had to know the stipulated “facts” were fiction. Alexander Dallas termed it “[a]n amicable action.”

Brailsford v. Georgia 3 US (Dal) 1 (1794) was initiated upon that fiction and another fiction that Brailsford was a British subject even though records indicate he was a citizen of South Carolina.

The Brailsford jury pool of 40 included not less than 38 merchants. This was not an ordinary jury, but a special jury of merchants selected for their expertise in law merchant (lex mercatoria).

Thus, if understood in its context, Chief Justice Jay’s jury charge includes the natural instructions that a judge in a trial at bar would give to an expert special jury of merchants, which was expected to play a part in incorporating mercantile law into the larger body of law. After all, the facts in Brailsford had already all been stipulated, and thus finding the law was the only matter left for the special jury to determine. In the case of Brailsford, a special jury of merchants would be expected to apply to this case the prevailing law merchant customs. This would assure the wide mercantile community that the courts of the nascent Republic would not be insular and partisan, but would apply the lex mercatoria to international mercantile disputes.

Lochlan F. Shelfer, “Special Juries in the Supreme Court,” 123 Yale Law Journal, 208, 242 (2013).

[This Note] has shown that the venire was almost exclusively made up of merchants, and that Brailsford’s attorney repeatedly invoked the law of merchants in his address to the jury. It has concluded from these and other strands of evidence that in the Supreme Court’s first and only reported jury trial, it employed a special jury of merchants in the Mansfieldian tradition.

Id. at 245.

It was a tradition of English common law to use an expert special jury in cases at law merchant, as shown in the case of Middlewood against Blakes (1797) 101 Eng. Rep. 911, 914 (K.B.) (Grose, J.), 7 T.R. 162, 168 (K.B.)(1797).

Now it must be remembered, that this cause was tried by a special jury of merchants of London, persons peculiarly conversant in commercial transactions, and who perfectly well knew the ordinary risk of such a voyage, and what would vary that risk; and they were of opinion that the underwriter was not liable.

This is not like an ordinary jury. The special jury is selected for its expertise at law merchant to assist the court. When John Jay addressed the jury in Brailsford, he was addressing such a jury. His remarks had no applicability to any criminal cases, and had no applicability to civil cases outside of those rare instances where the court impanelled a special jury of experts at the applicable law.

Sparf and Hansen v. United States, 156 U.S. 51 (1895) extinguished any possible notion of serving as a precedent as some wingnuts claim.

Wingnuts talk. And they talk. Even when they do not know what they are talking about.

nolu chan  posted on  2015-08-07   18:13:25 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


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