| Reasonable Doubt |
![]() If jurors aren't sure, can they find me guilty beyond a reasonable doubt? TranscriptANDY RADDING: The jury must believe beyond any doubt that is reasonable and rationale that the defendant has been proven guilty. BYRON WARNKEN: Not beyond all doubt, but beyond a reasonable doubt. ANDY RADDING: There cannot be a reasonable rational doubt to the guilt. BYRON WARNKEN: It is very inexact, it is very amorphous, but it means we are pretty sure. ANDY RADDING: It is interesting because certain things are not capable of a precise definition. BYRON WARNKEN: You cannot really quantify it. ANDY RADDING: You cannot give it a number. BYRON WARNKEN: But if you had to quantify it, it probably means, I don’t know, probably about an 85% degree of certainty. ANDY RADDING: I would like to believe that it is higher than 85. BYRON WARNKEN: We can find people guilty of crimes, send them to jail for a long time, even execute them when we do not know with certainty. But we have to get as close to that as possible. We have to have proof beyond a “reasonable” doubt. ANDY RADDING: Very different from the civil standard, which is “preponderance of the evidence,” which is 50.1%. BYRON WARNKEN: I am suing a doctor in malpractice, where there was a terrible operation and somebody died. That is an important case, but we are willing to accept a 49% risk of error – meaning, we are going to ask the jury can you find that the plaintiff persuaded you by a preponderance of the evidence, a little more than 50/50. ANDY RADDING: Beyond a reasonable doubt, a much stronger standard because we are dealing with peoples’ lives and liberty. ExpertsComing Soon!File NotesWhat Exactly IS Proof Beyond a Reasonable Doubt?We are all presumed innocent until proven guilty. But just how much proof of guilt is enough? Hmm. Good question. Even the lawyers lack a precise answer, as is evident in this video. Indeed, as these legal experts concede, it's extremely hard to quantify "proof beyond a reasonable doubt." So, when a judge instructs the jury on proof beyond a reasonable doubt, you will find the typical jury instruction devoid of objective measurement:
Though the legal experts can't seem to give it a precise definition, some have described a "reasonable doubt" as "any doubt which would make a reasonable person hesitate in the most important of his or her affairs." Now, that can mean many different things to many different people. While this is designed to be a very high standard of proof, it doesn't require absolute certainty. Indeed, people have gone to the gas chamber when jurors didn't know for sure whether they committed the crime charged -- a daunting proposition when you consider the fact that no one really knows for sure what proof beyond a reasonable doubt really is. THE COMMENT FILE (1)
![]() Gray Area in Jury Instructions by Bill S., Thursday, July 31, 2008 - 09:43 AM
I never noticed how the gray the jury instructions are on guilt beyond reasonable doubt, but the facts that the jury has to come to a unanimous decision and that the state has the burden of proof should help with the gray area.
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