The Case for Bifurcated Trials
Narrowing the odds of executing the innocent
Last July, the Texas Forensic Science Commission found that arson investigators had used flawed science in the trial of Cameron Todd Willingham. Willingham was convicted of setting the 1999 fire that killed his three children. He was executed in 2004, despite serious questions about his guilt. The case garnered national attention last year after a David Grann investigation in The New Yorker argued that there was no evidence the fire was intentional.
Now another questionable arson-related death penalty case is percolating in Pennsylvania, where Daniel Dougherty sits on death row for setting the fire that killed his two sons in 1985. Arson experts John Lentini and Angelo Pisani have found that, in a situation similar to the Willingham case, fire investigators relied on outdated and disproved science. One of them, for example, testified that the extreme heat put out by the fire could only have come from the use of a liquid accelerant, an assertion that arson specialists today say simply isn't true. Accelerants have little to do with how hot a fire burns. Subsequent investigators have found no forensic evidence that the blaze that killed Dougherty's children was deliberate.
In Mississippi two men—Devin Bennett and Jeffrey Havard—today sit on death row for the murder of children in their care. Both men insist the deaths were accidents. Both were convicted mostly based on the testimony of the controversial medical examiner Steven Hayne, whose dubious record was the subject of an investigative feature I wrote for the October 2007 issue of reason. In both cases, more reputable medical examiners who later reviewed Hayne's work reported that the signs of abuse he claimed to have found simply aren't there.
In recent years, DNA testing has exposed some serious flaws in several fields of forensic science. A 2009 National Academy of Sciences report found that forensic specialists often make exaggerated claims in the courtroom, expressing levels of certainty that aren't always supported by scientific research. In cases where it's certain that a crime was committed and for which DNA is available for testing, the challenge is getting prosecutors to agree to the tests. But in cases like that of Dougherty, Willingham, Bennett, Havard, and others, the question isn't who committed the crime, but whether a crime was committed in the first place.
DNA isn't of much use in those cases. But during a panel discussion at the Georgetown Law Center last year (disclosure: I moderated the panel), arson investigator Lentini suggested one reform that may give defendants in such cases a fairer crack at justice: bifurcated trials. Courts would hold an initial trial to determine if a crime was committed, then a second to determine who committed it.
The problem, as Lentini explained, is that by asking the jury to answer both questions at once, jurors are nudged toward answering both in the affirmative. When jurors first sit down in the jury box and see someone sitting in the defendant's chair, there's a tendency to think that some crime was committed. And once they've determined there was a crime, the person on trial is often seen as the only—or at least most likely—person to have committed it.
With infant death cases, for example, the only reasonable suspect is the person with the child at the time he or she died. Willingham and Dougherty were the only adults at home at the time the fire broke out. Their mere presence in the courtroom strongly implies from the outset that a crime was committed.
These trials then too easily become little more than judgments of a defendant's character; if the scientific evidence is a wash, the verdict may hinge on whether jurors believe the defendant is capable of violence. In Willingham's case, for example, prosecution witnesses testified about Willingham's emotional reaction after the fire, and whether it fit that of a grieving father or a man who had just committed murder. The prosecution also brought in a jailhouse informant—a notoriously unreliable source of testimony—who claimed Willingham had confessed to him. (Willingham's sentencing trial was even more farcical, with now-discredited psychiatrists testifying, among other nonsensical claims, that Willingham's Led Zeppelin and Iron Maiden posters were indicative of a death-obsessed psychopath who was likely to kill again.)
Such tactics aren't uncommon in these cases, and they can have the effect of getting the jury to look past the scientific evidence related to the important question of whether there has been a crime to be prosecuting in the first place. Once a witness says a guy was acting strangely, once his cellmate says he confessed, it isn't difficult to see how some jurors might then dismiss doubts about the quality of the evidence that a crime had been committed at all.
We already have bifurcated trials in other areas of the justice system. Their purpose is to isolate portions of court proceedings that require a judgment that isn't influenced by evidence from other portions of the case. In civil cases, for example, the awarding of damages is often separated from determining liability. In divorce cases the division of property may be a separate proceeding from the determination of who gets custody of the couple's children. In death penalty cases we separate the guilt portion of the trial from the sentencing.
And so in homicide cases where the defense can plausibly argue that a death wasn't a murder, it makes sense to resolve that question first. After a suspect is charged, defense attorneys would have a pre-trial deadline by which to make a motion for bifurcation. Such a motion would likely come into play not only in arson cases, but also in child molestation cases, infant death cases, and any other situation where there's a legitimate question whether a death really was a homicide.
The state would likely then file a brief in opposition to bifurcation. The judge would rule whether the trial is a candidate for bifurcation, using the same "beyond a reasonable doubt" standard used in criminal cases. If the judge rules for bifurcation, each side would then bring in experts to make their case before the jury. But there would be no defendant in the courtroom, and the state's case against a specific suspect would wait until after a jury first determines that there's a crime to charge.
In the 20 years since DNA testing began exonerating the wrongly convicted, there's been some momentum toward reforming the criminal justice system. Much of it has been understandably focused on improving the quality of the science used in the courtroom. But we should also consider structural changes, ways we can help juries deliberate verdicts as objectively as possible. In cases where the primary issue is not who committed the crime but whether a crime was even committed at all, bifurcated trials might be a way to prevent jurors from confusing those questions. Admittedly, it's a fairly radical idea. But we now have compelling evidence that the government has executed at least one innocent man, and we know for certain that it nearly executed several others. That ought to shock the conscience enough to start considering more radical reforms.
Radley Balko is a senior editor at reason.
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I never knew that myself and all my friends were death obsessed psychopaths in our teens. Amazing no one got hurt. And I can only wonder what this guy would make of Warty.
On a more serious note regarding the bifurcated case idea, isn't the grand jury ostensibly there to do almost that exact duty?
I believe they decide whether there's reason or not to indite a particular individual -- not whether or not there has been a crime.
Any respectable judge in the world, upon seeing Warty in his or her courtroom, would immediately sentence him to be hanged by the neck until dead. That's before analyzing his poster collection, and even if he's only there as a member of the jury.
On a more serious note regarding the bifurcated case idea, isn't the grand jury ostensibly there to do almost that exact duty?
I believe there's a cliche on the high indictability of ham sandwiches.
Your point and Name Nomad's are right, and I didn't really address Balko's statement that once someone is in court, there is the automatic assumption that a crime has been committed.
Let me withdraw the last paragraph of my comment.
How do I contribute to Reason magazine? My company makes machines that see through clothes and I'm trying to get them installed at all government buildings and transportation hubs around the country. I figure if my company donates to Reason, we can start to get some good publicity from it's writers, and maybe turn the tide in our favor!
Prosecutors will never go for this. They are all about getting high conviction rates, even if innocent people die because of their fanaticism.
Prosecutors easily rationalize that away by telling themselves that even if the person didn't commit the crime in question, they're still a scumbag.
Nobody is innocent. They just have yet to be caught.
Does that include the prosecutor? Maybe he should die, too.
Nope. Being in the business of enforcing the law means that you get to commit criminal acts that would give you the justified label of scumbag, and get promoted for it!
Isn't this sort of like a coroner's inquest? Except I don't think a coroner's inquest has any standing as far as law enforcement is concerned - it's just for informational purposes.
Scenario: the state charges defendant A with murder. Defendant A files a motion for bifurcation and loses the first trial, meaning the court rules that the murder did happen.
However, Defendant A either is acquitted or has charges dropped during the trial to determine whether he or she is guilty.
Now the state charges Defendant B. Does Defendant B have the right to request another trial to determine whether the murder happened?
I wouldn't see why - as to the question of whether a murder occurred, the question is res judicata. The only question now is who did it.
Ah, but that's the problem. If that's the case, then the state can make a deal with someone who has little connection to the crime and agrees not to defend himself at the first trial, slam-dunk the first trial, and then drop the charges against him.
Wa-la, the bifurcation system is now circumvented.
What kind of moron would sign up for that little joyride?
Say, a moron which is under charges for another crime, and has a secret deal with the prosecution to get an easier sentence if he helps them in another case.
It wouldn't be res judicata because there would be no privity between Defendant's A and B, and Defendant B was not given an opportunity to litigate the matter previously.
Furthermore, Defendant B has a constitutional right to defend himself that would trump any statutory or common law estoppal claims. (And in general, estoppal is useless as a defense if its use would be contrary to public policy--and what is listed in the Constitution is as high a level of a statement of public policy as there can be.) If he is charged with a crime, he has the right to force the state to prove all elements of the crime against him, as well as the right to challenge any of the evidence put forth against him.
There would also be confrontation clause issues if Defendant B were not allowed to challenge the witnesses in the primary part of the trial. And I'm sure I could think up several other constitutional issues that would arise in this scenario.
I think that a finding of murder, as distinct from a finding that the victim died due to foul play, would be specific to that accused (Defendant A). With a new defendant, I would think you'd need a new first trial. For one, Defendant B wouldn't have had a full and fair opportunity to participate in Defendant A's Trial 1.1, and that's usually required if you want the proceeding to have preclusive effect against Defendant B.
Balko's heart is in the right place, but his bifurcated trials idea has some serious flaws. I'd much rather see a system where indigents have a public defender system for their defense, rather than the court-appointed monstrosity that exists in, e.g., Texas. A much more willing attitude of judges towards using Daubert to exclude experts such as those used in the Willingham case, would also help a lot.
Even though Balko made the point that there would be no suspect on trial in the first portion? I'm of the understanding that whether the police have a suspect or not, the first trial would be unrelated to the suspect, and focus entirely on the victim and the scene of the "crime." Then, if it was indeed a crime, they roll in suspect A, or if charges were dropped, suspect B and proceed with the criminal trial.
Right. But who opposes the state? To have a trial you need two sides. One side in the "Was there a crime?" trial is the DA, obviously. Who's on the other side?
So it really would be a "finding" as opposed to a trial, right?
I see flaws in our current legal process, but these bifurcated trials open the door to essentially try someone in the court of public opinion before their real trial starts, because let's face it, the system implemented will only resemble what Balko proposes until a prosecutor in a high-profile murder uses it to that effect.
Yeah, his notion is a little weird, in that (as I understand it) the guy the state wants to charge with the crime is the one who has to discredit (in absentia) the state's proposition that there was a crime.
I think the concept of bifurcation makes sense, but it seems to stumble over our adversarial system: who, exactly, is to oppose the state's assertion that there was a crime? If there's already a defendant, someone the state intends to charge, or I suppose must already have charged, then of course that's going to prejudice the entire course of the first trial -- as Balko notes -- and I don't think merely removing the guy from the courtroom and not mentioning his name (only his taste in rock bands, ha ha) is going to change things very much.
But who else can do the job? It would be difficult to allow, say, a private organization (United Victims Of Overzealous Prosecutory) with no direct stake in the case to oppose the state. You can't ask the state to oppose itself, e.g. by asking a public defender type to do the job. So...who?
I thought England had something called a "coroner's trial" in which a jury was empanelled and could rule a death accidental or homicide, and bring a charge against a specific person -- who was then tried by a different jury in a different trial. Maybe that's the best you can do.
You're right about Daubert, but you're wrong about Texas, sort of. Starting about 8 years ago, the state has steadily improved the quality of counsel provided to indigent defendants in murder cases. That's little comfort to those already convicted, but Texas is probably better than average when it comes to indigent counsel in murder cases.
Since when did our "justice" system have anything to do with justice?
The purpose of criminal courts is to put someone in jail. It doesn't matter who.
When a child dies in a fire there needs to be closure.
Someone must be blamed, and they must pay.
Besides, prosecutors with high conviction rates can move into other more powerful positions like judge or AG.
They don't care about quaint little things like "justice".
To even suggest such a thing is silly.
The purpose of criminal courts is to put someone in jail. It doesn't matter who.
When a child dies in a fire there needs to be closure.
Someone must be blamed, and they must pay.
Except if it was a cop that did it while executing a warrant. Just ask the mother of Aiyana Stanley-Jones.
When children are killed by police in the execution of a warrant it is the fault of the parent or guardian who committed the unlawful acts that justified the warrant in the first place.
Even if the warrant is executed at the wrong address.
We can't hold police and prosecutors to the same standards as everyone else.
The result would be a loss of faith in American "justice", a perhaps the entire system breaking down.
NTTAWWT
Or it's the fault of the parent or guardian for not keeping a closer eye on said child during the police's search. Same can be said for dogs.
Good to know you can equate children and dogs. Happy Turkey day with your brood/family.
I was just reading about Coroners on Wikipedia. Interesting - a British coroner is a judicial official, but in America most coroners are part of the executive branch of government. Meaning their coroners are judges and ours are cops. In some jurisdictions, the coroner's office is a branch of the sherrif's office. So I'm not sure bifurcation involving the coroner would work over here.
Lest we forget this grew jewel:
http://reason.org/news/show/no.....-crime-lab
I meant "great"
I've always hated it when people tried to make the case that we should get rid of the death penalty, because we sometimes convict--and even execute--innocent people. What's to become of those sentenced for life, or even just for ten years, for a crime they didn't commit?
I like this proposal, because it addresses something I find *far* more disconcerting than just executing innocents: the fact that so many innocents are getting convicted--of anything--in the first place!
Any system we have is going to convict some non-zero number of innocent people.
What becomes of those sentenced to life is that they still get to live and speak and possibly have the chance to be released.
If we must have the death penalty, I vote that it should be an option for criminals sentenced to life at any point in their sentence. The state would only be assisting suicide, which is preferable to murder. If they are innocent, they can choose whichever option will cause them and their families the least amount of suffering. If they are guilty, we can kill them faster and more cheaply than under current death penalty law.
Off topic: A certain disagreeable person with the initials A. A. W. has shot Lassie, cursed at a baby, and wiped his ass with the American flag. The whole world must know these facts.
BBAAALLLKKKOOO!!
Interesting case, thanks for sharing with us. What surprised me is the small importance of the DNA
The argument could be made that bifurcation would have the exact opposite affect from what's desired. Consider this - Balko's argument is that the jury has at times ignored the question of whether or not a crime has been committed and convicted someone strictly because someone has to pay, and this guy is the one the cops and prosecution say did it. But in a bifurcated case, the jury will be sitting there with the verdict of the first phase of the trial, that a crime indeed was committed - and consider that the only logical conclusion is that the jackalope in the defendant's chair must have done it.
Given that, it would go to say that the bulk of the actual trial would happen in the first part of the trial, determining whether a crime had actually been committed; the second portion of the trial would frequently be just a check in the box. Case in point, the arson cases - the only logical person to have killed the children was the adult who was with them at the time, so once you've determined that the arson was indeed malicious, then you've essentially determined that they committed the arson. But herein lies the rub - the defendant isn't present for the first part of the trial, the part where their guilt is really sealed, and yet our justice system considers it a right of every defendant to face his or her accusers.
Though I guess all of that would be answered by the defense when they either choose or don't choose to petition for bifurcation. If the defendant waives his right to face his accuser as part of his bifurcation petition, then all bets are off.
With respect to the Willingham case, and I'm limiting my comment to that case only, bifurcation would have made no difference. Virtually all fire investigators at that time were relying on the same rules of thumb. All but a handful would have declared the Willingham fire arson, though we now know it wasn't. Even John Lentini had learned only months early (in the Lime Street fire) that the old rules of thumb were crap.
A truly deliberative jury, on the other hand, could have (and I argue should have) stopped the injustice then and there. There was plenty of reason to doubt the State's case. The jury was simply not inclined to do so.
For details, see The Skeptical Juror and The Trial of Cameron Todd Willingham.
I think I have a solution for some of the complaints; first off, if Defendent A passes on trying to get a bifurcated trial (is that gramatically correct?), that shouldn't mean that Defendent B can't get one. It would mean, though, that once it's done, it's done. Second, I should clearly think that a new jury would be brought in after it has been determined that a crime was committed. I'd say that the defense attorney would handle this part of the trial as well, but without identifying anyone. After all, it'd be nothing but a presentation of the evidence and questioning expert witnesses, more or less.
I can't figure out how this wouldn't conflict with a grand jury; if a grand jury decides there is enough evidence to bring Bob to trial, it does clearly presuppose that there was a crime. If there was doubt to the crime, then clearly Bob could not have been found a reasonable suspect to a non-crime.
Metallica made me do it.
An interesting question raised regarding what happens if the first part of Defendant A's trial results in the determination that a crime was committed, but Defendant A is found not guilty, what happens with Defendant B. I would guess it depends, since that a different defendant can also mean a different theory of the crime to be presented. It would depend on how much the theory of how Defendant B went about committing the crime is linked to the original theory of the crime as argued in the first trial.
After all, in the cases we're talking about here, there's no question about something having burned down, someone having been killed, etc. The question is, was it a crime or was it an accident, self defense, etc. And that can vary with the defendant.
Issue preclusion still depends on identity of the parties involved. An issue decided between A and B has no preclusive effect on C if C does not have privity with respect to either A or B.
And again, equitable principles of estoppal cannot trump constitutional rights. They can't even trump public policy considerations. (For example, estoppal cannot be used as a defense to prove that a contract to commit a crime is enforceable, as a contract to commit a crime is contrary to public policy; the theory being that the courts will not allow their power to be used in a manner contrary to public policy, regardless of any statutory or equitable theories of law that may apply.)
To Reason, Add Evidence
6) "Cameron Todd Willingham: Another Media Meltdown", A Collection of Articles
http://homicidesurvivors.com/categories/Cameron Todd Willingham.aspx
1) "The Death Penalty: More Protection for Innocents"
http://homicidesurvivors.com/2.....cents.aspx
In the single trial system, we fully present the guilt evidence, specifically in the context of the defendant on trial, not some random, "it may be anybody, so just find this defendant guilty."
Those guilt issues present evidence of the circumstances and degrees of the crime, which is also the context of the sanction, in consideration of that specific defendant.
Neither Lentini nor Balko present a credible reason to go to bifurcated trials.
I think both also underestimate the power and burden of proof, regarding the presumption of innocence, until proven guilty beyond a reasonable doubt.
For many well known reasons, very few cases actually go to trial. One of the reasons is that the burden of proof is so high for the prosecution, often precluding either at trial or a plea bargain.
No one discounts the importance and injustice of actual innocent convicted.
It is seldom recognized, however, that actual innocents harmed or murdered, is a much, much larger issue within the criminal justice system, when we knowingly release criminals through probation, parole or other early releases, and those criminals harm and murder, again, after release, while under government supervision.
I believe you overestimate the burden of proof, given that Texas is murdering innocent people.
And while it "feels" like your last sentence is true, I'd like to see some data to show the number of executed innocents v recidivist murderers.
Damned idiots! Politicians and wanna-be politicos - that's "lawyers" to the rest of you - have the "reverse Midas Touch". That is, everything they touch, handle or even deal with turns to ... second-hand dog food. Can't trust 'em with education, can't trust 'em with health care, can't trust 'em with entitlement programs ... can't trust 'em. Any ideas as to the solution?
Isn't the grand jury process supposed to be doing the same job that the first half of a bifurcated trial would do?
How about just providing a transcript of the grand jury proceeding to defense attorneys, and if they find fault with it and are sustained, then it would have to be redone with the defense attorney present?
Thanks
Given that, it would go to say that the bulk of the actual trial would happen in the first part of the trial, determining whether a crime had actually been committed; the second portion of the trial would frequently be just a check in the box. Case in point, the arson cases - the only logical person to have killed the children was the adult who was with them at the time, so once you've determined that the arson was indeed malicious, then you've essentially determined that they committed the arson.
???? ????? ????? ??????? ???? ??? ?????? ?????? ??????? But herein lies the rub - the defendant isn't present for the first part of the trial, the part where their guilt is really sealed, and yet our justice system considers it a right of every defendant to face his or her accusers.
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I just realized this was written in 2002. I wonder what the gun crime rate is now. Any government that tells you that you have no right to self defense is not looking after your best interest. Self defense is the most basic right anyone has. No government or police can protect you. I can't believe you all allow this to continue. I keep a gun at home for self defense and have a license to carry it concealed any where I go. And I do. If I am attacked then at least I have a chance to stay alive. By the time the police arrive they can either arrange for my body to be picked up or take a statement from me. I choose the later. Britons let a right be taken from them and now it will be much harder to get it back. But you should try.
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I just realized this was written in 2002. I wonder what the gun crime rate is now. Any government that tells you that you have no right to self defense is not looking after your best interest. Self defense is the most basic right anyone has. No government or police can protect you. I can't believe you all allow this to continue. I keep a gun at home for self defense and have a license to carry it concealed any where I go. And I do. If I am attacked then at least I have a chance to stay alive. By the time the police arrive they can either arrange for my body to be picked up or take a statement from me. I choose the later. Britons let a right be taken from them and now it will be much harder to get it back. But you should try.
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I just realized this was written in 2002. I wonder what the gun crime rate is now. Any government that tells you that you have no right to self defense is not looking after your best interest. Self defense is the most basic right anyone has. No government or police can protect you. I can't believe you all allow this to continue. I keep a gun at home for self defense and have a license to carry it concealed any where I go. And I do. If I am attacked then at least I have a chance to stay alive. By the time the police arrive they can either arrange for my body to be picked up or take a statement from me. I choose the later. Britons let a right be taken from them and now it will be much harder to get it back. But you should try.
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I just realized this was written in 2002. I wonder what the gun crime rate is now. Any government that tells you that you have no right to self defense is not looking after your best interest. Self defense is the most basic right anyone has. No government or police can protect you. I can't believe you all allow this to continue. I keep a gun at home for self defense and have a license to carry it concealed any where I go. And I do. If I am attacked then at least I have a chance to stay alive. By the time the police arrive they can either arrange for my body to be picked up or take a statement from me. I choose the later. Britons let a right be taken from them and now it will be much harder to get it back. But you should try.
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I just realized this was written in 2002. I wonder what the gun crime rate is now. Any government that tells you that you have no right to self defense is not looking after your best interest. Self defense is the most basic right anyone has. No government or police can protect you. I can't believe you all allow this to continue. I keep a gun at home for self defense and have a license to carry it concealed any where I go. And I do. If I am attacked then at least I have a chance to stay alive. By the time the police arrive they can either arrange for my body to be picked up or take a statement from me. I choose the later. Britons let a right be taken from them and now it will be much harder to get it back. But you should try.
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I just realized this was written in 2002. I wonder what the gun crime rate is now. Any government that tells you that you have no right to self defense is not looking after your best interest. Self defense is the most basic right anyone has. No government or police can protect you. I can't believe you all allow this to continue. I keep a gun at home for self defense and have a license to carry it concealed any where I go. And I do. If I am attacked then at least I have a chance to stay alive. By the time the police arrive they can either arrange for my body to be picked up or take a statement from me. I choose the later. Britons let a right be taken from them and now it will be much harder to get it back. But you should try.
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I just realized this was written in 2002. I wonder what the gun crime rate is now. Any government that tells you that you have no right to self defense is not looking after your best interest. Self defense is the most basic right anyone has. No government or police can protect you. I can't believe you all allow this to continue. I keep a gun at home for self defense and have a license to carry it concealed any where I go. And I do. If I am attacked then at least I have a chance to stay alive. By the time the police arrive they can either arrange for my body to be picked up or take a statement from me. I choose the later. Britons let a right be taken from them and now it will be much harder to get it back. But you should try.
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