Resistant Jurors Can Help Protect Abortion Rights (No Matter What the Law Says)
In the event of prosecution, jury nullification allows regular people to exercise a veto over the power of the state.

Americans worried about the status of reproductive rights earned a breather last week when voters amended several state constitutions to protect access to abortion and turned away ballot proposals to criminalize the practice. In the wake of the U.S. Supreme Court's decision overturning federal protections for abortion access, those are incremental wins for pro-choicers. But the matter remains unresolved elsewhere. Among the tactics pro-choice advocates could adopt is one popular among champions of other controversial liberties: jury nullification.
In recent years, jury nullification, the judge-aggravating power of juries to bring "not guilty" verdicts even in defiance of the law, has been invoked in cases involving drugs, guns, political protest, and prosecutorial overreach. It was a common practice among jurors who disapproved of Prohibition. But it's best known for its antebellum use by abolitionist juries enraged by efforts under the Fugitive Slave Act to recapture people escaping bondage and fleeing to hoped-for freedom in northern states. That example is invoked by scholars who see the tactic as a promising shield for reproductive rights.
"Those fighting against the increased criminalization of abortion should seek inspiration from how abolitionists responded to the Fugitive Slave Act by not only waging a fearsome political battle to contest the legislation, but also by leveraging the power available to criminal juries—most notably juror nullification—to abrogate the power of unjust laws," Wesleyan University's Sonali Chakravarti, a professor of government, wrote last month in Boston Review. "Should heath care workers be charged under anti-abortion statutes such as the ones in Idaho and Texas, jurors should know that, alongside their oath to render a 'a true verdict according to the law and the evidence,' they always retain the power to issue a not guilty verdict."
Referencing the use of jury nullification to hobble the enforcement of other laws, Chakravarti added "a jury trial may reveal the boundaries of jurors' willingness to punish medical professionals for assisting with an abortion, even in states that have passed strong anti-abortion legislation."
Chakravarti isn't alone in her argument. In September, law professors Peter N. Salib, of the University of Houston, and Guha Krishnamurthi, of the University of Oklahoma, also suggested that "jury nullification, also known as conscientious acquittals, may have a role to play in securing reproductive rights."
Writing in Inquest, a publication devoted to reducing mass incarceration, they emphasized that jury nullification has effects beyond the specific cases in which jurors refuse to bring "guilty" verdicts.
"The possibility of nullification here is serious enough that it might in fact be exactly that—the possibility, not actual nullifications—that matters most. Prosecutors want to win their cases, and they adjust their strategies accordingly."
"Thus, we expect the effect of nullification on abortion prosecutions to be twofold," they add. "First, it will reduce the range of cases that will be brought. Prosecutors fearing the possibility of objectors on the jury will avoid bringing the most unpopular charges. Second, when instances where prosecutors do bring charges, nullification may change the outcome of some cases."
Salib and Krishnamurthi point to plummeting federal marijuana prosecutions as the result of jury revolts, but there's evidence that the fear of nullification also changes police priorities. Several years ago, asked about evolving non-punitive approaches in the treatment of marijuana-law violators, El Paso, Texas, Police Chief Greg Allen said it's a waste of his officers' time to put hours into an "an arrest that has no end result of a conviction because of jury nullification."
In 2010, a Montana court couldn't even seat a jury after potential jurors said they wouldn't even consider convicting a defendant arrested for marijuana possession and distribution. Juror resistance in the case "is going to be something we're going to have to consider," the prosecutor told The Missoulian.
The federal government's difficulty in obtaining convictions in cases where people are charged with peacefully, but illegally, carrying firearms "may well be the product of jury nullification due to the public's confusion about our gun laws—such as they are, or are not—and the public's strongly held feelings toward guns," United States District Court Judge Frederic Block complained in 2009 (full text here). He referenced a juror in a case he tried "who candidly expressed his unwillingness to convict someone for merely possessing a gun" and cited other cases in which juries obviously ignored the law.
What jurors see as overreaching prosecution of protesters can evoke their sympathy, too. In 2017, a jury in upstate New York acquitted four defendants of charges related to a 2015 protest at the Hancock Field National Guard Base. The four opposed the piloting of Reaper drones from the base for bomb and missile missions that have frequently resulted in civilian deaths.
"Yesterday I spoke with one of the defendants found Not Guilty, and he confirmed that this was, indeed, a case of conscientious acquittal," Kirsten Tynan, executive director of the Fully Informed Jury Association, noted at the time.
"One of the things many people struggle with is that they don't want jurors exercising jury nullification in ways they don't like," FIJA's Tynan told me this week about the wide range of circumstances in which jury power can be used to spare defendants (FIJA advocates for jury power but takes no position on which issues should evoke juror mercy). "But jury nullification should not be dismissed or denigrated because it is not used perfectly in keeping with my, your, or any other particular individual's opinions. The option of voting not guilty based on conscience rather than strictly on the facts is meant to tilt the playing field in favor of erring on the side of liberty."
Abortion is one of many issues in which jurors can exercise their consciences. It's also controversial and many jurors will disagree that it's an appropriate exercise of mercy. But the same can be said of drugs, guns, political protests, and much more. Jurors who win over their colleagues will send defendants home free; those who don't will hang juries and prompt prosecutors to bring only the strongest cases.
"Nullification cannot and will not fix everything," concede Salib and Krishnamurthi. "But we think that the equilibrium effect of nullification will be to reduce the number of cases prosecutors bring. And when unpopular cases are brought, nullification can avert the harshest part of the criminal process—the punishment."
In this, as with all legal controversies, jury nullification allows an opportunity for regular people to exercise a veto over the power of the state and to spare intended targets from laws they consider unjust.
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Why has reason phrased this as if abortions are rights, that need to be protected? Are reason authors a bunch of leftist ideologies masquerading as the libertarians of yesteryear?
Individuals have a right to personal autonomy, and under many formulations that includes the right to make their own medical decisions, including whether or not to terminate a pregnancy. That people disagree on this is reasonable. That people disagree on the limits to this right is reasonable. What is not reasonable is calling people "leftist" for disagreeing with you on the boundaries to that right.
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the child in the womb has "a right to personal autonomy" too and therefore should not be murdered. characterizing this as a left / right issue is absolutely correct. universally those in favor of killing a child in the 9th month are all leftist democrats because they are the party of death & destruction.
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Whatever leftist! Please find something else to do other than slaughter babies you weirdo.
Brandybuck: Excuse me! I have a right to slaughter babies!
Lame BS.
Why stop with acquitting the killlers of the uborn? Why not acquit murderers if the victim "needed killin'," or if he was a member of an unpopular race who was acting above his station?
On the Volokh side of Reason, any suggestion of juries defying the judges evokes a torrent of denunciation about lawlesssness, chaos and anarchy. Merely mentioning the Penn/Meade acquittal in 1670 brings spittle-flecked vituperation.
Will they change their tune once they realize pro-abortion jurors can nullify?
Or perhaps, just as Congress disqualified polygamists from serving as jurors in polygamy cases, legislatures should disqualify abortion supporters from jury service.
>Will they change their tune once they realize pro-abortion jurors can nullify?
Its not nearly as impactful, as guilty verdicts can be appealed. Sure, its an uphill battle as a conviction means there is a presumption that the jury got it right, but there is a chance at overturning a conviction; if acquitted, that's it.
> Or perhaps, just as Congress disqualified polygamists from serving as jurors in polygamy cases, legislatures should disqualify abortion supporters from jury service.
It's (a) completely unnecessary as jury selection exists, and (b) probably unconstitutional as that would be viewpoint discrimination.
Another source of pressure is to admit during jury selection that "I am convinced that sending men with guns to chase and bully pregnant women and threaten physicians is forced labor in servitude prohibited by the Thirteenth Amendment of the Constitution of the United States of America." A less Pyrrhic victory is a victory just the same if it preempts elimination via pre-trial rigging.
This sort of horseshit is exactly why legislatures should be composed of the same pool as jurors (sortition) - not your little tyrants who will create tyranny solely because it can get votes that have been manipulated by emotion.
Yes, Reason, they can.
They can also kill prostitution and abortion protections, too.
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Murder is not a "reproductive right" you vile marxist cunt. Would you hold the same stance if I murdered an ex lover who got pregnant and wanted to enslave me against my will for 18-26 years with child support?
If you oppose murder so strongly, then...
Murdering plants and animals DELIBERATELY in order to EAT them stops beating hearts and flowing sap!!! STOPPING this utter MADNESS remains essential to establishing the universality of living-being rights!
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jain_vegetarianism … Jain vegetarianism is the Truth and The Way!!! Eat ONLY fruits that have fallen from the tree, lest ye HURT the tree during the picking of the fruit! And do NOT eat the seeds! Eating seeds prevents new plants from being born!
(All of this deep disrespect for universal LIFE inherent in ALL belief systems excluding strict Jain vegetarianism is the root cause of ALL human evils, including genocide, bad haircuts, torture-rape, sloppy housekeeping, and necrophilia!)
NOTHING will get us there (to PROPER life-respect), short of the absolute worshit, not only of recently-fartilized egg smells, but also, of ALL living beings!!! From the cited article about the Jains and their MUCH higher standards than the rest of us, see…
“Strict Jains do not consume food that has been stored overnight, as it possesses a higher concentration of micro-organisms (for example, bacteria, yeast etc.) as compared to food prepared and consumed the same day.”
Bacteria have feelings and rights too, ya know!!!
One comes to expect brilliant articles from Tuccille, so no surprise here. But to call three Christian National Socialist infiltrators and two spineless Trilbys "The Supreme Court" seems a bit of a stretch. Then again, the Army of God Caucus will doubtless argue that to call ongoing Republican candidate defeats “a full-throated, unflinching repudiation” of superstitious, cowardly girl-bullying may be a bit premature. What say we count some more votes, shall we?
You lost the house and GeezerBiden is about to be "thrice impeached forever."
Also, I laughed when you implied that catholics should not be allowed on the court, but baby killing atheist scum should be.
Now go back to fucking off.
Resistant Jurors Can Help Protect Abortion Rights...defiance of the law, has been invoked in cases involving drugs, guns...jury nullification allows an opportunity for regular people to exercise a veto over the power of the state and to spare intended targets from laws they consider unjust.
Arguments for the natural rights of self-defense and speech have already been made by 'regular people'. They are even memorialized in the constitution. Any laws abridging these rights are prima facie unconstitutional. Have we as lower-case libertarians come to a consensus that abortion is a right? We must have; the article is categorically lacking in any principled argument for it. That is consummate laziness.
There are very few on the pro-choice side who would argue that abortion is moral up to the moment of delivery. Unless you go to the church of Kermit Gosnell, we agree there is a point in human development, somewhere between conception and delivery, that abortion becomes malum in se.
We agree that depriving an individual of life, liberty and property through force or fraud is wrong, at least I thought we did. It so happens that some of us believe an abortion is exactly that, depriving an individual of life through "force". If libertarianism would like to completely dissolve I would suggest pretending there is universal consensus for the right to abortion is a good way to immanentize it.
Bullshit, "pro-choice" is the euphemism you use to dehumanize and justify murder up until shortly after birth and celebrate yourselves for the act. As evidence I offer the multiple state laws passed doing just that and the mainstream appeal of Obama and other leftists for such an opinion.
So the smuggled premise is that women may be freely coerced by threat or use of deadly force under color of law provided the number of objectors is a mere "few." Yet right this minute the number of votes in favor of allowing unlimited escalation of naked aggression against women is fast converging on that same real number the (masked) Army of God dismisses as "few." Do not Palito, Long Dong and Mutterkreuz Mom also qualify as "few"? Do Kentucky voters not qualify as "many"?
It would be funny if someone exercised their abortion rights on Tuccile.
Probably good for the world too.
Kermit Gosnell could have really used you on his Jury Tucci.
Who is protecting the rights of a 5 month old female fetus? Scott Peterson got hit with a double homicide yet its ok for a mom to kill a fetus the same age. How does that work?
It works like this: A people generally get the Government Almighty that they deserve. If their Government Almighty loses it's "Mandate of Heaven", the people need to throw off their Government Almighty... Preferably via ballots... If not, then via bullets. In either case, Government Almighty will often (sometimes more, sometimes less) do stupid, evil, counterproductive, inconsistent, random, and arbitrary bullshit. Blessing the keeping of slaves, and imprisoning Japanese-Americans in concentration camps come to mind.
If you want to enslave women and their wombs in the name of the Sacred Fartilized Egg Smells, then you can clearly vote that way. If you can persuade 51% of the voters that people with tattoos should be put to death, you can get that done, too. That doesn't make these things good, wise, or just, however.
Are abortion rights deeply rooted in the history and tradition of the United States?
Yes! See
https://www.npr.org/2022/05/18/1099542962/abortion-ben-franklin-roe-wade-supreme-court-leak
OK, yet another link: (FYI)
https://www.npr.org/sections/goatsandsoda/2022/05/27/1099739656/do-restrictive-abortion-laws-actually-reduce-abortion-a-global-map-offers-insigh “Do restrictive abortion laws actually reduce abortion? A global map offers insights” Answer: No, tighter laws do NOT reduce the number of abortions… They just make them harder to get, and more dangerous!
Of course, though, you are the one advocating that human rights are not universal. That the government can decide that some classes of human individuals can be excluded from the protection of the law for the convenience of others.
Live in the real world, study your history, and see that Government Almighty can do whatever the hell it damned well pleases! Often in the name of religion. See Holy Horrors, https://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/1573927783/reasonmagazinea-20/ ... Fartilized Egg Smell Worshit is just another aspect of another phase of this.
I know that your fossilized mind is incapable of changing, but the reasons why I am right, and you are wrong, are legion! On abortion, that is. See http://www.churchofsqrls.com/Jesus_Validated/#_Toc117957741 "The Sociobiology of Abortion"
"Of course, though, you are the one advocating that human rights are not universal."
Ye who believes that they are universal... Is this theology or abstraction upon abstraction, or both? Why are you not in North Korea, or among the Russian troops in Ukraine, announcing to them (the oppressed), the Good News about their Universal Rights? And if you WERE there, and DOING that, how much good would it do?
(What is, is radically different than what should be, and the path from the one to the other, is not, and has never been, plain and simple. Blather about "rights" doesn't usually help much. Two or 3-word slogans are equally worthless. Go help mom do the dishes!)
"Do the dishes" = Ralph Waldo Emerson, “All men plume themselves on the improvement of society, and no man improves.” Modern humorous and ALMOST in-your-face: PJ O’Rourke, “Everybody wants to save the earth; nobody wants to help Mom do the dishes.” Short generic: “Work is love made visible”. Longer version by Khalil Gibran, “Work is love made visible. And if you can't work with love, but only with distaste, it is better that you should leave your work and sit at the gate of the temple and take alms of the people who work with joy”.
"Are abortion rights deeply rooted in the history and tradition of the United States?"
"Are abortion rights deeply rooted in the history and tradition of the United States?"
I'm not sure that attempting to answer your question directly could provide definitive objective evidence regarding the right to an abortion.
I think this article more closely addresses the issue of whether abortion is constitutional: https://reason.com/2022/06/24/alitos-abortion-ruling-overturning-roe-is-an-insult-to-the-9th-amendment/
From that article:
"When the United States was founded and for many subsequent decades, Americans relied on the English common law," explained an amicus brief filed in Dobbs by the American Historical Association and the Organization of American Historians. "The common law did not regulate abortion in early pregnancy. Indeed, the common law did not even recognize abortion as occurring at that stage. That is because the common law did not legally acknowledge a fetus as existing separately from a pregnant woman until the woman felt fetal movement, called 'quickening,' which could occur as late as the 25th week of pregnancy."
For context: I fully support the concept of jury nullification.
Those contemplating exercising their right to nullify by voting a person not guilty of breaking a law which the evidence overwhelmingly proves they broke, should be aware that the government hates jury nullification and will do whatever it can to prevent it.
In my state - and I believe elsewhere - it is virtually impossible to be seated on a jury without swearing, under oath, that you are willing and able to find the defendant guilty when the evidence supports a guilty verdict.
If a person so swears, is seated on the jury, then votes not guilty; they will be subject to prosecution for perjury, which can result in a prison term.
And while I agree that getting rejected as a juror because you said you could not, in good conscience, find a defendant guilty of a particular crime; may itself influence the government to reconsider the law - the positive impact of that for any cause will, I believe, take a lot longer to produce positive results than a not-guilty vote as a juror - even assuming beneficial results will ever occur.
When those who believe the law is wrong are denied jury seats, their places will be taken by those who have less, or no, problem with the law ... nullifying, at least to some extent, the goal to nullify the law.
Finally, it is my personal experience that having convinced the powers-that-be that you are a potential jury nullifier, you can be essentially eliminated from future jury pools - not necessarily good for the cause.
[I understand that if insufficient citizens "qualify" for jury pools, the government will have to adjust its priorities. The government could then begin restoring potential jury nullifiers to the jury pool, knowing they can still keep them off of juries via the voir-dire process.]
Potential solutions:
1) When I was questioned as a potential juror, I honestly thought that I could convict a pot-smoker. I FIRMLY changed my mind, since then! As I was sitting here as a selected juror! Are there any laws against me changing my mind?
2) I just don't think that there's enough evidence to convince me "beyond a reasonable doubt", and I am sticking to my guns! I do not trust the prosecution-side's witnesses!
Do NOT EVER tell them that you know what "jury nullification" is, or that you are practicing it! (If you want to effectively monkey-wrench the Machine, that is).
"Do NOT EVER tell them that you know what 'jury nullification' is, or that you are practicing it!"
Not telling them won't help: they recognize that when you answer the question about whether you could convict if the evidence warrants in the negative, they already know what they need to know to exclude you from the jury ... and potentially from future jury pools.
Oh, I answered that I COULD convict... But then I changed my mind!
(If my mind can't change, as a juror, then they might as well replace human jurors with computer programs, or better yet, hand puppets of Government Almighty.)
"Oh, I answered that I COULD convict… But then I changed my mind!"
Of course you are welcome to take whatever risks you choose (and doing so in a good cause deserves credit).
My point in commenting in this discussion is only that voting not guilty when the evidence strongly indicates guilt and after you have sworn you would not do that, is a risk. I believe that if the government believes they can win, they will prosecute you for perjury ... even if you say you changed your mind (the government could argue that your claim of changing your mind is just a ruse to allow you to get away with perjury).
They can't get you for perjury just for voting. But if they find out you posted about nullification here first...
The government already has a history of demanding this website reveal who its posters are, remember.
OK then! Between now and (if-when I am next grilled as a potential juror) then, I will change my mind about jury nullification, and decide that it is just TOTALLY unacceptable! Then when seated as a juror... I just might change my mind AGAIN!!!!
Tucille recommends throwing a tantrum until the proaborts get their way.
And abortionists historical antecedents are the slave owners, not the abolitionists. In fact, the rhetorical tactics of abortionists are shockingly similar to those who opposed the abolitionists.
The actual best-known use of jury nullification was to create and preserve the right of a man to kill his wife's lover.
Sure, the right didn't exist in the statute books, and Blackstone, Hale, and Reeve's works on the common law all bluntly denied its existence, but juries decided that it did, and case after case (most famously, Sickles-Key in 1859, Cole-Hiscock in 1867, and McFarland-Richard in 1870) established it.
Resistant Jurors Can Help Protect Slave Owner Rights (No Matter What the Law Says)
Resistant Jurors Can Help Protect Segregationist Rights (No Matter What the Law Says)
Resistant Jurors Can Help Protect Censors' Rights (No Matter What the Law Says)
Government Almighty Can Help Protect Slave Owner Rights (No Matter What decent people think)
Government Almighty Can Help Protect Segregationist Rights (No Matter What decent people think)
Government Almighty Can Help Protect Censors’ Rights (No Matter What decent people think)
Government Almighty Can Turn Women into Womb-Slaves (No Matter What decent people think)
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>>Americans worried about the status of reproductive rights
status: reproduction is easy and nobody abridges your rights to reproduce. fuck you on the murder part.
Also, if "reproductive rights" were a thing, the father would be able to force an abortion. Even the people who use that phrase don't actually believe in it.