The prosecution's strange request
Posted: Sun May 16, 2010 8:13 am
There are 3 paragraphs in Justice Dewey's charge to the jury that would appear that the prosecution wanted Lizzie as an accomplice to be included in the jury's decision. Page 1914-1915 of the trial:
"Now, gentlemen, I have been asked by the counsel for the Commonwealth to give you instruction upon another view of this case, a view, so far as I remember, not suggested in the opening, or in the evidence, or hardly in the closing argument for the Commonwealth. And yet the evidence is of such a nature that it seems to us that, as a matter of law, the Government is entitled to have some instruction given you on this point; as a matter of fact, it would be entirely for you to consider whether the claim of the Government upon the matter to which I am going to refer is consistent with the claim which it has argued to you; whether the Government has not put this case to you, practically, upon the idea that the defendant did these acts with her own hands.
But it is a principle of law that a person may be indicted in just the form in which this defendant is indicted, that is, indicted as if she were charged with doing the act herself, and yet she may be convicted upon evidence which satisfies a jury beyond reasonable doubt that the act was done personally by another party, and that her relation to it was that of being present, aiding, abetting, sustaining, encouraging. If she stood in such a relation as that to the act, the act was done by some other person and she aided him, encouraged him, abetted him, was present somewhere, by virtue of an understanding with him, where she could render him assistance, and for the purpose of rendering assistance, then she would be a principal in the act just as much as the other party who might be acting.
But you notice the essential element. There must have been an understanding between her and her and this third party, if there was one, an agreement together for the commission of these crimes. She must have given her assent to it. She must have encouraged it. She must have been in a position where she could render assistance to the perpetrator, with his knowledge, by virtue of an understanding with him, and for the purpose of giving assistance either in the way of watching against some person's coining or furnishing him facilities for escape or in some other manner. The central idea of this proposition is that she must have been present by virtue of an agreement with the actor where she could render assistance of some kind, and for the purpose of rendering assistance. And if there was another party in this crime, and if she is proved beyond reasonable doubt to have sustained the relation to him in committing that crime which I have expressed to you, then she might be held under this indictment, because under such circumstances in the eye of the law, they both being in the sense of the law present, the act of one is the act of both."
To my knowledge the jury is to decide guilt or innocence only on the charge(s) contained in the indictment. There is no such charge in the indictment. For Lizzie to be tried as an accomplice it would require a new indictment and trial.
I'd be interested to hear your thoughts on why the prosecution requested this.
"Now, gentlemen, I have been asked by the counsel for the Commonwealth to give you instruction upon another view of this case, a view, so far as I remember, not suggested in the opening, or in the evidence, or hardly in the closing argument for the Commonwealth. And yet the evidence is of such a nature that it seems to us that, as a matter of law, the Government is entitled to have some instruction given you on this point; as a matter of fact, it would be entirely for you to consider whether the claim of the Government upon the matter to which I am going to refer is consistent with the claim which it has argued to you; whether the Government has not put this case to you, practically, upon the idea that the defendant did these acts with her own hands.
But it is a principle of law that a person may be indicted in just the form in which this defendant is indicted, that is, indicted as if she were charged with doing the act herself, and yet she may be convicted upon evidence which satisfies a jury beyond reasonable doubt that the act was done personally by another party, and that her relation to it was that of being present, aiding, abetting, sustaining, encouraging. If she stood in such a relation as that to the act, the act was done by some other person and she aided him, encouraged him, abetted him, was present somewhere, by virtue of an understanding with him, where she could render him assistance, and for the purpose of rendering assistance, then she would be a principal in the act just as much as the other party who might be acting.
But you notice the essential element. There must have been an understanding between her and her and this third party, if there was one, an agreement together for the commission of these crimes. She must have given her assent to it. She must have encouraged it. She must have been in a position where she could render assistance to the perpetrator, with his knowledge, by virtue of an understanding with him, and for the purpose of giving assistance either in the way of watching against some person's coining or furnishing him facilities for escape or in some other manner. The central idea of this proposition is that she must have been present by virtue of an agreement with the actor where she could render assistance of some kind, and for the purpose of rendering assistance. And if there was another party in this crime, and if she is proved beyond reasonable doubt to have sustained the relation to him in committing that crime which I have expressed to you, then she might be held under this indictment, because under such circumstances in the eye of the law, they both being in the sense of the law present, the act of one is the act of both."
To my knowledge the jury is to decide guilt or innocence only on the charge(s) contained in the indictment. There is no such charge in the indictment. For Lizzie to be tried as an accomplice it would require a new indictment and trial.
I'd be interested to hear your thoughts on why the prosecution requested this.