Citizen Judges in Japan: A Report Card for the Initial Three Years

Antoinette Plogstedt
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引用次数: 4

Abstract

In 2009, Japan implemented its first post-war criminal jury system, which is currently awaiting its three year review. Japanese mixed juries (saiban-in) consist of judges and lay citizens who jointly decide guilt and sentencing in serious cases by a majority vote. The Accused may not waive the right to a jury trial; prosecutors may appeal acquittals; and jurors are precluded from ever disclosing deliberations. In previous literature, scholars have criticized the use of mixed courts, prosecutor appeals, and juror confidentiality, and have offered suggestions to basically Americanize the Japanese juries. To the contrary, this Article explains, from a unique vantage point, that the Japanese jury system be expanded to cover additional criminal offenses; that the Accused remain prohibited from waiving the right to a jury trial; that prosecutor appeals should end; and that juror deliberations remain confidential. This Article’s most critical recommendation is that the Japanese promulgate rules requiring that lay citizen jurors deliberate and vote separately from the judges, with all votes combined to determine the majority jury vote.
日本的公民法官:最初三年的成绩单
2009年,日本实施了战后第一个刑事陪审团制度,目前正在等待三年的审查。日本的混合陪审团(saiban-in)是由法官和普通市民组成的,他们在重大案件中以多数票共同决定有罪和量刑。被告不得放弃由陪审团审判的权利;检察官可以对无罪判决提出上诉;陪审员被禁止透露审议情况。在之前的文献中,学者们批评了混合法庭、检察官上诉和陪审员保密的使用,并提出了基本美国化日本陪审团的建议。相反,本文从一个独特的角度解释了日本陪审团制度应扩大到其他刑事犯罪;被告仍不得放弃陪审团审判的权利;检察官的上诉应该结束;陪审团的审议情况仍然保密。本文最关键的建议是,日本应颁布规则,要求普通公民陪审员与法官分开审议和投票,所有投票合并决定陪审团的多数投票。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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