seamusTX wrote:Charles L. Cotton wrote:I would like to see Texas law changed such that "jeopardy attaches" at the Grand Jury stage, so that a no-bill from a GJ would mean that it could not be presented to another GJ at a later date.
I respect your opinion, but wouldn't that damage some legitimate criminal investigations?
For example, with organized crime investigations, it's not unusual for the DA to get a no-bill, then acquire more evidence and later get a true bill from another grand jury (grand juries sit for a limited time).
- Jim
Yes it would and that's the argument against my position. If strong or conclusive evidence is obtained later, but before the statute of limitations has expired, then a guilty person will escape justice.
My response comes in two parts. If the DA doesn't have enough evidence to be sure he's going to get an indictment, then don't take to the GJ. Secondly, the vast majority of the time a case is taken before a GJ twice, it's not because of newly found evidence, it’s because the case is very weak and/or politically motivated. The Travis County Sastrup (sp?) case is a great example. The “beyond a reasonable doubt� standard has nothing to do with Grand Juries. However, if a GJ determines there is insufficient evidence to believe a crime has been committed and no-bills someone, and another GJ indicts a person on the same evidence, it seems to me there is “reasonable doubt� as a matter of law.
I have no statistics or studies to back this up, but I suspect it is far more likely that an innocent person will be the victim of an overzealous prosecutor or second GJ, than a guilty person going fee in spite of later found evidence. No person who has been no-billed by a GJ should have to live their lives in fear wondering if a change of DA's, or a change of mind of the current DA, will resurrect the case.
Chas.