Police Talk in the Jury Room: The Production of Race-Conscious Reasonable Doubt among Racially Diverse Jury Groups

30 Pages Posted: 27 Jan 2025

See all articles by Mona Lynch

Mona Lynch

University of California, Irvine - Department of Criminology, Law and Society

Sofia Laguna

University of California, Irvine

Date Written: November 28, 2024

Abstract

A central goal of Critical Race Theory (CRT) is to deconstruct the "jurisprudence of colorblindness" that is infused with the language of equality while operating to maintain racial hierarchies. Color-blind ideology extends to the procedures governing criminal juries, ensuring they are disproportionately white while constraining diversity of perspectives, especially regarding policing issues. In this paper, we merge CRT insights about color-blindness and race-consciousness in the criminal jury context and in the Fourth Amendment law governing policing, to advance empirical socio-legal scholarship on race and jury decision-making. We analyze deliberations data from mock jury groups that decided on verdict in a federal drug conspiracy trial, focusing on how groups talked about law enforcement testimony. We find that negative discussions of the law enforcement testimony is associated with shifts toward acquittal, there are more skeptical discussions about this testimony when the defendant is Black, and that the presence of at least one Black juror in any given group is associated with more skeptical discussions of law enforcement testimony. Our qualitative analysis illustrates how Black jurors, in particular, raised concerns about policing, including unjust treatment of Black citizens, then successfully tied those concerns to the specific legal considerations at issue in the case.

Keywords: Critical Race Theory, juries, deliberations, police testimony, color-blindness, race consciousness

Suggested Citation

Lynch, Mona and Laguna, Sofia, Police Talk in the Jury Room: The Production of Race-Conscious Reasonable Doubt among Racially Diverse Jury Groups (November 28, 2024). Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=5048514 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.5048514

Mona Lynch (Contact Author)

University of California, Irvine - Department of Criminology, Law and Society ( email )

2340 Social Ecology 2, RM
Irvine, CA 92697
United States

Sofia Laguna

University of California, Irvine ( email )

Do you have a job opening that you would like to promote on SSRN?

Paper statistics

Downloads
29
Abstract Views
155
PlumX Metrics