They can be separate (criminal and civil trials), but can they be contradictory?
Yes, because as you pointed out, that's what happened in the O. J. trial. It is only possible for those acts that are are criminal AND can be taken into civil court. The biggest reason for contradictory outcomes, and it was the case in the O. J. trial, is the different standards of evidence. But there could also a difference in the quality of the legal advocacy, or a difference in the quality of the judges, or in the difference in the makeup of the juries. We should shoot for the best system, but recognize that calls for a 'perfect system' are usually a waste of time and involve 'fixing' details that actually take one away from the key purposes involved. ------------- Is the prohibition of double jeopardy violated this way?
Technically? No. In principle? Maybe... in some cases. If you define "double jeopardy" as the state having no legal right to try a person twice for the same offense, then the answer is no, because the state isn't pursuing a second criminal trial. And the civil trial won't (and can't) produce a criminal sentence. It just tries to return a person to where they were before the harmful event. For example, a guy breaks into your house and steals some stuff. The cops catch him and convict him. But you didn't get your stuff back. You still have the legal right to sue him for the value of what was stolen. I wouldn't see this as a form of double jeopardy. ------------- Some kind of legal aid or assistance should be provided by the courts (to both parties) to guarentee rights are protected in a civil trial.
We disagree. I don't believe that it is proper to take money away from some people to give it to others on the basis of need. It doesn't matter that those poor people as in need of money to pursue a legal goal as opposed to buying food or paying rent or getting medical care. Their need does not constitute a legitimate claim on the money that belongs to others. -------------- I don't see how in one trial a jury couldn't decide criminal guilt as argued by a prosecutor and civil liability as argued by the families lawyers, being presented the same set of facts and testimony.
There is a good reason to have different standards involved ("beyond a reasonable doubt" and "a preponderance of the evidence") and there is a good reason for having a separate case when you have separate adversaries and separate purposes. We disagree on that. --------------- Not everybody has the right to $35 million dollars from O.J. Simpson, but that is only a specific context of the right to be compensated. The family's right to be compensated existed at the moment Ronald Goldman was killed, the civil trail was simply a legal mechanism to act on that right and to determine the proper amount of compensation.
What I said was that there was no legal right to O. J. Simpson's money till it was established by the court. That is why the civil trial was needed.... not just to establish an amount, but to determine that they had a right to anything at all. And I pointed out that this is a derivitive right specific to the case as opposed to a universal moral or legal right. ---------------- Your life belonging to you, you should also have the right to compensation, but you're dead so that claim must be passed on to someone else (wife, family etc.).
Nope, there is a problem with that formulation. A right is always about an action that you can take without anyone's permission. When that action is breached by another (the violation of your right) that does not automatically confer some kind privilege to some third party. To put it into specific terms, in the O. J. Simpson example, what Ronald Coleman lost, and what his parents lost were different. Ronald Coleman lost his life. What his parents lost, if anything, has to be established in a court of law. It has to be something that they had rightful ownership to in the first place. We know that they did not own their son's life (which is what disappeared), so they have to show what was taken from them that they did have some kind of ownership in (his future companionship, etc.) Here is a made-up example. If you and I were neighbors and I often would loan you my lawnmower but a thief stole it, could you sue the thief for the value of that frequent use of my lawnmower which you lost? You could sue, but you shouldn't be able to win. Because you didn't have 'rights' (ownership) in the lawnmower. But if our arrangement was that you had given me money, in advance, to use that lawnmower, now you have rights in its use (ownership) and you could sue (me and the thief). ------------------ Freedom of speech doesn't come into existence the moment you walk into the Supreme Court, the Supreme Court is just a mechanism of the government devoted to protecting rights.
Yes but there is more to this. Yes, freedom of speech exists both as a legal and a moral right before a case makes its way to the court. That's true. And it is true that the Supreme court is a mechanism of the government for protecting rights. BUT, the court protects rights in specific instances by examining the facts to be sure that defined rights are involved, and are being violated. If not, they throw the case out. In other words, yes, the right of freedom of speech does exists before some specific comes before the court, but it might not apply to the specific person in the specific case. If a person said to another, in all seriousness, "I'll pay you $10,000 to kill my wife," and then tried to claim freedom from prosecution by saying it was just speech and therefore free, the court might say, your speech WAS free. Your prosecution is for solicitation of murder. Those are two separate acts. If you had said you would pay to have your wife killed while doing stand-up comedy, or as a complaint to a friend it would have been different. You are only being tried on the act that is conspiring to take the life of another - the fact that you used speech to do that doesn't erase the object of the conspiracy.
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