Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- 1 The Criminal Process and the Pursuit of Truth
- 2 Allegations
- 3 Confessions
- 4 Witness Testimony
- 5 Truth and the Probity of Evidence-Gathering
- 6 Decisions and Narratives: Factfinding and Case Construction
- 7 Truth and the Criminal Trial: Competing Stories
- 8 Truth, Sentencing and Punishment
- 9 Restoration, Reconciliation and Reconceptualizing Justice
- 10 The Truth, the Whole Truth and Nothing but the Truth: The Truth of Who Is to Blame
- List of Cases
- References
- Index
7 - Truth and the Criminal Trial: Competing Stories
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 23 December 2021
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- 1 The Criminal Process and the Pursuit of Truth
- 2 Allegations
- 3 Confessions
- 4 Witness Testimony
- 5 Truth and the Probity of Evidence-Gathering
- 6 Decisions and Narratives: Factfinding and Case Construction
- 7 Truth and the Criminal Trial: Competing Stories
- 8 Truth, Sentencing and Punishment
- 9 Restoration, Reconciliation and Reconceptualizing Justice
- 10 The Truth, the Whole Truth and Nothing but the Truth: The Truth of Who Is to Blame
- List of Cases
- References
- Index
Summary
Considering the centrality of the contested criminal trial in the popular imagination, there is a surprising lack of academic research into how contested trials operate. By design, alternative narratives are constructed and presented to the court to enable it to assess the factual and legal culpability of the accused. The rules of engagement are strict. Evidence that juries may find of relevance may sometimes be withheld – for example, evidence of previous bad character relating to an accused, or evidence of a complainant's sexual history in a rape case. This suggests that juries may attach disproportionate weight to evidence, jeopardizing the fairness of the trial. Issues also surround the use of expert witnesses. The presentation of complex evidence can lead to misunderstanding on the part of lay people and can also mask the fact that there can be scientific disagreement over the interpretation of evidence.
It is perhaps a common public perception that criminal trials will turn on questions of law. Legal practitioners spend approximately four years studying the law prior to qualification. In practice, however, few criminal cases are primarily about questions of law. In the overwhelming majority of criminal trials it is the facts that are disputed and in issue. The court will have to decide whether the necessary facts have been proved to a sufficient standard to meet the legal elements of the offence charged. As Susan Blake points out:
For the litigation lawyer a case will often be concerned with the sorts of questions of fact a journalist asks— who, what, where, when, and how? Effective litigation requires close attention to establishing and analysing the facts relevant to a case, and an ability to understand and address the problems that dealing with facts can present. (Blake, 2015, para 8.01)
Adversarial justice
As its name suggests, adversarial justice rests on the idea that the truth will emerge from two competing narratives of the criminal event. The state presents its case before a neutral finder of fact who has to determine, beyond reasonable doubt, whether the case against the defendant is made out. The defendant has the opportunity of contesting the prosecution case, of disputing the evidence, of questioning the witnesses and of raising potential defences.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Criminal Justice and the Pursuit of Truth , pp. 123 - 148Publisher: Bristol University PressPrint publication year: 2021