The purpose of the Bill of Rights was twofold: first, to ensure that
certain fundamental rights were protected from federal infringement
and, second, to ensure that the American people were expressly guaranteed
certain procedural rights in federal criminal prosecutions. While
all of the rights and guarantees enumerated in the Bill of Rights
– as well as those that were not enumerated – are critically
important to a free society, it is worth noting that two rights –
one fundamental and one procedural – are intended to provide
the citizenry with a means to resist federal tyranny should such ever
befall our land.
These two rights are the right to keep and bear arms and the right
to trial by jury. The gun right is found in the Second Amendment and
the jury right is contained in the Sixth Amendment.
We begin with the basic underlying assumption of the Bill of the
Rights, which is that the greatest threat to the freedom and well-being
of the American people is the federal government. Not terrorists.
Not communists. Not Muslims. Not drug dealers. Not immigrants. The
federal government is the greatest threat to the American people.
After all, it doesn’t take a rocket scientist to figure out
whom the crafters were addressing with the Bill of Rights. They were
confronting the president and the Congress, along with everyone else
in the executive and legislative branches. The reason that the First
Amendment, for example, expressly names Congress is simple: the crafters
of the First Amendment understood that in the absence of express protection,
members of Congress would do what government officials do in other
lands – punish citizens for criticizing government officials.
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The reason for expressly prohibiting government officials from making
gun ownership illegal and for guaranteeing trial by jury was to ensure
that the American people could resist, violently or peacefully, the
imposition of tyranny by the president, the Congress, or both. Implicit
in protecting the exercise of such rights was the assumption that
tyranny could conceivably come to the United States.
Tyranny and gun control
There are those who argue that the right to keep and bear arms has
to do with hunting and self-defense against robbers and burglars.
While guns are an important part of those activities, they are not
the primary reason the Second Amendment was enshrined in the Bill
of Rights. The main reason for the Second Amendment is one that government
officials are usually uncomfortable talking about: the right and the
ability of the citizenry to forcibly resist government officials,
including those in the FBI, the CIA, the military, and the police,
who are carrying out tyrannical orders of their superiors.
This important rationale for the right to keep and bear arms –
the ability to resist tyranny – was pointed out by the U.S.
Supreme Court in the recent Washington, D.C., gun-ban case, District
of Columbia v. Heller. The Court stated,
The right to keep and bear arms is essentially an insurance policy.
Like many insurance policies, people will probably never have to make
a claim on it. But if the worst happens, it’s nice to know that
one has the insurance.
Jury nullification
The right of trial by jury, enshrined in the Sixth Amendment, provides
the American people with a nonviolent means to resist tyranny. Trial
by jury provides the citizenry with the means to acquit people who
are prosecuted by U.S. officials for violating tyrannical laws.
In federal criminal prosecutions, the accused is guaranteed the option
of having a group of ordinary citizens decide his guilt or innocence.
Those people are chosen at random from the community.
At the trial, the accused is presumed innocent and federal prosecutors
have the burden of providing sufficient evidence to convince the jury
beyond a reasonable doubt that the accused is guilty of the crime.
The accused himself has the right to present evidence showing that
he is not guilty of the offense.
After both sides have presented their evidence, the federal judge
instructs the jury that its duty is simply to weigh the evidence and
decide whether the accused is guilty. The judge’s duty, he explains,
is to provide the jury with the applicable law in the case.
What federal judges (and, for that matter, state judges) never explain
to the jury, however, is the full extent of its powers. Every jury,
whether it realizes it or not, actually has the power to judge the
law itself. If the jury decides that the law itself is unjust, immoral,
or tyrannical, the jurors can vote to acquit the accused and there
is nothing the federal prosecutors or the federal judge can legally
do about it.
Once the verdict of acquittal is announced, the judge must discharge
the defendant, enabling him to immediately walk out of the courtroom
a free man. The jury itself is discharged as well, and neither the
prosecutors nor the judge can retaliate against the jurors. The jury
verdict is final.
Many years ago, a man in my hometown of Laredo, Texas, was on trial
in federal court for a drug offense. He took the witness stand and
admitted having sold the drugs, explaining that his family had been
in dire financial straits and that he deeply regretted his actions.
The jury knew that if they convicted the man, the judge would surely
send him to the penitentiary for a long time. They voted to acquit
him.
When the verdict of acquittal was announced, the federal judge flew
into a rage. He castigated the members of the jury, telling them that
they were the dumbest group of people who had ever served as jurors
in his court. He ordered that all 12 of them be removed from the jury
list and barred from ever serving again in his court. But at the end
of his tirade, he had but one choice: to discharge the defendant and
the jury. All of them walked away in freedom. The jury’s verdict
was final.
When our American ancestors demanded the inclusion of trial by jury
in the Bill of Rights, they knew that judges or other federal officials
could not be relied on to serve as ultimate checks against tyranny.
They knew that when it came to interpreting laws, judges would be
bound more by the rulings of the appellate courts than by their conscience.
Not so with ordinary citizens, however. If the citizenry believed
that laws that were being enacted were tyrannical, immoral, or unjust,
that sentiment could be quietly expressed by the refusal of juries
to convict people of such offenses.
Consider, for example, the case of Hans and Sophie Scholl, a brother
and sister who were attending college at the University of Munich
during World War II. They secretly began publishing anti-government
and anti-war pamphlets as part of an informal group called the White
Rose. Since that was a serious crime under German law, the SS caught
them and arrested them. They were immediately brought to trial before
the “People’s Court,” a special court that Hitler
established because of his dissatisfaction with a verdict that had
been issued in a terrorism case by a duly constituted court.
The Scholl trial was conducted before a panel of judges, and the
verdict was never in doubt. As the investigators and judges pointed
out, the law is the law and people are expected to obey it. And the
nation was at war, after all. Since Hans and Sophie admitted to having
violated the law, the judges felt that they were doing their legal
(and patriotic) duty by convicting them and sentencing them to death.
Now, imagine that trial by jury had been a guaranteed right under
the German system. A jury of ordinary German citizens, rather than
a panel of appointed judges, would have been deciding the fate of
the Scholl siblings. While it would be entirely possible that the
jury would nonetheless have convicted them of publishing the pamphlets,
at least the possibility would have existed that the jury, out of
conscience, would have voted to acquit, on the ground that the law
under which the Scholls were being prosecuted was tyrannical, immoral,
and unjust.
Under the right of trial by jury, Hans and Sophie Scholl, along with
jury, could have walked out of that German courtroom free people.
With trial by tribunal, they never had a chance.
Some people have argued that trial by jury leads to anarchy, a rather
silly suggestion, given that the right of jury nullification has existed
since enactment of the Bill of Rights and yet the federal government
is still in existence. Keep in mind that a jury verdict in a particular
case does not serve as any type of precedent for other cases. It simply
serves as a message that a particular jury in a particular case voted
to acquit the accused.
Resistance to tyranny today
Are the Second Amendment right to keep and bear arms and the Sixth
Amendment right of trial by jury still relevant today?
Well, consider how U.S. officials behave in the absence of constitutional
restraints and a Bill of Rights. Don’t they engage in the conduct
that the Constitution and the Bill of Rights expressly prohibit?
When U.S. personnel invade a foreign country, what’s the first
thing they do? Confiscate guns and impose gun control. Why? To prevent
the citizenry from violently resisting what is certain to follow –
tyrannical measures. Moreover, when the United States occupies another
country, notice that you never see it establish a judicial system
that guarantees such things as trial by jury, the right to confront
witnesses, the presumption of innocence, or due process of law.
Consider, for example, how the U.S. military has conducted itself
in Iraq, where the military operates without the constraints of the
U.S. Constitution or the Bill of Rights. The military is holding some
20,000 people in jail indefinitely without charges. U.S. soldiers
barge into people’s homes and search their personal effects
without a warrant. Prisoners are tortured and sexually abused, as
the Abu Ghraib photos documented. U.S. officials guide Iraqi officials
into holding kangaroo trials whose outcome is preordained and where
the defendant is denied important procedural guarantees, as in the
trial of Saddam Hussein. Curfews are imposed. Gun control is implemented.
The press is muzzled.
Or consider Guantanamo Bay, the Pentagon’s infamous prison
camp, where it has established what it considers to be a model “judicial”
system for handling terrorism cases. Unlike proceedings in the United
States, in the Gitmo proceedings the accused is denied trial by jury,
defendants are presumed guilty, coerced confessions and evidence acquired
by torture can be used to convict the accused, and there is no protection
against self-incrimination. Cruel and unusual punishments, including
torture and sex abuse, are permitted and even encouraged. In fact,
the ultimate farce of the entire proceedings is that even if the accused
is acquitted, a highly unlikely possibility, given that military personnel
are serving as prosecutor, judge, and jury, the defendant can still
be kept in custody for the rest of his life.
If it weren’t for the Constitution and the Bill of Rights,
who doubts that the president, the Pentagon, and Congress would be
doing the same things here in the United States? Those people look
upon constitutional restrictions on their power with disdain and disgust.
Why else, for example, did they establish their prison camp in Cuba,
rather than in the United States, if not to escape the applicability
of the Constitution and the Bill of Rights and any interference from
the federal judiciary?
Freedom can never be taken for granted, especially in times of crises,
real or contrived, and especially in an era when the president is
executing signing statements to avoid congressional laws; entering
into illegal partnerships with private businesses for the purpose
of illegally spying on the citizenry; declaring war on foreign nations
in violation of the Constitution; implementing an independent judicial
system designed to easily secure criminal convictions; and claiming
a wartime power to arrest, torture, sexually abuse, and indefinitely
imprison Americans as enemy combatants, all with the support of Congress.
If the worst were to happen – if Americans were subjected to
the sort of tyranny under which the Scots, Germans, Russians, Chinese,
and other people have suffered, at least Americans have two means
of resistance that most people in history have been denied. Thanks
to the courage, wisdom, and foresight of our ancestors, Americans
have the right to keep and bear arms and the right of trial by jury.