The idea behind The Jury: Murder Trial is that 12 “ordinary people” (or at least the sort of ordinary people who want to appear on TV) watch a re-staged version of a genuine murder trial. Actors use actual trial transcripts that have been edited down, but will these mock jurors reach the same verdict as the real jury did? Or, as narrator Greg Wise somewhat sweepingly asks: “Can we trust our justice system?”
Prosecuting barrister Ms Bakersfield (Photo: Channel 4/Screendog)
This time the programme-makers have decided to scrap the idea of two juries, with the new series recreating the real-life murder trial of a young mother who stabbed her boyfriend in the chest with a kitchen knife. The 23-year-old Sophie (a pseudonym) claims she was acting in self-defence as the victim, Ryan (also not his real name), was strangling her. Sophie’s trial is recreated in a disused Liverpool courtroom, and 12 people from the local area must decide whether she is telling the truth.
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Tommy, a lifelong union rep, is broadly in agreement, saying that he has always supported the underdog, whereas retired chef David believes that the justice system has gone soft. “I don’t take any s**t,” as he puts it. And just as in The Traitors, the jurors break into small groups for side discussions. However, real juries are instructed to discuss the case only when they are all together.
There is only one jury this series (Photo: Channel 4/Screendog)With the Government considering curbing jury trials to reduce the backlog of more than 70,000 Crown court cases, the perception provided by this TV experiment is arguably of real-world consequence if it dents confidence in the centuries-old system. But then many of us will have had our faith in the infallibility of juries dented by The Traitors; the contestants’ groupthink repeatedly leads them to a wrong decision over whether a fellow player is a traitor or faithful.
‘The Jury: Murder Trial’ continues tomorrow at 9pm on Channel 4
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