Funkadelia
TNPer
- TNP Nation
- Funkadelia Island
What is this even?FALCONKATS:i was all involved an look what happened
What is this even?FALCONKATS:i was all involved an look what happened
I am enjoying exploring this system.flemingovia:Witness statements would be quoted in the post of accuser or defendant.Great Bights Mum:Would this system allow witnesses to testify? How would discovery be handled? Would both sides be able to review the evidence pre-trial?flemingovia:Real time trials I oppose; especially as I live in a different time zone to most other people.
Radical departure .... yes. perhaps this simple format.
Simply this...
A complaint is made.
There is no Attorney General who decides whether a case is worthy.
The complainant has ONE POST to make their case. Questions can be asked by the justices of clarification, but no new evidence can be introduced.
The defendant then can make ONE POST to counter the argument and make their defence.
Nobody else can post. None of this Amicus curiae crap.
The judges then deliver their verdict.
The losing party has ONE POST to appeal. This can only apply if they believe the verdict to be factually inaccurate - not if they believe it is just "wrong".
The delegate can rule on the factual accuracy of the verdict (not on the rightness of it) and order a retrial if necessary.
It is not as good as Flemingovianism, of course. But it might work.
There would be no counsels posting. If folks want to advise the accuser of defendant, let them do it on their own time.
There is no discovery. This is a simpler sytem, not crown court.
There is no preview of evidence.
The system now looks like this:
A complaint is made.
There is no Attorney General who decides whether a case is worthy.
The complainant may use up to ten posts to make their case. Questions can be asked by the justices of clarification. These posts must be made within one week of the opening of the case. At any point the complinant may say "i rest my case", after which no further posts will be allowed.
The defendant may use up to ten posts to counter the prosecution and make their case. Questions can be asked by the justices of clarification. These posts must be made within one week of the opening of the case. At any point the defendant may say "i rest my case", after which no further posts will be allowed.
Nobody else can post. None of this Amicus curiae crap.
The judges then deliver their verdict within 48 hours.
The losing party has ONE POST to appeal. This can only apply if they believe the verdict to be factually inaccurate - not if they believe it is just "wrong".
The delegate can rule on the factual accuracy of the verdict (not on the rightness of it) and order a retrial if necessary.
I am enjoying exploring this system.
I have found, to my continual dismay, that people lie. Lots of people do it and they do it all the time. My own children do it, even when there is absolutely nothing at stake. In a court of law, there are the stakes of winning or losing. What are ways the court can ensure that a witness's testimony is not fabricated?
Another question that arises, how would matters involving more than 2 parties be handled? Or in the case of a rogue delegate, where it becomes a crime against the region, with many injured parties?
Frivolous lawsuits brought for political gain more often rebound on the accuser, because in court under any system the lack of evidence quickly becomes apparent, and the political motivation is soon exposed.unibot:Something I think we need to bear in mind is that courts in NS are often used frivolously or not genuinely to defame individuals ("oh someone just lodged a TREASON compliant against him"), to generate political drama around a minister someone doesn't like or otherwise just to throw whatever you have against a wall to see if it sticks so you can get someone you don't like removed from the region or from office.
The complexities of our current system make it difficult to prosecute real coupers, but also makes it harder to generate steam around these faux legal-political dramas that are often more or less about generating negative mob mentalities against individuals.
A "court of opinion" where people just comment on stuff could become more or less a trial by mob or a public lynching (which in some regions, criminal trials basically become).
I do think if you have *evidence*, you should be able to submit it fairly freely with a simple private review by the justices to ensure that its evidence appropriate for the trial (evidence that Unibot likes unusual sex positions, isn't relevant to whether he abused his responsibilities as Minister etc.). But not commentary.
flemingovia:That is why the smear brigade generally do not do so in court. RAther they just post up their accusations in public, chuck mud against a wall and wait for some of it to stick. Don't they, Eluvatar?
I can see why it would helpful to ban multiple people posting over each other, but I don't see why someone shouldn't be able to appoint someone else to speak on their behalf in court on their behalf.flemingovia:There would be no counsels posting. If folks want to advise the accuser of defendant, let them do it on their own time.
Since trying to coup the region is a crime that would be tried as TNP v. Couper, with someone prosecuting on behalf of the region. As for civil cases against such a couper by ejected and banned nations or some such, they could either each bring separate cases or appoint a single person to represent them collectively in some sort of class action suit if we want to allow such things. Either way the key point is that a single attorney can represent multiple people in a case.Great Bights Mum:Another question that arises, how would matters involving more than 2 parties be handled? Or in the case of a rogue delegate, where it becomes a crime against the region, with many injured parties?
We already have that. It's called normal election time politics in TNP.Belschaft:I propose we do away with the entire justice system, and adopt a modified form of Ostracism.
You've got a good idea there and I have to agree.Blue Wolf II:So I have a pretty good idea. How about the Attorney General simply can not refuse a case. If the case is frivolous then the Defense can file a motion to dismiss immediately and the Justices (holy crap, remember those guys?) can determine if the case is really without merit, probably within the first 48 hours even.
This prevents the AG from shooting down cases in which they have a direct interest in. For example, lets say there was an attempted coup against the legally elected delegate and the AG was in on it but no one else besides the plotters knew about it. People can scream for Treason charges all they like and the AG can just stonewall the case until they are recalled, which is a bitch to do.
My idea eliminates this possibility as there is almost no chance that the entire Justice team is also in on the plot and if they are, we have bigger issues than a trial. Point being, this way ensures than one person can't stand in the way of TNP Law for their own personal interests.
That is silly. That would make the Attorney General the servant of the people rather than the master.Blue Wolf II:So I have a pretty good idea. How about the Attorney General simply can not refuse a case.
Oddly enough, that is a valid statement as to the function of the Attorney General.flemingovia:That is silly. That would make the Attorney General the servant of the people rather than the master.Blue Wolf II:So I have a pretty good idea. How about the Attorney General simply can not refuse a case.
Unfortunately, it may be a matter of amending the Constitution. Which translates to, Oh, crap,Blue Wolf II:I say we draft a proposed law based upon what we have agreed upon. Sound good?
Worth a shot.Blue Wolf II:I say we draft a proposed law based upon what we have agreed upon. Sound good?
I understand what you are saying and I appreciate your satirical sense of humor...flemingovia:rather than rush into legislation, why not work it through unofficially and see if it works? I am using some of the principles in the Fiqh religious court in teh Temple area. I have based it a bit on ideas put forward here.
Why not run a few cases through that, and let's see if it works? Far better than to change the law without beta testing.