ABSTRACT

While denying a motion filed by criminal defendants to inspect the minutes of the grand jury proceedings in their case, United States District Court Judge Learned Hand professed unqualified confidence in the legal protections afforded individuals accused of crimes. He dismissed as fanciful the notion that amidst those layers of protection there lurked the risk of error.

Under our criminal procedure the accused has every advantage. While the prosecution is held rigidly to the charge, he need not disclose the barest outline of his defense. He is immune from question or comment on his silence; he cannot be convicted when there is the least fair doubt in the minds of any of the twelve [ jurors]. Why in addition he should in advance have the whole evidence against him to pick over at his leisure, and make his defense, fairly or foully, I have never been able to see. No doubt grand juries err and indictments are calamities to honest men, but we must work with human beings and we can correct such errors only at too large a price. Our dangers do not lie in too little tenderness to the accused. Our procedure has been always haunted by the ghost of the innocent man convicted. It is an unreal dream. What we need to fear is the archaic formalism and the watery sentiment that obstructs, delays, and defeats the prosecution of crime. 1