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Construing Motive in Videotaped Killings: The Role of Jurors' Attitudes Toward the Death Penalty
Authors:Goodman-Delahunty  Jane  Greene  Edith  Hsiao  Winston
Affiliation:(1) Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, USA;(2) Department of Psychology, University of Colorado, Colorado Springs, CO;(3) University of Washington, USA
Abstract:Death-qualified jurors are generally able to impose the death penalty, whereas excludable jurors are generally either unable or unwilling to do so. A long line of research studies has shown that the former are more likely than the latter to convict criminal defendants. Ellsworth (1993) argues that jurors' attitudes toward the death penalty predict verdicts because they are embedded in a cluster of beliefs and theories about the criminal justice system. Her studies show that jurors interpret ambiguous conduct based on these belief structures. The present study examines the possibility that death penalty attitudes also influence jurors' conceptions of criminal intent. We showed mock jurors the filmed murder of a convenience store clerk and examined the inferences they drew from this evidence. Jurors who favored the death penalty tended to read criminal intent into the defendant's actions and jurors who opposed the death penalty were less likely to do so. These data provide further explanation of the conviction-proneness of death-qualified jurors.
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