Copyright 1995-1999 Touch N' Go Systems, Inc. All Rights Reserved. No claim made to official government works.


Rule 303. Presumptions in General in Criminal Cases.

1 Weinstein's Evidence, Paragraph 303 [01] (1975). The second function is of no concern to the states in their lawmaking activities. But a third function may be important. "In a borderline case a judge may be influenced by the legislative judgment of Congress [or a state legislature] to submit a basic fact to a jury which he would not have submitted as merely circumstantial evidence of the presumed fact." Id. Thus, the first and third functions are the important ones for the states. There also may be a fourth function - to make clear the intent of the legislature in special circumstances.

As long as a court confines itself to a description of a permissible inference, avoiding a statement like the trial judge's in Barnes - " [i]f you should find beyond a reasonable doubt0.0.0.0that the mail0.0.0.0was stolen,0.0.0.0you would ordinarily be justified in drawing the inference0.0.0.0unless such possession is explained0.0.0.0."0(emphasis added) - and avoiding the legislative language in Leary employed by the court in its instruction - "[w]henever0.0.0.0the defendant is shown to have or to have had the marihuana in his possession, such possession shall be deemed sufficient evidence to authorize conviction unless the defendant explains0.0.0." (emphasis added) - the relatively mild comment in the form of an instruction commanded by this Rule is likely to be sustained in light of the traditional power of federal courts to comment on the weight of the evidence in criminal cases and the nature of the instruction.

ARTICLE IV. ADMISSIBILITY OF
RELEVANT EVIDENCE


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Copyright 1995-1999 by Touch N' Go Systems, Inc. All rights reserved. No copyright claim is made to the text of the rules.

Last Modified 7/14/1999

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