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Proof Beyond a Reasonable Doubt: A Balanced Retributive Account
Journal article   Open access

Proof Beyond a Reasonable Doubt: A Balanced Retributive Account

Alec D. Walen
Louisiana Law Review, Vol.76(2), pp.355-446
2015
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.7282/T3736SV9

Abstract

Standard of proof Proof beyond a reasonable doubt Retributivism Consequentialism (Ethics) Deontology Duty
The standard of proof in criminal trials in many liberal democracies is proof beyond a reasonable doubt, the BARD standard. It is customary to describe it, when putting a number on it, as requiring that the fact finder be at least 90% certain, after considering the evidence, that the defendant is guilty. Strikingly, no good reason has yet been offered in defense of using that standard. A number of non-consequentialist justifications that aim to support an even higher standard have been offered; all are morally unsound. Meanwhile, consequentialist arguments plausibly support a substantially lower standard — in some cases so low as to undermine the idea that punishment is what is at stake. In this paper, I offer a new retributive justification that supports excluding the instrumental benefits of punishment from the balance that sets the standard. The resulting balance supports a standard arguably in the ballpark of the customary understanding of BARD: a standard requiring that the fact finder have a high, though not maximally high, degree of confidence that the defendant is guilty.
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