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1 | | HOUSE RESOLUTION
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2 | | WHEREAS, The right to trial by jury was guaranteed to |
3 | | certain free subjects of the King of England and his
successors |
4 | | by the Magna Carta of 1215, among the first official documents |
5 | | ever to limit the power of
government over individual citizens; |
6 | | and |
7 | | WHEREAS, Over subsequent centuries, the rights and |
8 | | liberties guaranteed by that great charter grew to
safeguard |
9 | | the liberties of all English subjects; and |
10 | | WHEREAS, Royal interference with the right to trial by |
11 | | jury, along with unfair taxation imposed without
the consent of |
12 | | the governed, figured prominently in the colonists' subsequent |
13 | | dissatisfaction with
English rule, which culminated in |
14 | | revolution and independence; and |
15 | | WHEREAS, The First Continental Congress, convened in 1774 |
16 | | to protest further abuses and prepare for a
larger |
17 | | confrontation, declared and resolved "that the respective |
18 | | colonies are entitled to the common
law of England, and more |
19 | | especially to the great and inestimable privilege of being |
20 | | tried by their peers
of the vicinage, according to the course |
21 | | of that law"; and |
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1 | | WHEREAS, The Declaration of Independence revoked the |
2 | | colonies' allegiance to King George III on July 4,
1776, for, |
3 | | among other abuses, "depriving us in many cases, of the |
4 | | benefits of trial by jury"; and |
5 | | WHEREAS, Thomas Jefferson, author of the Declaration of |
6 | | Independence, member of the Continental Congress, and
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7 | | President of the United States, wrote to Thomas Paine in 1789 |
8 | | and declared that "I consider trial by jury
as the only anchor |
9 | | ever yet imagined by man, by which a government can be held to |
10 | | the principles of its
constitution"; and |
11 | | WHEREAS, John Adams, first Vice-President of the United |
12 | | States, and Second President of the United
States, reflected |
13 | | upon juries as "the heart and lungs of liberty"; and |
14 | | WHEREAS, John Marshall, Secretary of State, Chief Justice |
15 | | of the United States Supreme Court, and
namesake of the Chicago |
16 | | law school expressed in the Virginia Convention to ratify the |
17 | | United States
Constitution his "hope that in this country, |
18 | | where impartiality is so much admired, the laws will direct
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19 | | facts to be ascertained by a jury"; and |
20 | | WHEREAS, The late Chief Justice of the United States |
21 | | Supreme Court William H. Rehnquist said in 1979
that "the |
22 | | founders of our nation considered the right of trial by jury in |
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1 | | civil cases an important bulwark
against tyranny and |
2 | | corruption, a safeguard too precious to be left to the whim of |
3 | | the sovereign. Juries
represent the layman's common sense and |
4 | | this keeps the administration of the law in accord with the
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5 | | wishes and feelings of the community"; and |
6 | | WHEREAS, Abraham Lincoln, sixteenth President of the |
7 | | United States, the Great
Emancipator, and self-proclaimed |
8 | | "prairie lawyer" who tried hundreds of cases remarked on the |
9 | | value
of jury service as "the highest calling of any citizen"; |
10 | | and |
11 | | WHEREAS, In 1954, in a decision that echoed through the |
12 | | halls of every school throughout the United
States, Brown v. |
13 | | Board of Education, desegregation of schoolchildren within our |
14 | | schools was achieved,
pursuant to the "Equal Protection" |
15 | | provisions of the 14th Amendment to the United States |
16 | | Constitution,
through the civil justice system; and |
17 | | WHEREAS, Those that pollute the air that we breathe, the |
18 | | water that we drink, and the soil from which
we grow our crops |
19 | | have been held to account through our civil justice system and |
20 | | trial by jury; and |
21 | | WHEREAS, Safety protocols and procedures have been |
22 | | improved for: packaging and delivery of
medicines; |
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1 | | automobiles, airplanes, and trains; the toys with which our |
2 | | children and grandchildren play;
the construction and |
3 | | maintenance of our homes and buildings; and countless other |
4 | | protections
have been achieved through the civil justice system |
5 | | and trial by jury; and |
6 | | WHEREAS, Illinois' courts are open to its citizens that are |
7 | | harmed by the actions of another, and to
businesses, which |
8 | | account for 70% of civil case filings; and
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9 | | WHEREAS, Article 1, Section 13 of the Constitution of the |
10 | | State of Illinois states that "The right of trial by
jury as |
11 | | heretofore enjoyed shall remain inviolate"; and
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12 | | WHEREAS, Recognizing that juries are selected fairly and |
13 | | randomly from the pools of adult resident citizens,
which are |
14 | | cut from the fabric of each of Illinois' communities and |
15 | | represent the strengths of Illinois'
diversity and are without |
16 | | consideration for color, gender, race, creed, religion, |
17 | | socioeconomic status, or
sexual orientation; and
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18 | | WHEREAS, It is this recognition and these strengths that |
19 | | fundamentally empower our citizens, and
ensure that jurors are |
20 | | coequal within the jury box; and
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21 | | WHEREAS, Citizen empowerment and having fair sanctuary to |
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1 | | pursue justice before a jury of our peers in
a court of law are |
2 | | sacrosanct cornerstones of democracy; and
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3 | | WHEREAS, The sentiments of these Founding Fathers, |
4 | | patriots, jurists, and legislators are shared by
many Americans |
5 | | who regard the right of trial by jury as an essential safeguard |
6 | | of liberty; therefore, be it
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7 | | RESOLVED, BY THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES OF THE |
8 | | NINETY-NINTH GENERAL ASSEMBLY OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS, that in |
9 | | order for Illinois' citizens to have fair opportunity to |
10 | | redress their grievances, to maintain a system of justice that |
11 | | lends no favor within its arena, and to insure that the scale |
12 | | of justice remains blind to its pursuers, we declare the right |
13 | | to trial by jury of one's peers be preserved, neither altered |
14 | | nor eroded by those that may threaten it, in accordance with |
15 | | the foresight of our ancestors that safeguarded this most |
16 | | fundamental right.
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