
Plea Bargains: Why and When They're Made
From the Nolo.com Criminal Law Center
As criminal courts become ever more crowded, prosecutors
and judges feel increased pressure to move cases quickly through the system.
As criminal courts become ever more crowded, prosecutors and judges feel
increased pressure to move cases quickly through the system. Trials can
take days, weeks or sometimes months while guilty pleas can often be arranged
in minutes. Also, the outcome of any given trial is usually unpredictable
-- but a plea bargain provides both prosecution and defense with some
control over the result.
For these reasons and others, and despite its many critics, plea bargaining
is very common. More than 90% of convictions come from negotiated pleas,
which means that less than 10% of criminal cases result in a trial. And
though some still view plea bargains as secret, sneaky arrangements that
are antithetical to the people's will, the federal government and many
states have written rules that explicitly set out how plea bargains may
be arranged and accepted by the court.
In theory, a plea bargain may be negotiated at any time after arrest.
In practice, however, the time to plead depends on the court and the jurisdiction
-- some jurisdictions allow plea bargains only during certain phases of
the criminal process. In many other places, however, plea bargains can
be worked out virtually any time -- from shortly after the defendant is
arrested (before the prosecutor files criminal charges) up to the time
a verdict is reached -- even during trial itself. Also, if the trial results
in a hung jury (the jurors are split and cannot make the unanimous decision
required), the prosecution and defense may (and often do) negotiate a
plea rather than go through yet another trial.
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