Is the grand jury symbolic in New York? (It’s been said that a prosecutor can “indict a ham sandwich.”)

No. It is repeatedly made clear to the grand jurors that they represent the court and their community, not the prosecutor or the police. They alone have the discretion to indict or dismiss a criminal charge. In practice, only a fraction of felony arrests result in indictments issued by grand juries. There are several reasons for that:

  • Prosecutors weed out many questionable, borderline, and less-serious felony cases prior to grand jury presentment.
  • Many defendants agree to waive the grand jury process and plead guilty.
  • Even among cases presented to a grand jury, many cases every year are dismissed, reduced to lesser offenses and sent to local criminal courts, or transferred to family court.

Even where an indictment is issued, many grand juries decide to dismiss individual counts or charges, while indicting others.

Show All Answers

1. What is a grand jury?
2. Why does New York need grand juries?
3. Who presents evidence to the grand jury?
4. Who decides what evidence to present to the grand jury?
5. What types of evidence are received by the grand jury?
6. What is grand jury witness immunity?
7. How does the grand jury know what law to apply to a case before it?
8. How can we be sure the prosecutor acts properly before the grand jury?
9. What happens after all the evidence has been presented?
10. Do the grand jurors know about all of these powers?
11. Why is the grand jury proceeding secret?
12. Is the grand jury symbolic in New York? (It’s been said that a prosecutor can “indict a ham sandwich.”)