California — Statute

Section 219 | CALCRIM (Jury Instructions)

CALCRIM (Jury Instructions) Section 219. 221. Reasonable Doubt: Bifurcated Trial The People are required to prove the allegations beyond a reasonable doubt. Pro

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California State Law

Section 219

CALCRIM (Jury Instructions) § 219

Full Text

221. Reasonable Doubt: Bifurcated Trial
The People are required to prove the allegations beyond a reasonable
doubt.
Proof beyond a reasonable doubt is proof that leaves you with an
abiding conviction that the allegation is true. The evidence does not need
to eliminate all possible doubt because everything in life is open to some
possible or imaginary doubt.
In deciding whether the People have proved (an/the) allegation beyond a
reasonable doubt, you must impartially compare and consider all the
evidence that was received during this [phase of the] trial. Unless the
evidence proves (an/the) allegation beyond a reasonable doubt, you must
find that the allegation has not been proved [and disregard it
completely].
New January 2006; Revised August 2015
BENCH NOTES
Instructional Duty
The court has a sua sponte duty to instruct on reasonable doubt in any proceeding
in which that standard of proof applies.
This instruction is provided for the court to use only in bifurcated trials or special
proceedings where the court is required to instruct on reasonable doubt but neither
CALCRIM No. 219, Reasonable Doubt in Civil Commitment Proceedings, nor
CALCRIM No. 220, Reasonable Doubt, would apply. Do not use this instruction in
place of CALCRIM No. 220 in a trial on the substantive crimes charged.
Use this instruction only if: (1) the court has granted a bifurcated trial on a prior
conviction or a sentencing factor (see CALCRIM No. 3101, Prior Conviction:
Bifurcated Trial and CALCRIM No. 3251, Enhancement, Sentencing Factor, or
Specific Factual Issue: Template—Bifurcated Trial); or (2) in the penalty phase of a
capital trial when the court is instructing on other violent criminal activity or prior
felony convictions offered as aggravation (see CALCRIM No. 764, Death Penalty:
Evidence of Other Violent Crimes and CALCRIM No. 765, Death Penalty:
Conviction for Other Felony Crimes).
In the first sentence, the court, at its discretion, may wish to insert a description of
the specific allegations that the People must prove.
In the final paragraph, give the bracketed phrase “and disregard it completely” when
using this instruction in the penalty phase of a capital trial.
AUTHORITY

Instructional Requirements. Pen. Code, §§ 1096, 1096a; People v. Freeman
47

BENCH NOTES
Instructional Duty
The court has a sua sponte duty to instruct on the standard for extending
commitment, including the constitutional requirement that the person be found to
have a disorder that seriously impairs the ability to control his or her dangerous
behavior. (People v. Sudar (2007) 158 Cal.App.4th 655, 663 [70 Cal.Rptr.3d 190].).
Give CALCRIM No. 219, Reasonable Doubt in Civil Commitment Proceedings and
CALCRIM No. 3550, Pre-Deliberation Instructions, as well as any other relevant
post-trial instructions, such as CALCRIM No. 222, Evidence, or CALCRIM No.
226, Witnesses.
The constitutional requirement for an involuntary civil commitment is that the
person be found to have a disorder that seriously im

Common Questions

This section of the CALCRIM (Jury Instructions) establishes legal requirements and provisions that apply to specific circumstances in California law.

This section applies when the specific conditions outlined in the statute are met. The exact applicability depends on the facts of each situation.

Penalties vary based on the specific violation and circumstances. They may include fines, imprisonment, or other legal consequences as specified in the California code.

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In simple terms: CALCRIM (Jury Instructions) Section 219. 221. Reasonable Doubt: Bifurcated Trial The People are required to prove the allegations beyond a reasonable doubt. Pro. This means people must follow this rule, and breaking it can lead to criminal penalties.

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