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Restoring the Right to Trial by Jury: How the Right to Trial Act Helps Reclaim the Sixth Amendment

Mike Fox


Aaron Swartz.

In January 2013, the world lost a brilliant young mind when twenty-six-year-old internet pioneer Aaron Swartz took his own life. A coding prodigy and co-founder of Reddit, Swartz had been arrested in Massachusetts two years prior for entering a closed-access wiring closet at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) and using its network to download millions of academic articles from the digital repository JSTOR. He believed that human knowledge should be free and accessible to the public, rather than locked behind corporate paywalls.

Neither MIT nor JSTOR ultimately wished to pursue the matter. Yet, the United States Attorney’s Office stepped in, transforming the case into a federal felony by charging Swartz with two counts of wire fraud and eleven counts under the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act.

The government initially offered Swartz a deal: if he pleaded guilty to all 13 counts, they would recommend a sentence of just four months. However, federal prosecutors warned that if he rejected the offer, future deals would be far less attractive. Swartz wanted to do what has increasingly become the unthinkable: exercise his constitutional right to a trial by jury. This right is so fundamental that it appears in both the unamended text of the Constitution (Article III) and the Bill of Rights (the Sixth Amendment).

Yet today, the jury trial is no longer the primary mechanism for adjudicating criminal cases. In 2022, a staggering 98.3 percent of federal criminal convictions were secured via guilty pleas. This shift is largely due to the highly coercive nature of modern plea bargaining.

In response to Swartz’s insistence on going to trial, prosecutors weaponized the criminal justice system against him. Initially, Swartz faced up to 35 years in prison—an amount that increased to 50 years when prosecutors brought a superseding indictment. This represented a jaw-dropping 15,000 percent increase over the initial offer.

The disparity between a few months in a plea deal and decades threatened at trial is a systemic distortion known as the trial penalty. Under the immense emotional and financial weight of this high-stakes gamble, Swartz succumbed to the pressure before his case ever reached a jury. At the time of his death, then US Attorney Carmen Ortiz justified her office’s actions, noting that they planned to recommend just six months in a low-security setting.

While Swartz’s case drew international headlines, the terrifying math behind it plays out in courtrooms across America every single day. The Sixth Amendment explicitly guarantees the right to trial by an impartial jury, yet the modern justice system has rendered this protection nearly obsolete. The vast majority of defendants choose to waive their right to a jury trial and simply plead guilty. 

The jury trial has become an endangered species in large part because prosecutors hold structural levers that make standing trial incredibly risky. First, they possess the unilateral authority to stack charges, piling on extra offenses arising from a single event to drastically inflate potential prison time. Second, Congress and state legislatures have enacted rigid mandatory minimum sentences for various offenses. If a prosecutor brings a charge carrying a ten-year mandatory minimum, a judge is stripped of all discretion and must impose that decade-long term upon a trial conviction, even if they disagree with the severity.

Additionally, prosecutors can threaten family members, invoke habitual offender laws, and use the imposition of pretrial detention to leverage guilty pleas. Confronted with a choice between a guaranteed, shorter sentence via a plea and a catastrophic, decades-long sentence after a trial, even innocent individuals often plead guilty out of pure survival instinct.

A new bipartisan federal bill aims to fundamentally disrupt this imbalance of power. Introduced by Representatives Morgan Griffith (R‑VA) and Hank Johnson (D‑GA), H.R. 9095—the Right to Trial Act—directly targets the trial penalty by shifting leverage away from prosecutors and returning discretion to the judiciary.

The legislation amends federal sentencing law to require that judges explicitly review the entire history of plea negotiations. For the first time, a judge determining a post-trial sentence would be legally required to evaluate the original plea offers made by the government, as well as the sentences received by co-defendants who pleaded guilty. If the judge finds that the post-trial sentence is vastly disproportionate simply because the defendant forced the government to prove its case, the judge can reduce the sentence to close that gap.

Crucially, the Right to Trial Act grants federal judges the explicit authority to bypass statutory mandatory minimums. If a judge determines that a mandatory minimum is being used as an unfair structural penalty to punish a defendant for exercising their Sixth Amendment rights, they can legally sentence the individual below that statutory floor.

While this reform will not, on its own, dismantle the unduly coercive plea-bargaining regime entirely, it strips federal prosecutors of their ability to act as judge, jury, and executioner through charging decisions alone. By empowering federal judges to neutralize these disproportionate penalties, the legislation honors the legacy of advocates like Aaron Swartz. By restoring the proper balance of power, this proposal takes a critical step toward ensuring that the right to a trial by jury remains a meaningful constitutional safeguard, rather than mere words on paper.

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