Blackstone's ratio
In criminal law, Blackstone's ratio is the idea that:
This was written by the English jurist William Blackstone in his seminal work Commentaries on the Laws of England, published in the 1760s.
The idea subsequently became a staple of legal thinking in jurisdictions with legal systems derived from English criminal law and continues to be a topic of debate. There is also a long pre-history of similar sentiments going back centuries in a variety of legal traditions.
In the United States, high courts in individual states continue to adopt specific numerical values for the ratio, often not 10:1. As of 2018, courts in 38 states have adopted such a position.
In Blackstone's ''Commentaries''
The phrase, repeated widely and usually in isolation, comes from a longer passage, the fourth in a series of five discussions of rules of presumption by Blackstone:The phrase was absorbed by the British legal system, becoming a maxim by the early 19th century. It was also absorbed into American common law, cited repeatedly by that country's Founding Fathers, later becoming a form of words drilled into law students all the way into the 21st century.
Other commentators have echoed the principle. Benjamin Franklin stated it as: "it is better 100 guilty Persons should escape than that one innocent Person should suffer".
Defending British soldiers charged with murder for their role in the Boston Massacre, John Adams also expanded upon the rationale behind Blackstone's Ratio when he stated:
Historic expressions of the principle
The immediate precursors of Blackstone's ratio in English law were articulations by Hale and John Fortescue, both influential jurists in their time. Hale wrote: "for it is better five guilty persons should escape unpunished, than one innocent person should die." Fortescue's De Laudibus Legum Angliae states that "one would much rather that twenty guilty persons should escape the punishment of death, than that one innocent person should be condemned and suffer capitally."Some 300 years before Fortescue, the Jewish legal theorist Maimonides wrote that "the Exalted One has shut this door" against the use of presumptive evidence, for "it is better and more satisfactory to acquit a thousand guilty persons than to put a single innocent one to death."
Maimonides argued that executing an accused criminal on anything less than absolute certainty would progressively lead to convictions merely "according to the judge's caprice" and was expounding on both Exodus 23:7 and an Islamic text, the Jami' al-Tirmidhi.
Islamic scholar Al-Tirmidhi quotes Muhammad as saying, "Avoid legal punishments as far as possible, and if there are any doubts in the case then use them, for it is better for a judge to err towards leniency than towards punishment". A similar expression reads, "Invoke doubtfulness in evidence during prosecution to avoid legal punishments".
Other statements, some even older, which seem to express similar sentiments have been compiled by Alexander Volokh. A vaguely similar principle, echoing the number ten and the idea that it would be preferable that many guilty people escape consequences than a few innocents suffer them, appears as early as the narrative of Sodom and Gomorrah in Genesis :
With respect to the destruction of Sodom, the text describes it as ultimately being destroyed, but only after the rescuing of most of Lot's family, the aforementioned "righteous" among a city or overwhelming wickedness who, despite the overwhelming guilt of their fellows, were sufficient by their mere presence to warrant a "stay of execution" of sorts for the entire region, slated to be destroyed for being uniformly a place of sin. The text continues:
Similarly, on 3 October 1692, while decrying the Salem witch trials, Increase Mather adapted Fortescue's statement and wrote, "It were better that Ten Suspected Witches should escape, than that one Innocent Person should be Condemned."
The Russian writer Fyodor Dostoevsky in his work The Brothers Karamazov, written in 1880, referred to the phrase "It is better to acquit ten guilty than to punish one innocent!", which has existed in Russian legislation since 1712, during the reign of Peter the Great.
Even Voltaire in 1748 in the work of Zadig used a similar saying, although in French his thought is stated differently than in the English translation: "It is from him that the nations hold this great principle, that it is better to risk saving a guilty man than to condemn an innocent man."
Evolving significance over time
It has been claimed that the Ratio contains the message that government and the courts must err on the side of bringing in verdicts of innocence, and that this has remained constant.Given that Sir Matthew Hale and Sir John Fortescue in English law had made similar statements previously, some kind of explanation is required for the enormous popularity and influence of the phrase across all the legal systems derived from English law in the wake of the publication of Blackstone's Commentaries.
Cullerne Bown has argued that both the rise and fall in significance of the Ratio can be explained by the growing mathematisation of society. It rises to prominence at about the same time as Cesare Beccaria articulated the social principle of the greatest good for the greatest number, the starting point for Utilitarianism and, like the Ratio, quantitative in a loose way. Thus, the Ratio's rise "can be seen as a new kind of buttress of the law that was required in a new kind of society." He has explained its more recent decline as a reflection of a more sophisticated mathematical awareness in society, as reflected in the development of diagnostic testing in the 1920s. From a mathematical point of view, the Ratio is methodologically flawed, and once the Ratio lost its claim to the authority of mathematics, its usefulness declined. Today, its former role in justifying the policies of the criminal courts is primarily occupied by Herbert L. Packer's Two Models theory, an expanded doctrine of rights and arguments drawn from law and economics.
In current jurisprudential scholarship
Blackstone's principle influenced the nineteenth-century emergence of the "beyond a reasonable doubt" standard in criminal law. Many modern commentators draw a connection between the familiar "ten guilty persons" ratio and a specific probability threshold in criminal trials. For example, Jack B. Weinstein wrote that Blackstone's ratio would place the probability standard at roughly 90% certainty of guilt:Empirical research supports the idea that numerical guidelines may affect jurors' decisions. Studies by Dorothy K. Kagehiro and by Kagehiro & W. Clark Stanton show that mock juries presented with explicit percentages or probabilities demonstrate more consistent verdicts than those relying solely on verbal definitions of "beyond a reasonable doubt".
Building on these findings, Daniel Pi, Francesco Parisi & Barbara Luppi propose that Blackstone's ratio could be translated into formal jury instructions – for instance, specifying a probability threshold consistent with "ten guilty persons escaping for every one innocent punished". While some legal theorists remain cautious about expressing the burden of proof in mathematically precise terms, proponents argue that quantification aligns closely with the historical logic of Blackstone's ratio and helps clarify the meaning of reasonable doubt for fact-finders.