In England and Wales, all inquests were once conducted with a
jury. They acted somewhat like a
grand jury, determining whether a person should be committed to trial in connection to a death. Such a jury was made up of up to twenty-three men, and required the votes of twelve to render a decision. Similar to a grand jury, a coroner's jury merely accused, it did not
convict. There are no coroners in Scotland, which has its own legal system. The Scottish equivalent of an inquest is a fatal accident inquiry, held where there is a sudden, suspicious, accidental, or unexplained death, which is ordered by a procurator fiscal and presided over by a sheriff without a jury. Since 1927, coroner's juries have rarely been used in England. Under the
Coroners Act 1988, a jury is only required to be convened in cases where the death occurred in prison, police custody, or in circumstances which may affect public health or safety. The coroner can actually choose to convene a jury in any investigation, but in practice this is rare. The qualifications to sit on a coroner's jury are the same as those to sit on a jury in
Crown Court, the
High Court, and the
County Court. Additionally, a coroner's jury only determines cause of death; its ruling does not commit a person to trial. While grand juries, which did have the power to indict, were abolished in the United Kingdom by 1948 (after being effectively stopped in 1933), coroner's juries retained those powers until the
Criminal Law Act 1977. This change came about after a coroner's jury charged
Lord Lucan in 1975 in the death of Sandra Rivett, his children's nanny. ==United States==