IDoDis
Knows the password to get into the Moose Lodge
- Joined
- Jan 14, 2006
- Messages
- 5,567
Having been a plaintiff and seeing the vior dire from the inside, I found the process of jury selection fascinating. Our attorneys hired a jury consultant to help select the best jury. Here are some interesting things I learned:
1) There were 50 people on the jury panel. Each juror is assigned a number 1 - 50. If your number is above 25, it's less likely you'd be selected because they start with #1 and go down the list that way eliminating potential jurors in numerical order.
2) The jury consultant(s) and attorneys are able to pick up the juror list a day or two before the trial. Our trial started on a Monday. The consultant was able to pick the list up on Friday. She spent a good part of the weekend researching each juror and rating them on a scale of +3 (very good) to -3 (get rid of 'em). She rated them based on background checks, what their political party was, what kind of job they had, history with the courts, posts by them on message boards, my space, facebook, etc.. For example, she eliminate one person because of his myspace page that had a really weird photo of him in some kind of creepy costume. Another juror had an anti-semitic web page and our attorney was Jewish, so he was asked to be dismissed. I could go on and on.
4) Potential jurors are asked many questions by the attorneys before the attorneys from both sides start choosing. Each side gets to choose a juror or get rid of a juror on the list. They can each only get rid of 3 jurors when selecting a pool of 12 jurors unless both sides agree to dismiss a juror. If both sides agree to dismiss someone based on some fact about that juror, then that dismissal doesn't count towards the three jurors each side can eliminate.
5) Before final selection, potential jurors are allowed to come up to the judge and state privately why they cannot serve. If the reason is valid, the judge will dismiss them. For example if it's a DUI case and someone on the jury pool had a family member die as the result of a drunk driver and thought this would skew his/her ability to be fair and impartial, that juror would be dismissed if he/she asked.
Saying you are a SAHM will not get you dismissed. We had one juror try that and she actually was chosen to be on the panel and ended up being the the jury forwoman. If you want to get out of serving, just say you cannot be fair because you believe XXX. Or put up a creepy myspace page! You can also get your dates rescheduled once if you are not available for the dates given to you. That happened to my DH twice. Both times he was selected he was not able to serve, and therefore was given different dates 4 or 6 months later.
Our case took a week in court. We appreciated the jury's time and attention that week! Their service really helped justice be served.
1) There were 50 people on the jury panel. Each juror is assigned a number 1 - 50. If your number is above 25, it's less likely you'd be selected because they start with #1 and go down the list that way eliminating potential jurors in numerical order.
2) The jury consultant(s) and attorneys are able to pick up the juror list a day or two before the trial. Our trial started on a Monday. The consultant was able to pick the list up on Friday. She spent a good part of the weekend researching each juror and rating them on a scale of +3 (very good) to -3 (get rid of 'em). She rated them based on background checks, what their political party was, what kind of job they had, history with the courts, posts by them on message boards, my space, facebook, etc.. For example, she eliminate one person because of his myspace page that had a really weird photo of him in some kind of creepy costume. Another juror had an anti-semitic web page and our attorney was Jewish, so he was asked to be dismissed. I could go on and on.
4) Potential jurors are asked many questions by the attorneys before the attorneys from both sides start choosing. Each side gets to choose a juror or get rid of a juror on the list. They can each only get rid of 3 jurors when selecting a pool of 12 jurors unless both sides agree to dismiss a juror. If both sides agree to dismiss someone based on some fact about that juror, then that dismissal doesn't count towards the three jurors each side can eliminate.
5) Before final selection, potential jurors are allowed to come up to the judge and state privately why they cannot serve. If the reason is valid, the judge will dismiss them. For example if it's a DUI case and someone on the jury pool had a family member die as the result of a drunk driver and thought this would skew his/her ability to be fair and impartial, that juror would be dismissed if he/she asked.
Saying you are a SAHM will not get you dismissed. We had one juror try that and she actually was chosen to be on the panel and ended up being the the jury forwoman. If you want to get out of serving, just say you cannot be fair because you believe XXX. Or put up a creepy myspace page! You can also get your dates rescheduled once if you are not available for the dates given to you. That happened to my DH twice. Both times he was selected he was not able to serve, and therefore was given different dates 4 or 6 months later.
Our case took a week in court. We appreciated the jury's time and attention that week! Their service really helped justice be served.