Jury Duty.....AGAIN!

I consider myself a good All American Robot…
I pay taxes
I Love thy neighbor
I recycle
I vote

However, I dislike Jury Duty. The only experience comparible would be an Arm Forces Induction Physical. Give Me Liberty or Give Me Death! This will be my 5th “Tour of Duty”. I was a Juror twice for criminal cases. One of the cases, was emotionally dehydrating and left an improper taste in my mouth. This will be my last appearence as a juror- do not send me another summons-it will be burned, like the Walls of Waco.

Aw, man, I was looking forward to serving my first jury duty when I got my summons in December. I was supposed to begin next week, but I have numerous conflicts with classes (full-time student), so the judge deferred my service until September 2007.

But I WAS looking forward to it. :-/

I’ve always wanted to serve on a jury but never been called. It’s kind of disapponting. I always picture myself as the lone holdout for acquittal who gradually convinces everyone else that the dude didn’t stab his dad. Or I can be a holdout for conviction as well. I just want to be a holdout.

Be careful. You know what happened to a jury holdout on CSI?

The closest I ever got was being in a pool called to a domestic violence case. Didn’t get out of the pool, and went home that day.

I had to go once, and I got the part where they were lining us up and stuff, but apparently the parties going to court settled their cage while they were getting the potential jurors in order, and they let us go.

I don’t mind doing it but I wish you were better compensated than the like $5 they give you. Depending on where you live it can cost more in gas and parking just to get there, nevermind if your employer doesn’t reimburse you for jury duty or you work at home.

case, sorry.

And here I am hoping to get called again. Especially Grand Jury. That was really fascinating to sit on.

Please please please educate yourself on Jury Nullification and try to educate others if you wind up on a jury.
Simply for the record, they’ll probably throw you off a jury if you know about this.

Maybe they throw you off because it’s against your sworn duty as a jury? Could that be it

Seeing as how jury nullification exists both de jure and de facto, I have to question how it could possibly be against a juror’s sworn duty.
If a judge makes you swear to not exercise your rights as a citizen and utilitze jury nullification as you see fit, he has obstructed justie in the truest sense of the term.

I’m 26, and I’ve been sent letters about jury duty 3 times. Twice I’ve had to attend. I can’t really recall the other letter-but I could swear it said that I’ve been picked and might have to go.

Out of those two times, both have been for traffic court. The thing is-I’m never going to get to serve on that sort of jury because I’m always instantly dismissed when the find out that I used to be a insurance adjuster’s assistant.

The absolutely shitty thing is, I’ll get there at 9 (roughly) be dismissed at 9:30, and have to wait only to be dismissed again after lunch!

It’s frustrating!

I was called for jury duty and was really keen to sit on a jury. There were probably 80 of us there for the day’s cases. Not one case was ready for court and we were all dismissed after about 3 hours of aimless sitting around and wont get called again for years.

Two guys at work have been on juries. One was the foreman of the jury in a trial where the accused woman was convicted. Just for the hell of it I used to taunt him that he had put an innocent woman in jail, it was the worst miscarriage of justice I had ever seen …etc. Unfortunately sometime later the conviction was overturned on appeal…oops.

The other guy sat on a jury for many days. During summation the prosecutor said something to which the defense objected. The jury was taken out for legal argument and then brought back to be told that a mistrial had been declared. No member of the jury had noticed the prosecutor’s assertion that the defendant was guilty of something as yet unproven.

Jury Nullificiation certainly exists as a matter of fact… it happens. But as a matter of law? Really? Could I ask you for a cite? One that was decided in the last 30 years or so, and not from the 1700 - 1800’s.

Bullshit. Pure and simple bullshit. Jurors take an oath to determine their verdict based on the facts of the case. If the facts prove the defendant guilty or not guilty beyond a reasonable doubt, ignoring that is breaking your oath. Your overinflated rhetoric notwithstanding.

You could ask for one, but before I give you a second I’ll tell you to check the first.
I will, however, quote one fact they have up there, I’m sure you can do the rest of the research yourself.

Aww, what the hell, I’m feeling generous
Oh, and, just to be clear, yes, I am deliberatly disregarding your injunction that only something within the last 30 years can be used as a cite due to the fact that such a prohibition is ridiculous.

Several things, first, do you feel that somehow correcting a typo makes you look like anything other than a nitpicker? Sic indeed.
Second, your overinflated rhetoric notwithstanding, it is not bullshit.
Determining a verdict based on the facts is not mutually exclusive to finding that the law is unjust. One could, quite easily, determine that the facts in a case were evident, but the law unjust, and then vote ‘not guilty’.

Yeah, because that’s fun :rolleyes: .

Try being one of two holdouts on a murder trial where the other ten members just want to go home. Loads of fun, I tell you. I enjoyed getting the death glare from ten people when I said that I wasn’t entirely convinced that the defendant was involved in the murder. It kind of kills your faith in the justice system when you have another juror tell you “Just vote the guy guilty so we can all get the fuck out of here, okay? Because none of us wanna come back tomorrow.”.

Be careful what you wish for, Dio. Believe me, it’s not as fun as you think it is.

E.

This is what scares me about the jury system. I think an awful lot of people are very casual in how quickly they’re willing to convict somebody, especially if the defendant looks unsavory (e.g. black) to them.

Ironically, the kind of people who want to convict just so they can go home would probably have the keenest sense of justice if it was them in the defendant’s chair.

Did you ultimately reach a verdict in your case?

I came the closest last week to being chosen than I ever have before. I was number 35 on the panel and the last one chosen was #33.

Another wasted day…

Yes, we did, and while I’m 95% sure we reached the right one, there’s always a part of me that wonders if we sent an innocent kid to prison for life (he was eighteen, but seemed like a kid to us).

He was tried along with his brother, and I had no doubt about his brother’s guilt. But as far as he went, I had to review the evidence on my own over and over again in order to come to the verdict we chose.

What surprised me was the fact that the boys were black, and the majority of those who wanted to hurry up and convict were also black - the two of us who had questions were white. So it certainly wasn’t a race issue, per se.

This was in Brooklyn, BTW. And if I am ever called for jury duty again, I will happily serve a civil trial, a criminal trial, a federal trial, etc., but I will ask to be released from any murder trials. I absolutely can not go through that again. Having the power to send two people to prison for the rest of their lives is as much as my own conscience can stand, regardless of what the verdicts were.

E.

Indeed, I can do research on my own. The Supreme Court of Indiana, in 1957, specifically spoke about that provision and stated:

and

and

and

I can come up with additional cases, much the same, discussing the constitutional provisions in both Maryland and Georgia which have much the same language in their constitutions. But I don’t want to bore you.

Well, unless Mr Roboto is sitting on a jury trial which takes place in 1834, it certainly does matter. The current state of the law is of vital importance when you “attempt to educate” someone incorrectly.

You made a mistake, I corrected it. Nothing more, nothing less.

It is not the juries place to decide that they don’t like the law. In order to accomplish jury nullification, a juror must, in most cases, lie to the judge and ignore the oath they were given as jurors. While they have the “power” to nullify, they certainly don’t have the right.

Oh for heaven’s sake can we make it trhough one thread where the j-word comes up without sidetracking it into the nullification argument? Hamlet, there are many, many folks with law degrees out there who think nullification is perfectly proper. If you disagree, you should take it to another thread.

–Cliffy