I work with a lady who's 56 years old and never served on a jury. Her boss, however, has been picked at least once a year for the past four! Definitely a "go figure" on that one.
My own experience wasn't much to talk about. We walked in, signed in, sat down, and got the usual speech from the judge. What was expected of us, how we were to conduct ourselves, what all was going to happen. During the Q&A by the plaintiff's attorney (disability case, dude suing WA State L&I) a lot of folks gave simple and honest answers. Until they came to me. See, I never went to juror orientation; they had no background on me. And attorney's HATE a wildcard when cash is on the line. Ten minutes later I was out the door with a half-dozen other people, having stayed about two hours.
My second round went much the same as the first, only it was a criminal trial. I didn't get picked then, either. Probably due to one question raised by the defense. "Sir, what magazines or groups do you have a membership with?"
"Well, that would include Field & Stream, Guns & Ammo, Shooting Times, and the NRA. Why?"
That defense attorney looked somewhat shocked and promptly moved on. Again, about ten minutes later I split with a dozen other folks to head back home or to work. Nothing terribly exciting.
One person I work with got picked for a criminal trial where shots were fired at officers from a moving vehicle. The driver who fired was high on three different narcotics, plus drunk, and tried for an insanity plea. He said it took them about twenty minutes to convict the guy on nine different charges. Stuffing him in the meat locker with Bubba for 25+ years. When I asked him what it was like to actually be on a working jury, he put it thus:
"It's kinda like working at a fast-foot joint. Interesting experience, but I wouldn't want to repeat it."
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Flakbait [Delta6]
