#31
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Anyway, I agree that the $35/day my county pays jurors is ridiculous. That might cover lunch at the court cafe and gas to drive in. Maybe. |
#32
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#33
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The county I reside in (Onondaga County in New York) went through a thorough update to their jury duty process about 15 years ago. They cut way back on exemptions/exceptions. They also cut back on “professional jurors” who had more free time and often sat on juries. By enlarging the juror pool, they made it very unlikely that you would be called for jury duty more than once in ten years. When I was last called to jury duty, the commissioner of jurors spoke to all in attendance and briefed us on jury policies. I was very impressed with the professionalism. I served on a civil case jury and had a positive experience. Approximately 7 working days from jury selection through verdict. True to their word, I haven’t been called to jury duty in the past 11 years.
Greg |
#34
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Report for jury duty. You often get dismissed on day one and you are done, and the don’t get called again for a number of years. If you get put into a jury pool, and then make it through jury selection without being discharged, serve. It’s your civic duty. |
#35
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Anyways thanks for the lecture. |
#36
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My mother-in-law got called every year between age 90-95. My wife and I simply sent in a request to be exempt due to age and they immediately excused her but the jury summons continued.
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#37
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Over 20 years ago I received a letter saying that I'd been selected. As it turned out I was going to be out of town on business and was excused. (The test was rescheduled, so as it turns out I could have served, but it was too late to tell them that.) Then about 20 years ago I not a notice that I might be selected for some sort of Federal jury, but that too fell through.
Bottom line: I've lived in St Louis 38 years, and those were the only two times I've received anything related to jury duty.... |
#38
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To add to big bill's and Spaghetti Legs's stories, when I was on a jury I experienced similar behavior: Jurors doing crossword puzzles and engaging in idle chit chat while not fully understanding nor debating the case. They just wanted "out of there", while the parties were paying their lawyers to sit on the other side of the door waiting for a verdict. Just plain poor judgment and behavior.
__________________
http://hubbardpark.blogspot.com/ |
#39
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#40
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Get a higher degree. They never choose people that have a post-graduate degree.
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#41
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One of my high-school teachers played that for us in class, about 1967. I didn't know what the heck it meant!
__________________
You always have a plan on the bus... |
#42
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Would that I ever be in the position to face a jury, I wouldn't want it to be composed of pissed-off Why-Am-I-Heres.
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©2004 The Elefantino Corp. All rights reserved. |
#43
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I have been summoned 5 times in my 44 years of residence, served twice, got out due to work 3 times.
__________________
Sonder MTB, Seven Ti, Lynskey Ti Gravel |
#44
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For the graduate level case, folks who have been through the process understand that if you object or disagree, you have to support your answer. Personal feelings have to stay out of it. |
#45
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I remember the subject coming up during a meeting at an old job of mine and a manager saying "Just tell them you're a PhD, you'll never get selected". That education level can always sway the verdict. Loved that guy. He said it jokingly, but there's probably some truth to that. Unless of course the case involves a Doctor.
Last edited by YesNdeed; 09-15-2024 at 11:15 AM. |
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