February 26th, 2007

Scooter Libby Juror Excused — Bad for Libby?

Speculating on jurors is a full time job for trial lawyers, regardless of whether the matter is personal injury or criminal law. Today is no different as a juror is excused in the Scooter Libby trial during deliberations.

Why is this particular juror important? Well, on Valentine’s Day, she was the only juror not to be wearing a red shirt with a heart on, an odd event that I noted previously in Scooter Libby’s Jury and The Valentine’s Day Shirts.

Thus, the speculation would be that a stubborn juror (she refused to go along with the others in a “fun” thing) has now left. Since stubborn jurors are generally good for the defense, that would be bad for Libby.

See also:

 

February 17th, 2007

A Peek In the Jury Room

The ABA Journal has a great article on jury deliberations…with a camera in the jury room watching how it all happens. A couple snippets from A Peek in the Jury Room:

About 40 lawyers and judges at the ABA Midyear Meeting in Miami on Saturday got a peek into the deliberations of 50 actual civil juries handling trials in Arizona. There is one hitch. The findings come via researchers who, to get the court system and jurors to go along with the project, agreed that no one else ever will see the videotapes. And no identifying information will be released that would point to which juries and which cases.

This article popped into my email box yesterday, just one day after I wrote about the Scooter Libby jury walking into the courtroom on Valentine’s Day wearing red shirts with hearts on them. I wrote how juries are so often underestimated, even by the lawyers who appear before them, and treated as dumb “malleable creatures.”

So what does the researcher Shari S. Diamond say about the results of her study?

Diamond told the group that many of us hold misconceptions about juries. We believe, for example, that jurors are easily manipulated and often make up their minds before deliberations begin; that they take an immediate vote; and that the majority browbeats or otherwise persuades the others to come around.

“But actual deliberations were far more complicated in the civil cases we studied,” Diamond said.

On Feb. 5th I was selecting a jury in a personal injury case and, lo and behold, a personal injury attorney was in my jury pool. He then proceeded to talk himself off the panel. As I noted in a separate post, a trial attorney talking himself off jury duty is a big mistake.

That picture above, by the way? Watergate jurors listening to Nixon’s tapes. The sketch hangs in my office. As a constant reminder of so many different things, including the importance of juries.

 

February 15th, 2007

Scooter Libby’s Jury and The Valentine’s Day Shirts

It was just last week that I discussed a personal injury attorney that talked himself off a jury I was picking, and how this was a lost opportunity to see trials from a wholly new perspective.

Then in today’s New York Times (reg. req.) comes this remarkable piece about the Scooter Libby jury:

Before the jurors departed on Wednesday afternoon, they filed into the courtroom, all but one wearing bright red T-shirts with a white valentine heart over their clothes, to the uncertain laughter of many in the courtroom.

But as one juror, a retired North Carolina schoolteacher, rose to speak, Judge Walton became visibly anxious that the juror might say something inappropriate that could threaten the trial. Jurors are not supposed to speak and are supposed to make any concerns known through notes to the bench.

The juror said they were wearing the shirts to express their fondness for the judge and the court staff on Valentine’s Day. He then added, to the judge’s growing discomfort, that they were unanimous in this sentiment, but they would all be independent in judging the evidence in the Libby case.

The sole juror who apparently declined to wear the shirt was a woman who had been a curator at the Metropolitan Museum of Art.

Critics of the jury system like to think that juries are dumb; that they are all malleable creatures that will do whatever a lawyer asks of them. In doing so, they conveniently forget that juries are usually comprised of community members no different from one’s own friends, relatives and neighbors.

I am reminded of this daily, as I look at four Watergate trial images, including two of the jury, that grace my office wall , souvenirs of a Queens medical malpractice trial where I represented the estate of the artist. One is above and you can see them all at my law firm website.

The jury sketches (and Scooter Libby’s jury) should be a constant reminder that power doesn’t rest in the hands of one all powerful judge, but in the hands of your neighbors. Who should never be underestimated.

 

February 14th, 2007

Long Island Jury Awards 251K to Animal Rights Activist

A Long Island animal rights activist that was fired from a volunteer position by the town of Southampton, for speaking out against their animal euthanasia policy, has been vindicated by a jury. From Newsday:

A federal jury awarded an East End animal rights’ activist a $251,000 judgment Wednesday in a case that also compelled Southampton town to re-examine its euthanasia policy for stray cats and dogs.

Patricia Lynch said the town unfairly ended her work as a volunteer at its animal shelter after she used a radio show and newspaper column to speak out against putting the animals to sleep. The end of her work at the shelter, her attorney argued in U.S. District Court in Central Islip, made it impossible for her to continue rescuing the animals and place them in local homes…

[U.S. Judge Arthur D.] Spatt found that just like other municipal volunteers, such as volunteer firemen, Lynch did have First Amendment rights to free speech and due process…

 

February 6th, 2007

Personal Injury Lawyer Talks Himself Off Jury Duty

Yesterday I had a pool of 30 jurors. Four of them were lawyers. One tried personal injury cases.

Now you would think that of all people in the world, the ones that try cases would be least likely to say things to deliberately get booted from the jury panel. After all, no one appreciates the need for jurors more than those who work in the well of the courtroom.

But more importantly, the experience of being a juror is one that every attorney should have. You might not learn anything new about law or about trial tactics in a routine matter, but you learn what jurors go through. This potential juror who did mass torts litigation proceeded to say the magic words to get kicked, either because he was too busy, or just too snobby, to sit on a routine trip and fall sidewalk case. (Since jury duty can be deferred a few times for scheduling problems, it was likely unrelated to being too busy.) Deliberately getting kicked off a jury panel is, in my view, a lost opportunity.

I sat once in the late ’90s on a criminal case. And while it was a run-of-the-mill burglary — knocking off a fish truck in broad daylight in midtown Manhattan while being trailed by two undercover cops — and the lawyers weren’t that good, it was an altogether different experience seeing a trial from the jury box. And from the jury room.

No one should ever mistake the inside of a courtroom for the inside of a jury room. And no lawyer should turn down the opportunity to serve.