Dewe-Road-Gull
New member
- Jul 11, 2012
- 154
I'm 24 and got called up a couple of years back. Very interesting, bit of a savage case ( death by drink driving ) Concluded the law is an ASS
Done it twice. Once at Brighton and once at Lewes.
At the end of the second case at Brighton, the judge said he'd sum up, send us away, re-summarise the next morning and then send us out for our verdict. One juror said if he missed another days work he'd be out of a job. The judge asked the jury if we'd prefer to stay that night and as most had done two trials lasting about 15 days we said we'd stay. We were sent out at 4pm for our verdict to find we were split 6:6! We eventually left court 10pm at which point the juror who wanted to stay realised he'd left his dog in his car in a car park (for 8 hours!). God knows what he found when he got back to that car.
No, only if you're not eligible or ill with a medical certificate.
No, only if you're not eligible or ill with a medical certificate.
starting my second lot of jury service next week at Hove, attended lewes on my first service about nine years ago. very interesting and enjoyable, three trials, ABH, drug smuggling and murder case which the judge stopped after three days. Two weeks paid leave off work as well.
Murder trial at Old Bailey, bit of an eye opener.
One period which covered 2 trials.
I was lumbered with being foreman for one, just because I took notes so seemed to the rest of the jury to be taking it seriously.
At the end, I resisted the urge to add 'as sin' to the 'guilty' verdict, the judge then went through a long list of previous convictions which eased our minds.
Deferring it is not the same as turning it down. My ex colleague once tried to get out of it, because she told them she was married to a policeman, but that wasn't sufficient for her to be ineligible.