What does one wear for jury service?
What does one wear for jury service?
See your post #122Got the dreaded call.
How do I avoid being foreperson? Wear shorts and flip-flops I guess.
Blimey, forgot about that. Looks like I need to order some gear then.See your post #122
Don't worry, there's bound to be some gobby know-it-all that will THRUST themselves forward for the roleGot the dreaded call.
How do I avoid being foreperson? Wear shorts and flip-flops I guess.
Don't worry, there's bound to be some gobby know-it-all that will THRUST themselves forward for the role
You choose between yourselves. In my recent Jury Service, it was the juror already in chair 1 (i.e. called first in the random pick of jurors) who just did it - it's hardly a huge responsibility.Got the dreaded call.
How do I avoid being foreperson? Wear shorts and flip-flops I guess.
I did it for oursWe got lucky with a nice bloke, a vicar from Worthing.
Got the dreaded call.
How do I avoid being foreperson? Wear shorts and flip-flops I guess.
Hmmm....depends on the case I guess, I certainly felt the weight of it. You can end up having to moderate some quite feisty arguments and entrenched positions in the jury room, you need to try to bring order the thinking/approach to some extent, be on top of everything that was said/presented in court (people forget things) and the worst bit for me was delivering the actual verdict - realising you're (in our case) potentially condemning someone to several years behind bars.You choose between yourselves. In my recent Jury Service, it was the juror already in chair 1 (i.e. called first in the random pick of jurors) who just did it - it's hardly a huge responsibility.
I did it for ours
Fair point - I was on two relatively lightweight cases which both delivered Not Guilty verdicts due to lack of evidence (in fact on one count we were instructed by the Judge to do so).Hmmm....depends on the case I guess, I certainly felt the weight of it. You can end up having to moderate some quite feisty arguments and entrenched positions in the jury room, you need to try to bring order the thinking/approach to some extent, be on top of everything that was said/presented in court (people forget things) and the worst bit for me was delivering the actual verdict - realising you're (in our case) potentially condemning someone to several years behind bars.
Sure the selection method means most juries are such a mix, the two I was on were the same (one 8 days which was fairly traumatic , one a day and a half which was cut and dried as soon as we saw CCTV evidence)We got two week long trials. I say "we" because randomly from a pool of 50 in the room, 11 of the 12 from the first trial, formed part of the second jury.
An eclectic mix of Brighton/Sussex characters ... two 'hang em types' mind made up on seeing the defendants (they didn't brow-beat any of us), some touchy-feely types and assorted others.
In the first case the first 2 days were spent trying to convince one woman juror that because the defendant was 'looking at her funny' it didn't mean he was necessarily guilty and that wasn't a sound basis for a guilty verdict without needing to hear the rest of the case.
Has GB been called up?Don't worry, there's bound to be some gobby know-it-all that will THRUST themselves forward for the role
Sure the selection method means most juries are such a mix, the two I was on were the same (one 8 days which was fairly traumatic , one a day and a half which was cut and dried as soon as we saw CCTV evidence)
In the first case the first 2 days were spent trying to convince one woman juror that because the defendant was 'looking at her funny' it didn't mean he was necessarily guilty and that wasn't a sound basis for a guilty verdict without needing to hear the rest of the case.
That's MISTER Gobby Know It All to youHas GB been called up?
Just kidding…honest!