By Annette Cole Mastron,
Communications Director for Southern Writers Magazine
As a citizen of the
United States, one of the guaranteed rights under The United States
Constitution is a trial by a jury of your peers. I've served as a juror on
two different trials. These trials were settled before jury deliberations, and
we were thanked by the judge for our service and dismissed. Both of these were
criminal trials.
Two months ago, I
received another jury pool notice. Much has improved in the process, but there
is always room for improvement. Thankfully, you can register and pick your week
online. In my past experience, a prospective juror had to appear in person just
to pick their week.
So online, I picked the
most convenient week in order to be minimally invasive to my life. Of course, I
had much work that had to be pre-done in order to serve as a prospective juror.
There were emails, texts, and a letter in the mail to assure I would appear for
my assigned week.
Last Monday, with about
300 other citizens, I appeared for my week of jury service. The Jury
Coordinator gave instructions and called roll, yes like in elementary school.
Two judges addressed us to impress on us the seriousness of being a juror. One
judge walked us through some historical legal systems to determine guilt of a
crime. He advised some cultures would throw a rock in a vat of boiling oil. The
accused had to stick their arm in said vat and retrieve the rock. If they were
scalded then they were pronounced guilty. Another example was that the accused
arms and legs were tightly bound and tossed into a lake. If they drowned, they
were pronounced guilty. The judges then reminded us of combative trial which
has been popularized by the tv series, Game of Thrones. There were numerous
reminders of the importance of the American jury pool system for our jury
system to work. The judges left, and the jury coordinator left us to await
orders from the various courts.
The piped in music of
the jury room was playing, "Walking in Memphis," just as the
coordinator reappeared and had us file out into three different lines heading
to various courtrooms. Two groups of 40 went to criminal court a block away at
201 Poplar (also the jail.)
Of course, I was in the
group that trekked 2 ½ blocks to Circuit Court in 92 degree humid Memphis weather. The song "Walking in Memphis" will now always remind me of
this day. I took in the elegance of the building. It occurred to me how many
people have conducted serious business in this historic courthouse. Movies have
also been filmed in this courthouse. Yes, I was in the courthouse seen in the
John Grisham book made into a movie, The Client. The movie filmed Judge Harry
Roosevelt (played by Ossie Davis) at Memphis
County Courthouse at 140 Adams Avenue, where I was reporting as a
juror. In the book and movie, no one went through security screenings. After
being screened we perspective jurors climbed the worn rounded marble stairs directed
by a sheriff's deputy to line up outside the courtroom. We were placed in line
by a computer generated numbering system and then ushered into the
courtroom.
I was seated as the 12th
person in the jury box. Lucky me? The judge swore us in and briefly explained
the case. The plaintiff attorney was supposed to ask us questions to exclude us
as jurors. Instead, he actually began giving his opening statement. The judge
admonished the attorney limiting him to only asking questions. The Defendant’s
attorney began his questioning,. stressing the TN law.
This legal process is
voir dire. The purpose allows the attorneys to question prospective jurors
about their backgrounds, affiliations, and attorney-perceived potential biases
before being chosen as a jury member. After this process is completed, each
attorney has three jurors they can choose to strike. I was the first name called
and was directed to exit the courtroom and report back to the jury room. That
was Monday.
After reading many books
with courtroom scenes, very few gave realistic views from a jurors view of what
happens just to get seated in a jury. Authors who write books with courtroom
scenes should serve as jurors or at least go through the process when called to
serve for the real life experience. It will help you be able to write a more
believable courtroom scene that is authentic. Readers will notice.
Tuesday morning finds me once again in the jury room at 10:30 because they only had one case left for the week that
needed jurors. At this point their were about 65 of us left. We were called to
Criminal Court. We were waiting outside the courthouse while the Judge cleared
his daily docket. We were escorted into the courtroom. After six hours of
various legal procedures all I have to say is...Sequestered.
Have you served on a
sequestered jury? Did you write about your experience?
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