Doing My Civic Duty
Blogging is gonna be spotty this week because I’ve been picked for jury duty. Call me a dork, but I’m kinda excited about it. My hope is that I get put on a celebrity murder trial, but that ain’t gonna happen :
Few Americans know that there is a unique jury selection procedure for capital cases, known as “death qualification.” Any citizen with qualms about inflicting death can be disqualified from jury duty. While most Americans favor the death penalty, many do not. More importantly, many people in the middle of the road do not believe the death penalty should be used as frequently as it is today. Even most conscientious death penalty supporters believe the ultimate penalty should only be approached with fear, trepidation, and solemnity. And yet such qualms can be sufficient to disqualify them from jury duty in a capital case.Because of this, jury selection in capital cases often takes weeks, if not months, as “conscientious objectors” are winnowed out by prosecutors. Women and minorities are removed from the panels at a much higher rate than are white males. (That may explain why capital juries are approximately 43 percent more likely to sentence a killer to die if his victim is white.) Numerous academic studies show that those who survive the death qualification process are not only biased towards death (instead of life imprisonment), but conviction. People who have no qualms about the death penalty just tend to favor the prosecution – whether the crime is shoplifting, drunk driving, or murder.
In 1986, the Supreme Court ruled that the interest of the State in carrying out the death penalty trumps the right of the accused to a jury representative of the community. If those with qualms about the death penalty were allowed to serve on the jury, the logic went, the death penalty would seldom, if ever, be invoked.
The jury — historically referred to as the “conscience of the community” — has now been tamed, at least in capital cases. Only those who support capital punishment are permitted to serve. You have doubts that the death penalty is just? You think the death penalty may be over-used? The states do not want your opinion to be heard in the jury room. After all, one conscientious opinion could make the difference between life and death. And in capital litigation, some prosecutors view life imprisonment as a professional “setback.”
. . .
It is impossible to preserve the core values of the criminal justice system while trying to concentrate jury selection procedures on the prevention of jury nullification of the death penalty, at the expense of a selected jury. If there is one issue on which supporters and opponents of the death penalty ought to be able to agree, it is that no person should be executed after a trial before a jury that was stacked against them.
As much as I’d love to believe that I’d give a moving and articulate denunciation of the death penalty along the lines of this post if asked, I’m sure a combination of stage fright and social retardation would render my stunning oration as something along the lines of “Uhhh…n-n-n-no sir…”
Either way, it should be an interesting and rare (for me, anyways) look inside the criminal justice system. If anything more exciting than spending half a week reading my Richard Feynman book happens, I’ll write about it.
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I’m quite jealous. I don’t understand why people complain about jury duty. I would love to be called up for jury duty. That’s highly unlikely, however, since I’m not a US citizen. I sort of wish the naturalization process came with a jury duty guarantee.
Comment by pea — April 19, 2004 @ 2:35 pm
The death penalty is said to be a deterrant.
Wrong!!! In Hanoverian England the death
penalty was used against pick-pockets. As
the pocket picker was being hanged, other
dips were working the crowd.The passion of
the moment over comes any supposed death
threat. This brings it all down to pure
revenge. We don’t want to admit it,but that
is all the death penalty is.
Comment by Jim — April 19, 2004 @ 5:20 pm
Not to miss the point entirely, but which Feynman book?
Comment by jwer — April 20, 2004 @ 4:40 am
Yes which one? “Surely you’re joking..” is one of the best books about and around science I have read (long ago… I should re-read it actually). Is it that?
Comment by Alex Fradera — April 20, 2004 @ 8:10 am
By the by, John Kerry raised $60 million since January. You might want to update the Kerry link on the right.
Comment by Joe — April 21, 2004 @ 6:46 pm
I’m currently reading The Pleasure of Finding Things Out. Since it’s a hodge-podge of different things, it’s a good book to pick up for a few minutes here and there.
My most surreal jury experience so far was walking into the jury waiting room yesterday after lunch to see a few people glued to a TV showing “The People’s Court”. Unfortunately it was some new version, not the classic with Judge Wapner and Rusty the bailiff.
Comment by greg — April 22, 2004 @ 9:53 am