Well, the past 2 weeks have been interesting. I was called in for jury duty on March 5th and assumed I'd not get selected. However, unlike the typical experience, I wound up on a jury and spent the last two weeks listening to a domestic violence case involving an assault, threatening with a deadly weapon (a knife), possession of a firearm, witness tampering, violation of 2 no contact orders, felony imprisonment and harassment.
We finished our duty yesterday afternoon and delivered guilty verdicts for about half the charges. The 26 yr old male defendant will be going to jail for 5-7.5 years (not much chance for early release as this was his 3rd strike on some counts). While I was impressed with my fellow jurors, the whole experience was a little saddening. I'm fairly sure that the victim in this case will hook up with another abusive guy (she was with this guy even though he had two no contact orders and had previously assaulted her). I'm pretty sure the defendant will by abusive to his next female companion when he gets out of jail. Worst of all, I pretty sure the victims children will grow up in an environment in which violence is commonplace. It was emotionally draining but it was nice to see the other jurors take their duty seriously and do their best to be fair and reasonable.
I learned a couple of lessons on this one (I was the presiding juror - AKA jury foreman). 1) You can't rush justice - there were a couple of jurors who wanted to go through things far more slowly than the rest of us. While it was a bit painful for me, they were simply trying to be fair and cautious and their views needed to be heard. 2) I don't EVER want a court appointed attorney. While the defense attorney didn't have a lot to work with, I think 10 or the 12 jurors could have done a better job than he.
I'm glad the whole thing is over. I'm way behind in my work as a result of this and I lost about $250 in non-refundable travel fees (for a trip that had to be canceled as a result of my jury duty) but overall it was interesting to see how the process works. The prosecuting attorney was stellar and I was quite impressed with the judge also. I'm glad that these people do what they do day in and day out.
We finished our duty yesterday afternoon and delivered guilty verdicts for about half the charges. The 26 yr old male defendant will be going to jail for 5-7.5 years (not much chance for early release as this was his 3rd strike on some counts). While I was impressed with my fellow jurors, the whole experience was a little saddening. I'm fairly sure that the victim in this case will hook up with another abusive guy (she was with this guy even though he had two no contact orders and had previously assaulted her). I'm pretty sure the defendant will by abusive to his next female companion when he gets out of jail. Worst of all, I pretty sure the victims children will grow up in an environment in which violence is commonplace. It was emotionally draining but it was nice to see the other jurors take their duty seriously and do their best to be fair and reasonable.
I learned a couple of lessons on this one (I was the presiding juror - AKA jury foreman). 1) You can't rush justice - there were a couple of jurors who wanted to go through things far more slowly than the rest of us. While it was a bit painful for me, they were simply trying to be fair and cautious and their views needed to be heard. 2) I don't EVER want a court appointed attorney. While the defense attorney didn't have a lot to work with, I think 10 or the 12 jurors could have done a better job than he.
I'm glad the whole thing is over. I'm way behind in my work as a result of this and I lost about $250 in non-refundable travel fees (for a trip that had to be canceled as a result of my jury duty) but overall it was interesting to see how the process works. The prosecuting attorney was stellar and I was quite impressed with the judge also. I'm glad that these people do what they do day in and day out.