Between micro-blogging on Twitter and consulting in litigation and settlement preparation at LSI, the blogging has lagged. In the near future, I’ll start blogging again, but aim for briefer, denser and more useable off the shelf information for trial advocates. For those of you who want a clear glimpse of the trial advocacy content from  JuryVox Blog and Micro-Blog on Twitter, a picture is worth a thousand words. Use this link…  http://www.wordle.net/gallery/wrdl/1011161/JuryVox%3A_A_pallet_of_trial_advocacy

July 22, 2009 · Posted in Jurors, Jury, Jury Bias, Jury Research, Trial, Voir Dire, Witness Preparation  
    

unemployedWhen Uncertainty and Anxiety Rocks a Person’s Life, Everything is a Threat

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Much of what you need to know about your venire is out there. It’s reliable. It’s enlightening. It’s free.

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It’s your room. Work it. They are your guests. Welcome them. Smile….

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March 26, 2009 · Posted in Jurors, Jury, Jury Bias, Trial, Uncategorized, Voir Dire  
    

We are Borg. Resistance is futile. Welcome to the Wired Collective.

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March 17, 2009 · Posted in Jurors, Jury, Jury Bias, Trial, Uncategorized, Voir Dire, tweets  
    

What happens when you ask them isn’t Memorex… it’s mostly guess. Read more

March 12, 2009 · Posted in Jurors, Jury, Jury Bias, Jury Research, Questionnaires  
    

The Only Thing Worse Than Peremptory Strikes Is Losing Them.

 

 

The utility and fairness of peremptory strikes has been the subject of discourse in the media, within blogs, and post jury selection in courtrooms and law offices of late. Opponents cajole that peremptory strikes are often capricious, discriminatory and patently unfair to the venire persons subject to the process.

 Nathan Koppel in the March 5, 2009 Wall Street Journal intones: “In the interest of fair trials, attorneys can dismiss people from jury pools for dressing strangely, for being fat, even for just looking at them funny. What lawyers can’t do is dismiss potential jurors based on their race, gender or ethnicity. Yet, attorneys and academics say, it happens all the time.” Three Strikes and You’re Out? Critics Seek Juror-Dismissal Cap

 peremptory-blog-fat-man-in-funny-tshirt

Apparently, Mr. Koppel hasn’t read the plethora of “how to get out of jury duty” material on line. How to Get Out of Jury Duty. Wearing a t-shirt emblazoned with “Barbie is a Slut!!!” will do it every time. Why in the world would any litigant, defendant or the State want someone with this intention and attitude making serious decisions? D’oh!

 

The snarky ridicule above suggests that the motives and rationale for elective strikes are superficial and shallow… or sinister. Through this argument the writer seeks to dismiss the process, purpose and the product of effective, thoughtful inquiry in voir dire and paint it with the broad brush of taint. He wants us to believe that any point of view and any potential juror is as good as the rest when it comes to fair and impartial. He asserts that because the peremptory process might be misused, it should be abandoned. He’s wrong and here’s why:

 

We are as a species riddled with cognitive and emotional biases and partialities. Many of us proudly wear our prejudice out into the marketplace. Most of us are blind to ourselves. If human beings were sublimely self aware, imbued with perfect honesty, acutely reasoned and rational, untroubled by strong preferences, unfettered by faithful adherence to unquestioned beliefs, ruled by compassion and fair play, and born to Vulcan parentage, there would be no need for the peremptory strike. A straight question regarding bias or predilection would result in a straight answer and the cause strike would suffice.

 

Peremptory strikes are an effective way to remove extremes of partiality. By nurture and nature, jurors and other humans acquire beliefs, prejudices, cognitive short cuts, and heuristic biases that bracket and define our capacity to experience and conceptualize “reality” as we see it. These predilections are the “truth” as we know it and will circumscribe our capacity to weigh and measure the facts, testimony and arguments proffered in trial. Extremes of partiality affect the capacity of an individual to follow the instructions of the court and render the parties fair and impartial justice.

 

Perhaps the best reason to support peremptory strikes is to cure erroneous refusals by the trial court to excuse jurors for cause. You can’t assume the judge really cares or understands the issues in your case as well as you do and you have the obligation of effective advocacy… Hizzoner doesn’t. I’m not big on judge conducted voir dire.

 

Litigants and defendants have the right to competent representation. Whether competent means clever is another matter. One thing is clear: it’s clever to probe for partiality and get the cause strike if possible. Competent counsel should be acquainted with the abundant social science research pertinent to trial practice in the area of decision making, cognitive and emotional bias, prejudice and partiality, etc. Competent counsel will use that knowledge base to form incisive and probing questions for voir dire. Competent counsel will have refined those questions into conversational invitations to the panelist to self disclose. Competent counsel will welcome and encourage disclosures from the panelists that are adverse to the case. Competent counsel will be unrelentingly polite all through voir dire. Competent counsel will apply judgment with discretion and discrimination when pursuing the cause strike and reserve the remedy of the peremptory for the necessary culling of the partial or probably partial panelist. Competent counsel will know that attitudes are more important than demographics always. Competent counsel will use a peremptory strike on the strangely dressed fat man who simply looks out of place when it serves the advocacy of his client and the issues of the case.

 

Count me in as a proponent of peremptory strikes. Until my crystal ball comes back from the shop, I want to be able to use my judgment and my strikes to deselect and get the fairest panel possible.

Photo: http://www.flickr.com/photos/emilyjh/134153057/ Read more

March 5, 2009 · Posted in Jurors, Jury, Jury Bias, Trial, Uncategorized, Voir Dire  
    

What Jurors’ Tell Us They Expect in Women and Leadership

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 foreclosure-blues                             When things go very wrong or very bad for a large number of people, it can have a significant effect upon the way they and others close to them think, feel and behave.   911 changed the way New Yorkers and frequent flyer’s experienced their world. The people in the Twin Towers experienced extreme direct trauma, the first responders  experienced direct trauma, the friends and family of the victims and the heroes experienced the trauma of their fears and losses.

The rest of us experienced 911 through the ubiquitous lens of the media, with repeated viewings of the tragedy of the Twin Towers collapsing, people running in grimy panic, and the walls of pictures of the dead and missing.  The rest of us were buffeted by vicarious stresses and trauma, but very few if any of us experienced 911 directly. There is no doubt that 911 invaded and pervaded our national psyche and introduced a level of uncertainty never before part of our way of being.

This vicarious trauma, fed by persistent media revivification and a political war footing expanded the scope of the direct effects and soon there were American combatants leaving their families and jobs for battle. More trauma from more places and more often. Loved ones were dying in foreign wars. 911 leads to Afghanistan and to Iraq and to “The War Against Terrorism”. From vicarious stress to direct trauma. Like concentric waves from a stone dropped in a still pond, the shock, uncertainty and pain spread throughout the populace. Still, while touching nearly all, this pain has not affected all.

The current shock wave reverberating through the populace has been called, “The Worst Financial Crisis Since the Great Depression”. The comparison to 911 requires us to recognize that this mega-event is tantamount to a tsunami of devastation that has affected the wealth, hopes, dreams, economic stability, jobs and day to day reality of the entire population. This economic trauma far surpasses 911 in its affect on the day to day thinking, feeling and behavior of our citizens and jurors. The uncertainty of another “terrorist attack” within the continental United States pales in comparison with the certainty of  unemployment, loss of health coverage, mortgage stresses, gutted 401k’s,  losing your home and being “upside down” in a mortgage that eclipses the worth of your home.  911 rocked us back on our heels; the Economic Collapse  threw us to the floor. It is a protracted time of growing uncertainty and anxiety. There is plenty of evidence in national polling that shows despair and distrust in our national government, big industry, big finance, big business, and almost any other previous edifice of trust and reliance for a better, safer and predictable world. It is easily the worst of times, at least compared to the prior 50 years.

World changing events create experiences that shape the world view and spirit of the times. These pivotal events shake previously held beliefs and values and facilitate fundamental changes in the way we think, feel and act. Those of us fired in the kiln of earlier epochs will tend to hold to those traits and beliefs brought forward. Those of us forged in the immediacy of this uncertain world will bear the defining marks of this world as it is as they have known no other. The events of today are shaping the new jurors of 10 years from now and creating a state of uncertainty that affects our jurors of today.

The question I’ve been hearing most often from trial attorney’s is, “What effect is the general economic downturn having on verdicts and damages?”  It’s still unclear. Every fact pattern, every jury trial is a unique set of characters, issues and evidence. I think it may be too early to tell exactly what the impact of the Economic Crisis is and will be. Yet, this is a question that must be explored and studied systematically rather than anecdotally.

Attorney lore opines that hard economic times are good times for plaintiffs. The high levels of stress, anxiety and depression in the populace leaven a potential for strong emotional reactions to issues of fault and harm. Affect drives action. This could be good for plaintiffs. On the other hand, the “bowling alone” effect and decrease in actual community membership may induce individual jurors to simply take the position that, “I’ve got it bad, too. Nobody is reaching out to help me and I have done everything right!”.  Generosity and empathy do not necessarily expand in times of general economic hardship. In fact, a la Maslow, under times of stress, we regress. It could be a time of the great selfishness.

Trust in institutions is in the crapper. Polling shows that the anger and dismay created by fundamental violations of trust by core social institutions has eroded the good will directed toward Business and Industry. It may not be a good time to be a Corporate Defendent… but it’s too early to tell. The debacle of our credit, lending and financial institutions has created a credit and mortgage crisis. Even folks who did the right thing are “up side down” on their mortgages and folks who have never made a late payment on their credit cards are being notified a interest increases in the mid to high 20%. Doing the right thing doesn’t make you safe.

What is known is this: There is a predominant direct and personal experience of financial hardship and economic uncertainty extending to all socio-economic levels. The working poor, working class and lower to middle class are hit hard and likely most dispirited. The upper middle have seen their investments and pensions evaporate before their eyes, creating distrust and anger. Even Donald Trump has been forced to file for Chapter 11 bankruptcy in his Vegas gambling hotels. GM and Chrysler are on the chopping block and nobody, not even the Japanese are making any money selling cars.

Expression of angst, anxiety, uncertainty and anger are replete in national polls, op/ed pages, and talk around the water cooler. Anxiety and depression levels are rising and are associated with the financial stresses currently increasing. Daily national media reports ra-ta-tat like hail on a tin roof and are inescapable. The political rancor and debate seems effete and ineffective as our political leaders and political parties fail to lead or have any vision. Huge “bailout” numbers are bandied about making the reference points of Bob and Mary Sixpack’s pay check seem like nickles and dimes. People feel small, ineffective, overwhelmed, helpless and stuck. Uncertainty pervades and the opportunities for the individual to effect any change or improvements, even in their own lot, seemingly pales to the immensity of the economic situation.

In a time where there are no clear answers, it is critical that the wise create good questions. Talking to your neighbors (especially those you aren’t professionals) about their views and experiences is a very good way to take the pulse of the community.  Read the paper focusing upon Op/Ed materials written by local citizens. Go on line and search for blogs and discussion threads on the economy, especially about the personal impact. With no doubt, pre trial or ADR research on how real people of the real world evaluate, describe and react to your case is indispensable. Use focus group research and national polls to compose voir dire and supplemental juror questionnaires. Voir dire extensively on the direct impact of the economic toll with your venirepersons. Remember that this is new ground and we are trekking through a dynamic and changing environment.

When exploring new ground, do not hold too tightly to what you think you know. Assume that the meaning of what you see  and hear is still developing. Ask questions. Lots of them.

February 20, 2009 · Posted in Jurors, Jury, Jury Bias, Jury Research, Uncategorized