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TheQueen
02-16-2010, 12:09 AM
Weighed down by recession woes, jurors are becoming disgruntled

As more people seek dismissal for financial hardship, their claims face much tighter scrutiny. In one case the jury pool was so rebellious and 'scary' that both sides agreed to let the judge decide.

By Carol J. Williams

February 15, 2010

Spurned in his effort to get out of jury duty, salesman Tony Prados turned his attention to the case that could cost him three weeks' pay: A Los Angeles County sheriff's deputy was suing his former sergeant, alleging severe emotional distress inflicted by lewd and false innuendo that he was gay.

Prados, an ex-Marine, leaned forward in the jury box and asked in a let-me-get-this-straight tone of voice: "He's brave enough to go out and get shot at by anyone but he couldn't handle this?" he said of the locker-room taunting.

Fellow jury candidate Robert Avanesian, who had also unsuccessfully sought dismissal on financial hardship grounds, chimed in: "I think severe emotional distress is what is happening in Haiti. I don't think you could have such severe emotional distress from that," he said of the allegations in the deputy's case.

The spontaneous outbursts of the reluctant jurors just as Los Angeles County Superior Court Judge James R. Dunn was about to swear them in emboldened others in the jury pool to express disdain for the case and concerns about their ability to be fair, and to ratchet up the pathos in their claims of facing economic ruin if forced to sit for the three-week trial.

KEEP READING: http://www.latimes.com/news/local/la-me-reluctant-jurors15-2010feb15,0,824472.story

Christy
02-16-2010, 07:10 AM
Prados, an ex-Marine, leaned forward in the jury box and asked in a let-me-get-this-straight tone of voice: "He's brave enough to go out and get shot at by anyone but he couldn't handle this?" he said of the locker-room taunting.

Fellow jury candidate Robert Avanesian, who had also unsuccessfully sought dismissal on financial hardship grounds, chimed in: "I think severe emotional distress is what is happening in Haiti. I don't think you could have such severe emotional distress from that," he said of the allegations in the deputy's case.

But I agree and I agree :lookaroun

Maybe it's financial hardship and whiney crap like this that people are REALLY fed up with... not only do they have to miss work, but they have to listen to this garbage?? And in a lawsuit case, how much did the sheriff's deputy stand to win if they all found in his favor I wonder?

BeeJay
02-16-2010, 12:39 PM
But I agree and I agree :lookaroun

Maybe it's financial hardship and whiney crap like this that people are REALLY fed up with... not only do they have to miss work, but they have to listen to this garbage?? And in a lawsuit case, how much did the sheriff's deputy stand to win if they all found in his favor I wonder?

Based on what I've read, I agree. This sounds like a fairly trivial case, and I'd be fine with seeing cases along this line restricted to a bench trial. Maybe cases where under a certain amount ($5,000?) stood to be gained or lost.

I guess the legal problem is the Constitution guarantees a right to trial by jury. Is this only true in criminal proceedings? Can a litigant in a civil case be required to submit to a bench trial? Constitutional scholars holla? :shrug

figmentmom
02-16-2010, 05:18 PM
My retired judge father once told me (not ADVISED me!) that the best way to be excused from a jury pool was to say, "I'm sorry, but I just don't believe the police arrest innocent people." In this case, sounds to me like BOTH of those guys took Dad's words to heart, and revised them accordingly.

xfkirsten
02-17-2010, 09:09 PM
Good for the jurors! This guy had to hear it from SOMEONE, and it sure as hell wasn't going to be his lawyer!

(On a side note, my mom said I just got a jury duty summons in WA... I've been registered to vote in FLORIDA for almost two years now. :lol)

BeeJay
02-18-2010, 12:20 AM
In 10 years of being registered to vote, I've never gotten a jury summons. :shrug

(Now watch one come in the mail tomorrow.)

figmentmom
02-18-2010, 12:24 AM
In 10 years of being registered to vote, I've never gotten a jury summons. :shrug

(Now watch one come in the mail tomorrow.)

That, and news of your IRS audit. :rotfl

Katie4075
02-18-2010, 11:08 AM
In 10 years of being registered to vote, I've never gotten a jury summons. :shrug

(Now watch one come in the mail tomorrow.)

Lucky! I registered to vote for last year's election, and got my first summons last month!

Doug11
02-18-2010, 04:21 PM
Jury service? :lookaroun

Wait, what were we talking about?

Oh yeah - I loved that jury venire. Why in the world did the defense lawyer agree to waive the jury trial and let the judge decide it?

figmentmom
02-18-2010, 06:33 PM
Jury service? :lookaroun

Wait, what were we talking about?

Oh yeah - I loved that jury venire. Why in the world did the defense lawyer agree to waive the jury trial and let the judge decide it?

I'm sure he was afraid that the jury would convict his client out of sheer aggravation, if nothing else. :lol