English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

I've been summoned and I really have no excuse not to show up or get out of it. Will the judge ask me direct questions when I'm there? Will they actually use me as a juror or will they make me fill paper work before? So basically, I have no idea what goes on. Thanks in advance!

2007-10-02 20:28:58 · 4 answers · asked by Anonymous in Politics & Government Civic Participation

4 answers

They will call people up, both lawyers will ask you questions, they will decide if they want you to be on jury or not. They will do this until they have 13 people. 12 jurors and 1 alternative juror, in case someone gets sick during the trial. There is nothing to be nervous about! I promise. They will just ask you what you think about different issues- they are trying to find the best jury-- unbiased as possible. For example, if it was a child endangerment case- I am a teacher, not a mother: but want to be: therefore my answers would more than likely make me NOT be the best person to be picked for that jury.
I think you do fill out a card- I can't remember- If they knew I was a teacher or asked me that first. Alot of times- you will call the night ahead of jury duty and it will tell you not to report for duty. Many cases are settled out of court. Like I said, really don't be nervous, just be yourself. They are only picking out a jury- so their will be a lot of people there. They may select jury before they have to call on you. Best of Luck!

2007-10-03 07:45:30 · answer #1 · answered by michelle 6 · 17 0

It does not happen often. It is not necessarily a conflict of interest; just remember that if you both are picked to be on a jury, you must not discuss the case with anyone, not even each other. It is unlikely that you'll both be picked for the same case; lawyers typically don't want a husband and wife on a jury.

2016-03-17 21:17:49 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

The questions are usually asked by the attorneys in order to see that you are not prejudicial.

My experience is giving in paper in to prove that I am there and then waiting along time in a large auditorium type room with hundreds of other prospective jurors. Some people were periodically called and were escorted by a bailiff to a smaller room where they were questioned by the attorneys. I was not selected to be on a jury.

2007-10-03 03:12:43 · answer #3 · answered by DrIG 7 · 0 1

You will sit around and get moved around a lot. Take a cushion to sit on and something to occupy your time...magazine, book, knitting.
You won't talk to a judge. The court clerks pick out potential jurors. Attorneys ask questions. You either get picked or do not get picked.
It is sooo boring.

2007-10-02 23:26:43 · answer #4 · answered by regerugged 7 · 0 1

You'll fill out paper work and a copy will be given to
the prosecution and defense. They'll ask you questions
and either accept/reject you.

2007-10-02 20:40:14 · answer #5 · answered by Paul C 2 · 2 1

fedest.com, questions and answers