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- <text id=94TT1319>
- <title>
- Oct. 03, 1994: Justice:Questionable Judgment
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- Oct. 03, 1994 Blinksmanship
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- JUSTICE, Page 62
- Questionable Judgment
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p> A new book says the American jury system is in deep trouble.
- The O.J. trial is offering a glimpse of why
- </p>
- <p>By Richard Lacayo--Reported by Jordan Bonfante and Elaine Lafferty/Los Angeles,
- Wendy Cole/Chicago and Andrea Sachs/New York
- </p>
- <p> Let's grant that the trial of O.J. Simpson is a case unto itself.
- What with the consuming attention of the media, the camera-ready
- lawyering, the surrounding atmosphere--alternately tragic
- and coarse, that seems like something from Dostoyevsky read
- aloud by Jackie Collins--there's nothing typical about it.
- This would extend to the jury selection that begins this week.
- In a nation where jury duty is considered second only to a tax
- audit among the devices of government-inflicted pain, there
- are people who are struggling to sit in judgment on this one.
- Responses to jury call notices in the Los Angeles area have
- risen by 8% since the Simpson case erupted. One city council
- member reports being cornered at the gym by would-be jurors.
- From as far away as Minnesota and Florida, people eager--avid!--to do their official duty have been phoning the offices of
- Judge Lance Ito and District Attorney Gil Garcetti. That out-of-staters
- are ineligible is no barrier to their civic-mindedness.
- </p>
- <p> And who can blame them? Not many juries promise a continuing
- spot on daytime television, to say nothing of the prospect of
- big money for anyone willing to sell an inside account of the
- verdict deliberations. But even if the Simpson trial is in a
- class by itself, it still promises to exemplify problems that
- infect the American jury system as a whole. Those include the
- likely attempt by lawyers to skew the panel along racial and
- gender lines, plus a surfeit of dense testimony, in this case
- about the scientific validity of DNA evidence, in a trial that
- threatens to go on for so long that jurors will be hard-pressed
- to remember at the end what they heard at the beginning.
- </p>
- <p> Just in time to put the Simpson trial in perspective, a full,
- gloomy diagnosis of the larger problem has arrived in a new
- book, The Jury by Stephen J. Adler, legal editor of the Wall
- Street Journal (Times Books; $25). Adler describes the several
- juries he examined from selection through trial proceedings
- to the deliberations that bumptiously rendered a verdict: "There
- were lots of sincere, serious people who--for a variety of
- reasons--were missing key points, focusing on irrelevant issues,
- succumbing to barely recognized prejudices, failing to see through
- the cheapest appeals to sympathy or hate, and generally botching
- the job."
- </p>
- <p> All that from a man who supports the institution of juries,
- which are, after all, a group of ordinary citizens who sacrifice
- their time, comfort and sometimes income. It's not the jurors
- who are the problem, says Adler, but the ordeal they are subjected
- to. First, the most competent citizens are permitted to escape
- the jury pool. The pool is whittled down further by peremptory
- challenges, which allow lawyers to strike a potential juror
- from the panel without giving reasons. The lawyers have reasons,
- of course, often based on stereotypes of race, gender, age or
- income that lead them to believe a particular candidate will
- disfavor their client. Then the trial begins, when jurors face
- complicated testimony and evidence that judges and lawyers do
- little to help them understand.
- </p>
- <p> Thomas Jefferson considered juries more important than free
- elections as bulwarks of democracy. What Adler fears is a jury
- system that limps along, its prestige in decline and its powers
- clipped. "Appeals courts are already more freely overturning
- verdicts as they come to respect juries less," he recently told
- TIME. "They once would have been much more respectful of the
- jury's fact-finding." Some corporate groups want to make it
- official, urging appelate courts to deny the right to jury trial
- in commercial cases that they think are too complex for ordinary
- citizens. States are pushing through new laws that put caps
- on the amount jurors may award to injured individuals.
- </p>
- <p> Much of the maneuvering in last week's evidentiary hearings
- for the Simpson case was peculiar strictly to a highly publicized
- trial. Arguments on both sides were aimed as much at the potential
- jury pool, meaning everyone in the city who follows news of
- the case--meaning everyone--as they were at Judge Ito. In
- an attempt to disallow evidence seized during searches of O.J.'s
- residence, defense lawyers claimed they went further than the
- warrants permitted.
- </p>
- <p> Though Ito admitted the evidence, including blood in the foyer
- and bathroom of Simpson's house, he gave the defense team a
- consolation prize by lambasting Philip Vannatter, the lead Los
- Angeles police detective in the case, for being "reckless" in
- drafting the search warrant. That gave well-publicized ammunition
- to the defense argument that Simpson is the victim of bumbling
- investigators. Later Ito went after the media for an "erroneous"
- local TV news report that DNA testing had identified Nicole
- Simpson's blood on socks found at O.J.'s home. At a time when
- much of the news for the defense side had been unfavorable,
- Ito's implicit message for potential jurors was, "Don't believe
- everything you read."
- </p>
- <p> The serious manuevering begins this week with the selection
- process. Given that the trial may drag on for months, and that
- the jury may be sequestered, Ito will excuse a great many of
- the 1,000 potential jurors who can present plausible arguments
- of hardship. The rest he will interview one at a time, with
- the lawyers chiming in only when he allows them to. The questions
- derive from suggestions submitted by the defense and prosecution.
- The answers will help both sides determine which jurors they
- most want to be rid of.
- </p>
- <p> At this point the most important people in the courtroom will
- be the jury consultants, who are either an essential resource
- of the fully equipped attorney or a kind of quasi-scientific
- jury tampering--or worse, both. To clients able to pay as
- much as $100,000, these experts offer charts, focus groups,
- surveys and psychological profiles that try to predict how potential
- jurors will vote. The chief indicators are everything from race,
- income and gender to personal history and what kind of car they
- drive.
- </p>
- <p> "Who are the jurors who will find it difficult to set aside
- the prejudices they know they hold? Who are the people who are
- unaware they hold prejudices?" asks Donald Vinson, a former
- marketing professor at the University of Southern California
- who heads DecisionQuest, a consultancy hired by the prosecution.
- "Those are the people we want to eliminate." Simpson's lawyers
- have brought in Trial Logistics, headed by Jo-Ellan Dimitrius,
- who advised the defense in the Rodney King and Reginald Denny
- beating trials.
- </p>
- <p> Vinson maintains that race alone is an overrated factor in determining
- which potential jurors will be most sympathetic to Simpson.
- "We are not going to base decisions on demographics," he insists.
- "We are much more interested in their worldviews." The defense
- side may not be so convinced. Some trial observers are wondering
- if the increased prominence last week of Johnnie Cochran, the
- only black member of Simpson's A-team, is a confirmation of
- reports that the defense hopes to appeal to the racial sympathies
- of black jurors. Studies show that blacks and whites are both
- more lenient toward defendants of their own race. African-American
- jurors may also be more likely to be skeptical of testimony
- by law-enforcement officers. Women, meanwhile, might be presumed
- to be more favorable to the prosecution in a case involving
- a female victim.
- </p>
- <p> But jury selection by race or gender is a tricky game. In the
- William Kennedy Smith rape trial, defense attorney Roy Black
- was astonished by jury research showing that conservative women
- over 40 were the people most likely to acquit his client. "They
- were most skeptical of claims made by younger women who would
- go out all night in bars," he says.
- </p>
- <p> In his book, Adler treats jury consultants as a regrettable
- development, in part because they give further advantage to
- wealthy clients who already hire the best lawyers. To undercut
- their influence, he urges the complete elimination of peremptory
- challenges. The Supreme Court has already disallowed them when
- used solely for reasons of race or gender. It may eventually
- abolish them altogether. If not, says Adler, Congress and state
- legislatures should.
- </p>
- <p> To create a larger pool of qualified jurors, Adler also argues
- that legislatures should eliminate most automatic exemptions
- for such professions as doctors and clergy, which allow some
- of the best educated members of the community to escape service.
- The disadvantages of a narrow jury pool that has been worked
- upon by lawyers determined to seat the least qualified members
- is evident from Adler's account of the trial of Imelda Marcos,
- the wife of deposed Philippine dictator Ferdinand Marcos. In
- 1990 she faced charges in a New York City court of transferring
- Philippine government money to American banks to finance shopping
- sprees in the U.S. that bought hundreds of millions of dollars
- in real estate and jewelry for herself and her husband. By the
- time the lawyers were done, anyone who followed the news closely
- enough to have knowledge of Imelda's role in her husband's dictatorship
- had been struck from the panel. One juror was unsure whether
- Imelda was a man or a woman.
- </p>
- <p> It was a jury ill-equipped to make its way through the complicated
- financial transactions the case hinged upon. "The net effect
- on many jurors was panic at their inability to follow the money,"
- writes Adler, who later interviewed the jurors. Unable to sift
- the complex evidence, they fell back on sheer sympathy for Imelda,
- who courted it with gusto. Dressed in black, clutching her rosaries,
- she could be seen at the defense table wiping back tears. Acquitted,
- Imelda threw a thank-you party for the jurors with roast pig
- and a belly dancer. She sang Feelings.
- </p>
- <p> To help jurors understand their work, Adler suggests changing
- rules that bar them from taking a more active part in trial
- proceedings. For instance, while no law forbids them to take
- notes, most judges disallow it. Adler would also permit jurors
- to ask questions, perhaps by submitting them in writing through
- the judge, who could decide which ones to address to witnesses.
- Judges should also issue jury instructions at the start of trial,
- he says, not the end, so jurors will know what to watch for.
- And he urges simpler instructions, so jurors aren't confounded
- by legalese.
- </p>
- <p> The pileup of confusions that those reforms might clear away
- is obvious from Adler's description of the 1989 lawsuit that
- Liggett & Myers, the giant tobacco company, brought against
- Brown & Williamson, a rival that Liggett accused of unfair competition.
- After an eight-month trial that hinged on notions like "predatory
- price discrimination" and "price-value submarkets," jurors had
- to rely on memory alone to recall testimony that filled 108
- volumes. The judge's 81-page instructions gave them such helpful
- hints as this one: "You may wish to reject an inference of predatory
- intent if you find that a substantial motivation of Brown &
- Williamson's entry into black and white cigarettes was LIFO
- decrement avoidance tax benefits." No surprise--the stymied
- jurors fell back on guesswork before awarding Liggett $49.6
- million.
- </p>
- <p> When the verdict was overturned three years later, the Supreme
- Court ruled that no "reasonable jury" could have concluded that
- B& W's actions were illegal. Under the rules in place, no reasonable
- jury could have been chosen. And even a reasonable jury could
- barely have operated. Does anyone suppose that this is what
- Jefferson had in mind?
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
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