No.312 SIM音読用英文
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When Jury Service Looms, Many Plead Hardship
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One of the duties or privileges

of civic life in the American democracy,

depending on one's viewpoint,

is jury duty.


Only one in ten U.S. criminal cases ever proceeds to a trial

where the verdict is decided

by what we call 'a jury of our peers.'


Charges are dismissed

in the other cases.


Or the defendant pleads guilty.


Or he or she opts

to have a judge hear the case.


But thousands of civil lawsuits do reach a jury,

and a pool of qualified adult citizens must be assembled

to hear them.


So every day, people get notices

ordering them to report for jury duty.


Some will be quizzed by attorneys on both sides

and chosen as jurors,

others rejected and sent home.


Still others in the jury pool

never reach the interview stage.


They spend the day in a waiting room,

reading the paper

and drinking coffee

until they're excused.


In other words, the odds are slim

that anyone will be sitting

in a jury box for long,

say on a complex or high-profile case.


But civic duty or not,

that doesn't keep many Americans from striving mightily

to avoid jury service.


'I have a medical condition,' they say.


'I bought plane tickets for a trip that week.'


'I have to care for an elderly and infirm parent.'


And more and more frequently

in the current economic recession,

courts are hearing this:

'I'm hanging on the edge financially.'


'My husband lost his job.'


Or, 'My employer won't pay for days

I'm not at work.'


Or, 'I'm behind

on the mortgage.'


As one Florida judge told the New York Times,

a pervasive cloud of financial insecurity hangs over the process,

and he's inclined to believe people's stories

and let them skip jury service.


The result is that judges must cast their nets ever wider

in order to find 12 jurors

and a couple of alternates

able and willing to serve.


I'm Ted Landphair.
by danueno | 2009-10-14 16:31 | SIM音読用英文 | Trackback
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