Trial by jury demands impartial jurors as the indispensable basis for public confidence. And the first requisite for obtaining impartiality is indifference on the part of those who select the jury. This was fully recognized at the common law, and ever since the days when jurors ceased to be witnesses and became triers of facts, it was a good objection to the entire panel that the sheriff was not indifferent between the parties in the selection and summoning of the jury. Prejudice on the part of individual jurors could be met by challenges to the polls, but when favor lurked behind the juror in the officer who selected and summoned him, insidiously cutting at the very root of the jury as an impartial tribunal, the whole panel was infected w...
The jury system has been the center of our judicial system since the Bill of Rights guaranteed the r...
This Article reports on four federal jury challenges in which the trial judge or defendants retained...
It is probably no exaggeration to state that many cases are won or lost on the jury selection. Every...
Since the Supreme Court\u27s 1986 decision in Batson v. Kentucky, commentary about jury selection ha...
Although proponents argue that peremptory challenges make juries more impartial by eliminating “extr...
In Mu\u27Min v. Virginia, the United States Supreme Court held a defendant has no right to ask juror...
Although the early history of the jurata shows it to have been chosen from among those who were fami...
In a prosecution for murder, a special venire was summoned and a list thereof served on the accused....
The article was orginally submitted jointly with Dr. Jay Schulman as prepared testimony to the Senat...
In the essay that follows, Professor Lempert pursues the lay versus professional issue, once again...
An integral part of the jury selection process is the individual challenge, where a party has the pr...
The Sixth Amendment to the United States Constitution guarantees the right of criminal defendants to...
Reasoning that one who opposes the death penalty may deny the state an impartial trial, most America...
Defendant was convicted of selling whiskey and imprisoned in the county jail. After the time for app...
The American Bar Association (ABA) filed an amicus brief1 in the Boston Marathon bombing case that t...
The jury system has been the center of our judicial system since the Bill of Rights guaranteed the r...
This Article reports on four federal jury challenges in which the trial judge or defendants retained...
It is probably no exaggeration to state that many cases are won or lost on the jury selection. Every...
Since the Supreme Court\u27s 1986 decision in Batson v. Kentucky, commentary about jury selection ha...
Although proponents argue that peremptory challenges make juries more impartial by eliminating “extr...
In Mu\u27Min v. Virginia, the United States Supreme Court held a defendant has no right to ask juror...
Although the early history of the jurata shows it to have been chosen from among those who were fami...
In a prosecution for murder, a special venire was summoned and a list thereof served on the accused....
The article was orginally submitted jointly with Dr. Jay Schulman as prepared testimony to the Senat...
In the essay that follows, Professor Lempert pursues the lay versus professional issue, once again...
An integral part of the jury selection process is the individual challenge, where a party has the pr...
The Sixth Amendment to the United States Constitution guarantees the right of criminal defendants to...
Reasoning that one who opposes the death penalty may deny the state an impartial trial, most America...
Defendant was convicted of selling whiskey and imprisoned in the county jail. After the time for app...
The American Bar Association (ABA) filed an amicus brief1 in the Boston Marathon bombing case that t...
The jury system has been the center of our judicial system since the Bill of Rights guaranteed the r...
This Article reports on four federal jury challenges in which the trial judge or defendants retained...
It is probably no exaggeration to state that many cases are won or lost on the jury selection. Every...