- $80 a day buys a hell of a lot of lunch.
- Lawyers charge an awful lot of money to sit there and say "no questions, sir".
- The unusual tag on the back of lawyers' gowns is an atrophied remnant of a pouch for food - a sort of legal culinary appendix.
- The secret motto of the High Court is "hurry up and wait".
- Jurors with nicotine addictions are let out during deliberations to smoke. Jurors with caffeine addictions must resort to snorting instant.
- You can dial out for methamphetamine and have it delivered as if it were pizza, even in a dump like Levin or Foxton.
- P dealers don't know the first thing about digital scales.
- The secrecy of jury deliberations would not prevent jurors from serving as witnesses in court if one of their number decided to resolve a deadlock by murder.
- Her Majesty has poor taste in restaurants.
- You can find absinthe in unexpected places.
- "Twelve good men and true" may not be quick, and it may not be pretty, but it works well enough, even for something as complex as conspiracy.
- Finding someone guilty has a moral cost, no matter how clear the facts are.
Friday, May 27, 2005
Twelve things I learned on a jury
Posted by
Idiot/Savant
at
5/27/2005 12:06:00 AM
4 comments:
>Jurors with nicotine addictions are let out during deliberations to smoke. Jurors with caffeine addictions must resort to snorting instant.
Oh no! Surely a case of discrimination, or cruel and unusual punishment, or something...
Posted by Amanda : 5/27/2005 09:31:00 AM
I think the lack of proper coffee ("I do not drink... robusta") is a cruel and unusual punishment in itself.
Posted by Idiot/Savant : 5/27/2005 09:47:00 AM
Well if you're demanding decent coffee, maybe I should have tried my luck. The tea provided at the High Court in Auckland was servicable, but perhaps I should have held out for a decent darjeeling, red bush or jasmine.
Jury service itself was a constructive and morally trying process. The slow, olde world charm of proceedings was quite effective for me; but then I also enjoy test cricket. I rather envied the defedant's lawyer his ability to maneuver suggestions - he could have insinuated for New Zealand.
Posted by Anonymous : 5/27/2005 12:03:00 PM
The jury is the last refuge of the common persons exercising the common sense of a citizen left; And I agree, its a bastion of our freedom! Yet the number of technocrat lawyers i know who argue it should be abolished is truely scary...
Posted by Anonymous : 5/27/2005 12:43:00 PM
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