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Weighed down by recession woes, jurors are becoming disgruntled

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  • Weighed down by recession woes, jurors are becoming disgruntled

    Honest citizens are finally revolting against the jury system. Day after day good people are forced, yes forced, to listen to trivial complaints and lose their own time and money.

    Now they are saying things in courts that the bright attorneys and judges, folks making lots of money from a silly system, refuse to say.

    "Spurned in his effort to get out of jury duty, salesman Tony Prados turned his attention to the case that could cost him three weeks' pay: A Los Angeles County sheriff's deputy was suing his former sergeant, alleging severe emotional distress inflicted by lewd and false innuendo that he was gay.

    Prados, an ex-Marine, leaned forward in the jury box and asked in a let-me-get-this-straight tone of voice: "He's brave enough to go out and get shot at by anyone but he couldn't handle this?" he said of the locker-room taunting."

    If you have time to waste, jury duty is worthwhile. For people with jobs and families, it is a killer.

    "The spontaneous outbursts of the reluctant jurors just as Los Angeles County Superior Court Judge James R. Dunn was about to swear them in emboldened others in the jury pool to express disdain for the case and concerns about their ability to be fair, and to ratchet up the pathos in their claims of facing economic ruin if forced to sit for the three-week trial.

    In this time of double-digit unemployment and shrinking benefits for those who do have jobs, courts are finding it more difficult to seat juries for trials running more than a day or two. And in extreme cases, reluctance has escalated into rebellion, experts say."

    Nixon ended the military draft, now it is time to end the jury draft.

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