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| In my old large county, when I started some 15-16 years ago, it was not uncommon for felony courts to try a couple cases a week, especially impact type courts. Of course, we didn't have computers, powerpoint, DNA, or CSI. People just tried the case. Now that we are more "modern," people are slower, courts don't want to start on Monday, work before 9 or after 4, or work on Friday, etc. |
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| BAck in the late 70s I had just moved to the great state of Texas from California, and got a jury summons. We reported on Tuesday morning. It was a second degree murder case. The judge, who had two counties in his jurisdiction, informed the venire panel that the trial would be completed no later than 5:00 p.m. Wednesday because he had court in Brownfield Thursday morning. I didn't make the jury (too far down the row on the panel), but by golly they picked a jury, proceeded with trial, deliberated, and returned a verdict before 5:00 p.m. Wednesday! Coming from California, I was amazed. It wasn't quite so bad in California back then in pre-OJ days, but no way did a murder case try in two days!
Janette A |
| Posts: 674 | Location: Austin, Texas, United States | Registered: March 28, 2001 |
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| Cranky Man might be a better nom de guerre at this point.
But seriously, in talking to other cranky old lawyers: shorter hours + fewer days + longer trials = fewer trials. Add in: more hours spent filing notices and copying/scanning crap for discovery on cases everyone knows will plead. |
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| In the places I've worked, it takes almost all day to pick one jury, so it's not practical to have more than one trial a week. I do recall a judge who thought my voir dires were too long, chiding me because another assistant DA, a girl right out of law school, picked 3 juries in one day. Over the next 3 weeks they tried each case: one acquittal of an obviously guilty def. and two hung juries. Buzzing thru voir dire, especially in rural areas, does not lead to more justice or efficiency.
On the other hand, I routinely tried about 12 cases a week, when I was a public prosecutor in Zimbabwe. No juries there, just a professional magistrate's service which tended to take detailed notes during trial, and had to justify their decision, be it guilty or not guilty. I had no second chair, but I didn't have to have a case as well prepared as you do over here. If, after calling my last witness I decided the court needed to hear from another witness, I would reset it to the following Friday, which was designated a "part heard day." It was an extremely good system. |
| Posts: 687 | Location: Beeville, Texas, U.S.A. | Registered: March 22, 2001 |
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