http://glasses-justice.livejournal.com/ (
glasses-justice.livejournal.com) wrote in
fandomhigh2010-05-13 04:31 am
Entry tags:
Anatomy of a Trial [Period 4, Class #1, 5-13]
Class today was meeting in the Danger Room, which they might realize looked very much like a courtroom. Their professor entered with a cup of tea in one hand and a briefcase in the other.
Alex had decided the best way to teach this class -- at least this first week -- was to dive in and pretend it was a courtroom scenario, at least at the outset. They were teenagers, most of them; they should catch on rather quickly.
"Thank you for being here," Alex said, setting her briefcase down on the long table in front of her. "I know jury duty is generally seen as a thankless nuisance, but the court appreciates your civic duty. We're going to start with a voir dire session as we empanel a jury. Those of you who are selected will be seated to hear a case; those of you who are excused may go home, with our thanks."
"Voir dire means that we ask you to speak the truth. Both the defense attorney and I will be asking a number of questions so that we can be sure to seat an impartial jury, one that has no preconceptions or prejudices on the issues we're going to be facing in court. Therefore, we'll be asking a number of questions both related to the accused -- William T. Thornsmith -- and his alleged victim, as well as more general concerns.
"Once we've asked our questions, certain participants may be stricken for cause -- if either side can make a compelling argument that the potential juror is too biased to follow the rule of law -- or dismissed summarily by either side via 'peremptory challenge,' which simply means that one of us feels we'd rather that juror not serve. We only have ten each, and if either of us are caught using them discriminatorily -- that is, to eliminate members of a specific gender, ethnic group, or sexuality -- our challenges may be overturned.
"All you need to concern yourself with is answering questions as honestly as you can. The rest, you can leave to the lawyers; that's why we're so overpaid." She smiled at her students. "Shall we?"
(wait for the OCD! OCD of wtf-was-I-thinking-DOOM is up!)
Alex had decided the best way to teach this class -- at least this first week -- was to dive in and pretend it was a courtroom scenario, at least at the outset. They were teenagers, most of them; they should catch on rather quickly.
"Thank you for being here," Alex said, setting her briefcase down on the long table in front of her. "I know jury duty is generally seen as a thankless nuisance, but the court appreciates your civic duty. We're going to start with a voir dire session as we empanel a jury. Those of you who are selected will be seated to hear a case; those of you who are excused may go home, with our thanks."
"Voir dire means that we ask you to speak the truth. Both the defense attorney and I will be asking a number of questions so that we can be sure to seat an impartial jury, one that has no preconceptions or prejudices on the issues we're going to be facing in court. Therefore, we'll be asking a number of questions both related to the accused -- William T. Thornsmith -- and his alleged victim, as well as more general concerns.
"Once we've asked our questions, certain participants may be stricken for cause -- if either side can make a compelling argument that the potential juror is too biased to follow the rule of law -- or dismissed summarily by either side via 'peremptory challenge,' which simply means that one of us feels we'd rather that juror not serve. We only have ten each, and if either of us are caught using them discriminatorily -- that is, to eliminate members of a specific gender, ethnic group, or sexuality -- our challenges may be overturned.
"All you need to concern yourself with is answering questions as honestly as you can. The rest, you can leave to the lawyers; that's why we're so overpaid." She smiled at her students. "Shall we?"
(

OOC - ANAT01
Also, I'm using other people from L&O to serve as your NPC jury -- the person who looks like Olivia Benson might just happen to look like her, but not have the same backstory. The judge, if needed, is going to be Liz Donnelly the Severely Kickass.
Lastly: I kept with lighter felonies in the case file summaries, in the hopes of not accidentally hitting trigger spots, IC or OOC, but I may not have succeeded. If your case file is bothersome, for any reason, you have my apologies: tag me here or via e-mail and I'll conjure up something else. (You don't even have to explain the objection: just "I'm not comfortable with mine" is fine.)
I lied, that wasn't lastly, this is: since Alex's experiences are from some of the ugliest, most unpleasant trauma-spots in criminal court, she does not shy away from painful subject matters. Please consider this a general warning that conversations about murder and violence will be routine. If there's something you'd like me to have her steer clear of, let me know; you're also perfectly welcome to handwave, or have your character leave, if he or she is uncomfortable with the topic.
Re: OOC - ANAT01
... I hope that made sense. SO hoping that made sense.
Re: OOC - ANAT01
I completely failed to consider the logistics of that part last night but I'm going to say go ahead and do your own mini-OCD. Unless for whatever reason you'd rather not. Go to town! Have fun with it! Enjoy some cameos from L&O peeps that I found icons of late last night!
It made perfect sense: I am facepalming at myself for not considering that last night. I cannot believe my OCD failed me, after all that.
Re: OOC - ANAT01
Just so you know.
Re: OOC - ANAT01