Yesterday I was in Rumpole's building serving as a potential juror. It was an interesting experience. I wasn't selected to actually sit on a jury, but I participated in Judge Andrea Wolfson's voir dire in a misdemeanor battery case.
Judge Wolfson was fantastic and ran a very good jury selection. I was impressed by her demeanor and how she handled the lawyers and the jury pool.
It's eye-opening to see the process from the juror's point of view. I don't think lawyers realize how much waiting around there is, but more on this later.
So what did I miss yesterday? The Pakistan trial has hit some bumps in the road. Rhino horn smuggling. And Justice Scalia is hunting again, this time with Justice Kagan. He spoke about it during a Q&A with Nina Totenberg at the same time the President gave his State of the Union Address. From the AP:
Lest anyone think the timing of his talk was anything other than a coincidence, Scalia tried to put those thoughts to rest.
"I didn't set this up tonight just to upstage the president," he said. "The State of the Union is not something I mark on my calendar, like Easter or Yom Kippur."
Scalia said the justices in attendance inevitably keep their eyes on the chief justice, who decides when it is appropriate to applaud.
If the president says the United States is a great country, clap away, he said. But no justice can clap "if it's anything anybody can disagree with," Scalia said.
Prodded by Totenberg, Scalia also commented on the hunting ability of Justice Elena Kagan, who has joined Scalia to shoot quail, pheasant and larger animals.
Last year, on a trip to Wyoming, they had a license to go after antelope and mule deer. But there were none to be found.
Instead, "she ended up killing a white-tailed doe, which she could have done in my driveway" in suburban Virginia, Scalia said.
He said Kagan, who never handled a gun before joining the court, is just a beginner, but "she dropped that doe in just one shot."
David: I also had the pleasure of participating in a jury pool before Judge Wolfson. I completely agree that her demeanor during the voir dire process is impressive. I even remember hearing other members of the jury pool complimenting how she handled the process. It was also a definite eye-opener to see the "other side".
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