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The Watercooler
The verdict has ben rendered
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<blockquote data-quote="DDD" data-source="post: 128383" data-attributes="member: 35"><p>I understand your sentiments. Jury duty saps your emotional strength in a unique way. I have served on three. The first was frustrating to the max because the prosecution did a lousey job of pulling the information together. We found the Defendant not guilty (even though we believed he was guilty) because it was not properly proven.</p><p> </p><p>The compassion for family members on both side makes it hard to shake</p><p>off and return to your normal life. on the other hand, I trust the "jury system" a heck of alot more than I trust "the system". There is a raw honesty in combining six or twelve American citizens from divergent backgrounds to decide the fate of a fellow citizen. Powerful stuff. DDD</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="DDD, post: 128383, member: 35"] I understand your sentiments. Jury duty saps your emotional strength in a unique way. I have served on three. The first was frustrating to the max because the prosecution did a lousey job of pulling the information together. We found the Defendant not guilty (even though we believed he was guilty) because it was not properly proven. The compassion for family members on both side makes it hard to shake off and return to your normal life. on the other hand, I trust the "jury system" a heck of alot more than I trust "the system". There is a raw honesty in combining six or twelve American citizens from divergent backgrounds to decide the fate of a fellow citizen. Powerful stuff. DDD [/QUOTE]
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The verdict has ben rendered
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