Friday, October 16, 2009

Second of Three Jury Trials

Wednesday I presided over the second of three jury trials in the final six weeks before leaving for Ukraine. The charges included one count of driving under the influence of alcohol We had an unusual jury panel of nineteen, including a scientist, a widow, an aerial cartographer, several office workers, two students, two current or former jailers and three firefighters. Voir dire took about an hour and a half. I struck five of the panel for cause or bias, including the two jailers. We started hearing evidence about 10:30 a.m., after my preliminary instructions. The prosecutor, Mr. M, put on two witnesses, both police officers. The strategy for the defense attorney, Mr. B, appeared to be to highlight several minor errors the arresting officer made in filling out the reports, and to argue that the chemical test was faulty. The disparity between the time occupied by the prosecutor, Mr. M, and the defense attorney, Mr. B, was remarkable--Mr. M occupied the podium for approximately 50 minutes during the trial, while Mr. B took up more than four hours, mostly on cross examination. In my view, the case was decided during closing argument: Mr. M laid out a very simple case, highlighting the "elements" of the offense very clearly and showing how the evidence had satisfied each individual element. Mr. B's closing strategy seemed to be to cast a vast cloud of doubt over the entire proceedings, but I believe that the result was a sense of annoyance and impatience in the jury--you could literally see it in their eyes. The jury went out for deliberation just after 6:00 p.m., and returned a guilty verdict on all charges in about 45 minutes.

Tuesday, October 13, 2009

First Travel Gear Purchases



Yesterday I bought my first travel gear for this year's teaching excursion. First, I bought an HP Mini "Netbook" from Best Buy with 160 GB of storage, wireless card, etc. It is only about 10 inches by 6 inches and weighs less than 3 pounds. I played around with it for a while last night and found it very fast with nice graphics and sound. It has a built in webcam and microphone for easy Skyping (more about that later). I bought it in a package deal including a Belkin cover and a Microsoft wireless mouse--total cost $334. I like the idea of having an ultra small laptop on the plane and trains, as well as in Kyiv and Jerusalem.

Next I bought an Osprey urban pack from REI in Salt Lake City--it has retractable shoulder and waist straps, handles on all sides, plenty of compartments, and appears to be very durable and strong. Cost was $99.