Originally posted by OzzyKP
Jury duty only applies to individuals who have registered to vote. So you have some element of choice. Plus giving up a day or two is much different than giving up two years of your life. Same with mandatory voting which requires at most an hour of your time. But we have never had mandatory voting in this country, nor do I expect we will ever have it.
Jury duty only applies to individuals who have registered to vote. So you have some element of choice. Plus giving up a day or two is much different than giving up two years of your life. Same with mandatory voting which requires at most an hour of your time. But we have never had mandatory voting in this country, nor do I expect we will ever have it.
AFAIK jury duty is in some jurisdictions legally incumbent on everyone - there is no official grant of exemption to those who dont register to vote. Its just that the use of voter list to identify eligible jurors creates a de facto exemption.
As for the different lengths of service, of course thats a real substantive issue that should be considered. But AFAIK SCOTUS has held that there's no difference from the POV of constitutional law.
Note also, service on a trial jury can easily last more than a week.
If youre unlucky enough to be called for a grand jury, it can last months.
Or even a trial jury, if you happen to land on say, the ATT antitrust case.
Unlike national service the extreme variance in what you serve (some folks show up and are dismissed after one or two days, or a simple one or two day trial) and others serve for months) is a source of injustice.
Comment