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Twelve Angry Men
Short Story/Novella Collection
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Twelve Angry Men - January 2023


Thanks Sue!
I definitely agree with you that the defense lawyer should have done all these things; the defense attorney must have been highly incompetent or unmotivated.
And juror #8 going into the neighborhood to find the knife is for sure investigating, which is illegal for jurors to do, even if the knife had been legal to buy. The reenactments, I'm not sure. That might be unusual, but I don't think it's illegal. Jurors have a right to talk things out in any way with what they're given in court.
Of course, by going into that neighborhood and seeking out the knife himself, he probably prevented an innocent boy from dying. So, I'm glad he did it!
It's just interesting and ironic that the way he makes the legal system work is by doing something that jurors are specfically instructed not to do, something that would result in a mistrial if the judge found out about it.
I guess one of my main takeaways from the book is how vital it is for both parties to have adequate representation in the courtroom and how unfair things can be when one side is vastly more motivated than the other. And of course that can be true in either direction . . . whether with competent prosecutors alongside overworked, discouraged or untalented defense attorneys . . . or with high-priced star defense attorney teams alongside overwhelmed public prosecutors. It's an achilles heel in the American justice system that so much hinges on the quality of the legal representation.
I honestly think volunteering would lead to a more corrupt system than having #7 or #12 on the jury. Someone with an agenda could not be persuaded by logic or evidence as these two were.

The judge does not call out or comment on the bias.
Most of the jurors are ready to judge the defendant as being guilty. The one thin fragile thread that this whole play rests on is one juror wondering if the young defendant can be declared guilty beyond a shadow of doubt. For the jury to say that the defendant is guilty in this case all members of the jury have to be absolutely absolutely sure. They are not.
The implicit bias/attitude/prejudice was a common enough concept in mid to late 20th century. This is the concept that controls the play of the same time period.



I agree that they could have talked about it, but creating the experiment is what wasn't proper. I don't believe a judge would have even let that experiment go on in the court room as evidence. The defense would have to have an expert testify as to the likelihood of the timing.
I agree that the unequal representation is the biggest problem on both ends. If only we could fix that.

I agree Cynda. The historical perspective is important and it is also relevant in current times.

Cynda and Sue, I completely agree that racial bias is a hugely important theme in the play as well, especially looking at it historically.

It's interesting how it hints near the very end that the one very angry juror had a problem with his son and something in his personal history was what was making him so angry toward the boy. The reveal at the end was pretty moving, I thought. It didn't excuse his behavior, but it helped explain why he was so angry.


In my one experience with a murder case, potential jurors were given long questionnaires, which could be studied by the opposing attorneys before verbal questions. Some people were challenged “for cause,” and in some cases the presiding judge dismissed them before a lawyer could get around to it.
(In a separate drunk driving case, one man was removed by the judge because he obviously had been drinking during an extra-long lunch, and a bailiff was assigned to make sure he didn’t try to drive home.)
This in addition to a limited number of peremptory challenges by both sides.
Unfortunately, people with a strong motive to get on a jury are often willing to lie about it. And some people just don’t recognise their own biases as being such.

....
Unfortunately, people with a strong motive to get on a jury are often willing to lie about it. And some people just don’t recognise their own biases as being such."
Yeah, that makes sense.

In Austria you can be ordered into a jury any time between a certain age. There are only exceptions for people with certain jobs or the like, earlier on also for women. There are two different types: the ones deciding by themselves, the others deciding as lay judges together with a professional judge. I worked in the last function last year, but was once sent home, because there were too many jurors, the second time I was a substitute, so I heard the trial but couldn´t decide. I heard though that it usually worked the way that the professional judge suggested a verdict, and the lay judges agreed to it. We could also ask questions. Both trials were about drug dealing, often having been dragging on for years till the defender made the accused person confess. We were sent a manuscript about our tasks, how a trial worked and that we were obliged to not let our prejudices influence us.
What came to my mind considering the play and my experience was that people (here both not Austrian born, one even with a translator) were often represented by an appointed lawyer who had no big interest in his client. Though I never decided, it was interesting to participate in a trial and so exert a voluntary work and at the same time a duty for your country which was glad to involve lay people into jurisdiction.

The professional Public Defender system (see the article), set up in parallel to the prosecution, fills in the gap in some jurisdictions.
This has some problems too, as with too many novice lawyers on the staff, and caseloads that are too large, and lack of adequate funding. Retaining lawyers once they have considerable experience is also a problem, hence the novices.
But I know two career public defenders here in Los Angeles, both very hardworking and competent, and I tend to judge by that.
One of them told me that the LA Police Department is often too lazy to make a good case.
I suspect that makes it easy to get some defendants acquitted without regards to actual guilt. But the defense attorneys have an ethical obligation to defend the accused effectively, whatever they believe about a case at hand.
It sounds to me like it is an imperfect system in all our countries, but that we have all tried to set up something that will work well if used as intended. It is never simple when you involve people, and this is one area where people and the luck of the draw makes all the difference. We like to think it is "equitable" but nothing ever is really, because people cannot help bringing baggage in the door with them. The juries that work are the ones where everyone at least tries to check it at the door.

It does seem to be the right number, doesn't it. Enough to almost guarantee you will have at least a few sincere and honest men included.

I agree. All countries have innocents being judged guilty. The better countries/systems are those that care about this fact at all.

I agree, with this and also with what you and John Dishwasher say about 12 jurors being the right number. As long as there's enough for one person to make a difference, we have hope.
What was interesting in my jury experience was when we first sat down around the table, we were in two camps: decided and undecided. As we talked, the details of our individual positions came out more, and by the end you could tell there were actually 12 very different viewpoints to be considered. Kind of like this story, actually!
Funny how when the details come out, we're not really in camps after all--just individuals.
"Funny how when the details come out, we're not really in camps after all--just individuals."
I find that so heartening, Kathleen! People stand the best chance of justice when each person is thinking it through.
I find that so heartening, Kathleen! People stand the best chance of justice when each person is thinking it through.

Exactly as you say, Nancy. The play really works because it is so realistic. You can imagine being in this room and how hard it would be to reach a consensus, let alone a unanimous decision.

Like many of you I listened to the LA Theater Works version. It just happened to be the copy the library had, but as I listened I suddenly realized "Hey! That's Quark!" and then I looked up all the actors and saw what a talented bunch it was. It would've been fun to see that live.
I'm also surprised how many of us have served on juries. I'm the only person I know who has actually served on a jury. None of the people I know called to jury duty were ever even called to jury selection.
Many people told me I'd never be called to serve on a jury because I was a teacher. They were all wrong! ;D The case was about a man accused of throwing a Molotov cocktail into a home. The trial went on for one day and then we deliberated for 1.5 days. Interestingly, our jury was a bit opposite from the book.
On our first vote there were three for guilty. We went back and forth over the evidence. It turned out that everyone thought he was guilty but weren't sure the evidence proved it "beyond a reasonable doubt." We even went back out to the judge and asked him to explain it to us legally. Then we went through all the evidence again. We ended up with a guilty verdict.
No one in my jury was angry or invested in a certain verdict. I do feel everyone tried to be logical and fair, at least as far as humans can be with all their biases. As the book so aptly highlights.




If I recall correctly, there was some overlap with other “critical” occupations that were draft exempt, so my memories are from back in the 1970s.
And some very large corporations began paying the full salaries of employees called up for jury duty, so financial hardship ceased to be a valid cause of exemption for a whole lot of people.

Nowadays, the judges at the court near me can get pretty cranky at excuses. There was a woman at a former jury service who asked to be excused to take care of her sick husband and the judge was far less compassionate than I would have liked. And the judge also threatened a couple other potential jurors with "contempt of court" charges for deliberately answering questions in such a way that they would get kicked off the jury.
I think I would rather tell jokes in the airport security line than trying to put one over on one of these judges. Their wits and tempers are both quite sharp!
It's easy to have one's service delayed but nearly impossible to get excused.
I got an interesting thing in the mail yesterday. It was a notice from my county to tell me that if I would like to be excused from jury duty permanently I need to fill out the form they enclosed. The exemption is due to age. Of course, if I want to remain in the pool, all I need do is not fill out the form.


In my prior experience, judges were usually willing to dismiss people with serious chronic illnesses that might cause delays in a trial. One got very testy with people he thought had concealed health problems that could interrupt the proceedings. The civil case already had been delayed a long time, and we potential jurors spent a whole lot of time back in the jury pool while motions were being argued in our absence. On top of which there was a shortage of courtrooms....

Oh yes Sara, here too there is an exemption for age and that one is easy to use. You do not even have to go to the courthouse for that one. At age 70 and up in California, it is still quite easy to be excused. Below that in age though it's pretty tough.
Though it makes sense what you say about some conditions causing unwelcome delays Ian. Soon after the stroke when Ron was almost completely disabled, they wanted him wheeled in there somehow. Though that was for the jury selection day; it might have been much easier to get him out of being actually selected given his obvious condition. Being in his early 50s, he couldn't use the age based exemption.
I am sole caretaker to my husband who is in home hospice care. I could not serve at this time. There are legitimate reasons why some people cannot serve on a jury, and no amount of compensation would suffice. The reason should simply not be frivolous. I think someone in Ron's situation should only need a doctor's statement.


Yes, your situations are different than “I have arthritis in my elbow” or “I have two dogs and a child.” My point was that people will try anything to get out of serving on a jury, and I hate that.

I remember the short story A Jury Of Her Peers by Susan Glaspell.
I was once called to jury duty where were asked to judge a man in his earliest 20s who had been intimate with a older teenager. I could not be impartial as I saw two young adults doing what young adults do. This is a situation for families, not public courtroom drama and public expense. . . . Such a emotionally charged room that was. The lawyers' eyes were showing some frustration. Their shoulders did too when they released us as a group of potentials

It is a shame, Cynda, for it is voices like yours that are needed on juries. You are right that we become more capable of these kinds of responsibilities when we have some life experience to draw on.

@Greg -- I had the same confusion when I read that #8 had gone to the neighborhood and gotten a duplicate knife.
@Greg and Sarah -- Given that the movie was released in 1957 (I presume with the same reenactments and knife purchase) I applaud the jurors for wanting to reenact the events. They were trying to scientifically verify testimony. 21st century, there would be an electronic recreation of the events. Scientists would measure how quickly the "old man" could walk, that kind of thing.
One thing that bothered me is that if the kid had the presence of mind to calmly wipe fingerprints from the knife and door knobs, why wasn't he also calm enough to walk (vs run) down the stairs? Also, why didn't he just take the knife with him?!


@Greg -- I had the same confusion when I read that #8 had gone to the neighborhood and ..."
That's a good point Cheryl about reenactments being much easier today with newer technologies! It's so true that it helps to keep the time frame in mind!
Though of course if the defense attorney is incompetent, disinterested, or overwhelmed with other cases, they might still fail to present or challenge a lot of important evidence . . . .


Actually, the play never answered the question as to the defendant's guilt or innocence. It was all about the jurors.

Whenever I'm called I bring with me a copy of In Spite of Innocence. I figured that if the case turns out to be one I don't want to be involved with I would take it out and start reading it and no prosecutor alive would let me on the jury. The opportunity to try it has never arisen, though.

Actually, the play never ans..."
Absolutely Tom! It doesn't answer conclusively. But it does seem that there are a lot of problems with the story the prosecution is telling. That's why I said "probably." I guess I could say "possibly" instead. But the problems in the prosecution's case seem pretty serious.
Much like in a real courtroom, the jury can never really know any more than what they are presented (or in this case, plus a little bit of self-investigation).
Books mentioned in this topic
Twelve Angry Men (other topics)In Spite of Innocence (other topics)
Twelve Angry Men (other topics)
A Jury of Her Peers (other topics)
Twelve Angry Men (other topics)
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Authors mentioned in this topic
Susan Glaspell (other topics)Reginald Rose (other topics)
Each lawyer is allowed to dismiss a certain number of potential jurors from a case. Selecting a jury for a case is a procedure that can take a half day or longer as each lawyer (defense and prosecution) asks questions of jurors to see if they have any improper involvement with the people involved in the case, if they have any improper bias, or if they lack the ability to comprehend the details of a case.
Because many potential jurors can be removed, they always call up many extra jurors on a day so they have enough jurors to cover the maximum number of jurors that can be removed during the selection process.