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	<title>Neatorama &#187; jury</title>
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	<link>http://www.neatorama.com</link>
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		<title>Cat Called for Jury Duty</title>
		<link>http://www.neatorama.com/2010/01/10/cat-called-for-jury-duty/</link>
		<comments>http://www.neatorama.com/2010/01/10/cat-called-for-jury-duty/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 10 Jan 2010 05:15:34 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Miss Cellania</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Animals & Pets]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Crime & Law]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Cat]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[jury]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[jury duty]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.neatorama.com/?p=28724</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Sal Esposito of East Boston has been summoned for jury duty. He just might be excused for being a cat, but so far he is expected to serve. Sal&#8217;s owners Guy and Anna Esposito think his name may have been pulled from census records, where he was listed as a pet. Anna filed for Sal’s [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img class="imageleft" src="http://static.neatorama.com/misscellania/sal.jpg" alt="" />Sal Esposito of East Boston has been summoned for jury duty. He just might be excused for being a cat, but so far he is expected to serve. Sal&#8217;s owners Guy and Anna Esposito think his name may have been pulled from census records, where he was listed as a pet.</p>
<blockquote><p><em>Anna filed for Sal’s disqualification of service. However, the jury commissioner was unmoved and denied the request.</em></p>
<p><em>Sal’s service date at Suffolk Superior Court is set for March 23. Anna said that if the issue isn’t cleared up by then, she will simply have to bring the cat to court. </em></p></blockquote>
<p><a href="http://www1.whdh.com/news/articles/local/BO133130/" target="_blank">Link</a> -via <a href="http://digg.com/" target="_blank">Digg</a></p>
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		<item>
		<title>The CSI Effect</title>
		<link>http://www.neatorama.com/2008/12/16/the-csi-effect/</link>
		<comments>http://www.neatorama.com/2008/12/16/the-csi-effect/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 16 Dec 2008 07:25:45 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alex</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Bathroom Reader]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Crime & Law]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Film]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[CSI]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[CSI effect]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[forensics]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[jury]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Perry Mason]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Perry Mason effect]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[television show]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.neatorama.com/?p=21439</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[The following is reprinted from Uncle John's Unsinkable Bathroom Reader CSI's Gil Grissom - via Wikipedia FAMILIAR FORMULA If there were no cops, prosecutors or defense attorneys, the television airwaves would probably be far less crowded. Over the past 60 years, these professions have dominated prime-time schedules. Why? They offer formulas ready-made for drama: A [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>
<table border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="10" width="510">
<tbody>
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<td colspan="2" valign="top"><em>The following is reprinted
from <a href="https://bathroomreader.theretailerplace.com/MLBX/actions/searchHandler.do?key=0007844209&amp;nextPage=booksDetails&amp;parentNum=11997" target="_blank">Uncle
John's Unsinkable Bathroom Reader</a></em>

<img src="http://static.neatorama.com/images/2008-12/csi-gil-grissom.jpg" alt="" width="500" height="319" />
CSI's Gil Grissom - via <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:CSI_Grissom.png">Wikipedia</a>

<strong>FAMILIAR FORMULA</strong>

If there were no cops, prosecutors or defense attorneys, the television
airwaves would probably be far less crowded. Over the past 60 years, these
professions have dominated prime-time schedules. Why? They offer formulas
ready-made for drama: A brand-new conflict is presented to the protagonist
each week, promising to be full of mystery, intrigue, and ... predictability.
Viewers can rely on the fact that near the end of the viewing hour, one
crucial piece of evidence will appear and lead to the capture of the elusive
killer, or to the acquittal of the wrongly accused defendant. Then comes
the philosophical musing that wraps everything up neatly, providing a
clean slate for next week's episode.

Real life is rarely so cut-and-dried. And while some may argue that cop
and lawyer shows are merely entertainment, actual cops and lawyers claim
these shows can make their already-difficult jobs even harder.

<strong>JURORS' PRUDENCE</strong>

<img class="imageleft" src="http://static.neatorama.com/images/2008-12/perry-mason.jpg" alt="" width="150" height="222" />The
"CSI effect" occurs primarily inside the courtroom. Its first
incarnation was referred to as the <em>Perry Mason</em> effect, based
on the popular fictional defense attorney's trademark ability to clear
his client by coercing the guilty party into confessing on the witness
stand. During Mason's TV heyday, from the 1950s to the '80s, many prosecutors
complained that juries were hesitant to convict defendants without that
"Perry Mason moment" of a confession on the stand - which in
real life is very, very rare. (Photo: The Academy of Motion Picture Arts
&amp; Science, via <a href="http://www.perrymasontvshowbook.com/pmb_c300.htm">The
Perry Mason TV Show Book</a>)

After <em>Perry Mason</em> went off the air, a new kind of law enforcement
program appeared: the scientific police procedural (which started with
<em>Quincy, M.E.</em>, a drama about a crime-solving medical examiner
that aired from 1976 to '83). But few cop shows have matched the success
of <em>CSI: Crime Scene Investigation</em>, which debuted in 2000 and
has spawned two successful spin-offs. A 2006 TV ratings study in 20 countries
named <em>CSI</em> "the most watched show in the world."

<strong>MYTH-CONCEPTIONS</strong>

Along with similar shows such as <em>NCIS</em>, <em>Diagnosis: Murder</em>,
and <em>Bones</em>, <em>CSI</em> focuses on forensic evidence and lab
work as the primary means of catching killers. These drama may be "ripped
from the headlines," but when it comes to telling an entertaining
story, certain liberties must be taken by the writers:
<ul>
	<li>On television shows, detectives work one case at a time; in real world,
they juggle a deep backlog of cases.</li>
	<li>Experts who perform scientific analyses are rarely the same people
who do the detective work and make arrests, unlike TV where one team
tackles every aspect of the investigation. (And few real forensic scientists
ever drive a Hummer to a crime scene.)</li>
	<li>The almost instant turnaround of DNA tests is what TV writers refer
to as a "time cheat," a trick necessary to get the story wrapped
up. In reality, due to the screening, extraction, and replication process
(not to mention the backlog), DNA test can take months. And the results
are rarely, if ever, 100% conclusive.</li>
	<li>Just about every murder investigation on TV leads to an arrest and
conviction. In the real world, less than half of these cases are solved.</li>
</ul>
"If you really portrayed what crime scene investigators do,"
said Jay Siegel, a professor of forensic science at Michigan State University,
"the show would die after three episodes because it would be so boring."

<strong>SHOW ME THE SCIENCE</strong>

The main problem caused by the <em>CSI </em>effect: Juries now <em>expect</em>
conclusive forensic evidence. According to Staff Sergeant Peter Abi-Rashed,
a homicide detective from Hamilton, Ontario, "Juries are asking,
'Can we convict without DNA evidence?' Of course they can. It's called
good, old-fashioned police work and overwhelming circumstantial evidence."
In the worst-case scenarios, guilty people may be set free because a jury
wasn't impressed with evidence that - as recently as the 1990s - would
have led to a conviction.

In fact, many forensic experts find themselves on the stand explaining
to a jury why they <em>don't</em> have scientific evidence. Some lawyers
have even started asking potential jurors if they watch <em>CSI</em>.
If so, they may have to be reeducated.

Shellie Samuels, the lead prosecutor in the 2005 Robert Blake murder
trial, probably wishes that her jury had been asked beforehand if they
were <em>CSI</em> fans. Samuels tried to convince them that Blake, a former
TV cop himself (on <em>Baretta</em>), shot and killed his wife in 2001.
Samuels illustrated Blake's motive: she presented 70 witnesses who testified
against him, including two who stated - under oath - that Blake had asked
them to kill his wife. Seems like a lock for a conviction, right? Wrong.
"They couldn't put the gun in his hand," said jury foreman Thomas
Nicholson, who along with his peers acquitted Blake. "There was no
blood splatter. They had nothing." The verdict sent a clear message
throughout the legal community: Juries will convict only on solid forensic
evidence.

This new trend affects cops, too. <em>CSI-</em>watching detectives tend
to put unrealistic pressure on crime scene investigators not only to find
solid evidence, but also to give them immediate results. Henry Lee, chief
emeritus of Connecticut's state crime lab (and perhaps the world's most
famous forensics scientist), says that, much to the dismay of the police,
his investigators can't provide "miracle proof" just by scattering
some "magic dust" on a crime scene. And there is no machine
- not even at the best-equipped lab in the country - in which you can
place a hair in at one end and pull a picture of a suspect out of the
other. "And our type of work always has a backlog," laments
Lee, who's witnessed the amount of evidence turned in to his lab rise
from about five pieces per crime scene in the 1980s to anywhere from 50
to 400 today.

<strong>MIRANDA WRONGS</strong>

The <em>CSI</em> effect doesn't stop at science - the entire judicial
process is being presented in a misleading fashion. Mary Flood, editor
of a website called The Legal Pad, asked a dozen prominent criminal lawyers
to rate the most popular shows. Her findings: "Generally, they hate
it when <em>Law &amp; Order's</em> Jack McCoy extracts confessions in
front of a speechless defense lawyers. Not real, they say. They go nuts
over the <em>CSI </em>premise of the exceedingly well-funded, glamorous
lab techs who do a homicide detective's job. Even less real, they say.
And they get annoyed when <em>The Closer</em>'s heroine ignores a suspect's
request for a lawyer. Unconstitutional, they say."

<strong>DUMB CROOKS</strong>

In the real world, it's usually neither the crusading prosecutor nor
the headstrong cop who solved the case. Most criminals, cops admit, are
their own worst enemies. Either they don't cover their tracks or they
brag to friends about what they did, or both. People tend not to think
clearly when they commit crimes. But in the past few years there has appeared
a new kind of criminal: the kind that watches <em>CSI ...</em> and learns.

<img class="imageleft" src="http://static.neatorama.com/images/2008-12/jermaine-mckinney.jpg" alt="" width="150" height="198" />In
December 2005, Jermaine "Maniac" McKinney, a 25-year-old man
from Ohio, broke into a house and killed two people. He used bleach to
clean his hands as well as the crime scene, then carefully removed all
of the evidence and placed blankets in his car before transferring the
bodies to an isolated lakeshore at night, where he burned them along with
his clothes and cigarette butts - making sure that none of his DNA could
be connected to the victims. One thing remained: the murder weapon, a
crowbar. McKinney threw it into the lake ... which was frozen. He didn't
want to risk walking out on the ice to get it, so he left it behind. Big
mistake: The weapon was later found - still on the ice - and linked to
McKinney, which led to his arrest. When asked why he used bleach to clean
his hands, McKinney said that he'd learned that bleach destroys DNA. Where'd
he learn that? "On <em>CSI</em>." (Photo: Steve Schenk/AP, article
at <a href="http://www.signonsandiego.com/uniontrib/20060202/news_1c02csi.html">The
San Diego Union-Tribune</a>)

Using bleach to clean a crime scene was almost unheard of until <em>CSI
</em>used it as a plot point. Now the practice is occurring more and more
often. "Sometimes I believe it may even encourage criminals when
they see how simple it is to get away with murder on television,"
said Captain Ray Peavy, head of the homicide division at the Los Angeles
Sheriff's Department. It's difficult enough to investigate a crime scene
with the "normal" amount of evidence left behind.

<strong>MAYBE DON'T SHOW THEM THE SCIENCE?</strong>

So should these shows be censored? Should they tone down the science
or, some have argued, use <em>fake</em> science to throw criminals a red
herring? "The National District Attorneys Association is deeply concerned
about the effect of <em>CSI</em>," CBS News consultant and former
prosecutor Wendy Murphy reported. "When <em>CSI</em> trumps common
sense, then you have a systemic problem."

But not everyone agrees. "To argue that <em>CSI</em> and similar
shows are actually raising the number of acquittals is a staggering claim,"
argues Simon Cole, professor of criminology at the University of California,
Irvine. "And the remarkable thing is that, speaking forensically,
there is not a shred of evidence to back it up."

And furthering the debate about whether criminals learn from <em>CSI</em>,
Paul Wilson, the chair of criminology at Bond University in Australia,
stated, "There is no doubt that criminals copy what they see on television.
However, I don't believe these shows pose a major problem." Prison,
Wilson maintains, is where most of these people learn the tricks of their
trade. So while law enforcement officials may agree that cop and lawyer
shows do have an effect on modern investigations and trials, the jury
is still out on exactly <em>what </em>that effect is.

<strong>THE SILVER LINING</strong>

<img class="imageleft" src="http://static.neatorama.com/images/2008-12/anthony-zuiker.jpg" alt="" width="150" height="238" />The
shows do have their positive aspects. For one thing, they teach basic
science, saving the courts time and money by not having to call in experts
to explain such concepts as what DNA evidence actually is. Anthony E.
Zuiker, creator of the <em>CSI</em> franchise, is quick to point this
out. "Jurors can walk in with some preconceived notion of at least
what CSI means. And even if they are false expectations, at least jurors
aren't walking in blind."

Perhaps most significantly, though, ever since <em>CSI</em> became a
hit in 2000, student admissions into forensic field have skyrocketed.
So even if Zuiker's show is confusing jurors, misinforming police, and
helping to train criminals, at least it's proven to be an effective recruiting
tool. "The <em>CSI </em>effect is, in my opinion, the most amazing
thing that has ever come out of the series," he said, "For the
first time in American history, you're not allowed to fool the jury anymore."
(Photo: <a href="http://flickr.com/photos/atelier_us/3027857219/">Mathieu
Ramage</a> [Flickr])

And finally, a message from Zuiker to anyone who walks up and points
out his shows' inherent flaws: "Folks, it's television."</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td width="150" valign="top"><img src="http://static.neatorama.com/images/2008-11/bri-unsinkable.jpg" alt="" width="150" height="194" /></td>
<td width="330" valign="top">The article above is reprinted with permission from <a href="https://bathroomreader.theretailerplace.com/MLBX/actions/searchHandler.do?key=0007844209&amp;nextPage=booksDetails&amp;parentNum=11997" target="_blank">Uncle
John's Unsinkable Bathroom Reader</a>.

The Bathroom Readers' Institute has sailed the seas of science, history,
pop culture, humor, and more to bring you Uncle John's Unsinkable Bathroom
Reader. Our all-new 21st edition is overflowing with over 500 pages of
material that is sure to keep you fully absorbed.

Since 1988, the Bathroom Reader Institute has published a series of popular
books containing irresistible bits of trivia and <a href="http://www.bathroomreader.com/pilot.asp?pg=throneroom">obscure
yet fascinating facts</a>. Check out their website here: <a href="http://www.bathroomreader.com/">Bathroom
Reader Institute</a>.

<img src="http://static.neatorama.com/img4/bri-uncle-john-logo.gif" alt="" width="150" height="67" /></td>
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