The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Jury trials

-

said. “Justice needs jurors.”

On Oct. 10, Melton signed an order allowing for jury trials to resume, provided strict safety precaution­s are in place. But during a recent Judicial Council of Georgia meeting he acknowledg­ed reports that indicate “this winter is going to be rough and the COVID is not nearly done with us just yet.”

Melton’s order does not require counties to restart jury trials, only tomake a plan forwhen that happens. Most jurisdicti­ons are confrontin­g extraordin­ary obstacles.

People entering any Georgia courthouse must wear a mask or could be confronted by armed deputies demanding to know why they aren’t.

Many jurors will wear transparen­t face shields, as will witnesses and defendants — so their facial expression­s are visible to others as a trial plays out. Plexiglass shields, hand sanitizer stations and temperatur­e screenings will be as common as closing arguments. Inmany counties, jurors will deliberate in a courtroom, not in the close quarters of the jury room.

Court administra­tors will become de facto traffic controller­s, staggering times for trials and hearings to begin so crowds of jurors, lawyers and litigants won’t showup at the same time.

‘ We don’t have a choice’

Jury trials have already resumed in some parts of the country. The first one in Georgia occurred last month in federal court in Columbus in an elaboratel­y retrofitte­d courtroom.

“It went well,” said Dave Bunt, clerk of court. “All in all, wewere tremendous­ly impressed with the jurors’ willingnes­s to serve under these circumstan­ces.”

Fulton Superior Court Judge Shawn LaGrua said a resumption of jury trials will help return the court system to a semblance of normalcy.

“We don’t have a choice,” she said. “We just have to be careful how we do it.”

Fulton’s first jury trial is tentativel­y set for Jan. 11, said LaGrua, who heads the chief justice’s COVID- 19 task force. Three large courtrooms at the courthouse in Atlanta will be used first, and not all at the same time.

“What happens with COVID in the next 60 days will determine what happens,” she said. “We will start slowly.”

As will be the case in most jurisdicti­ons, defendants who have been in custody the longest will be the highest priority, she said.

‘ Some degree of diplomacy’

Cherokee County has tentativel­y set its first jury trial for Dec. 7, clerk Patty Baker said. It will be a misdemeano­r case for which only six jurors are required.

“We’re taking lots of precaution­s,” she said. “The safety of our jurors is paramount.”

Fayette County could have its first jury trials in early December, Superior Court Judge Fletcher Sams said.

One looming question is how many summoned jurors will show up.

“We have thosewho think this is a simple hoax to thosewho are completely paranoid, and all those in between,” Sams said. “But one thing that is real is some people’s fear about this virus. We must always remember that.”

Melton, Georgia’s chief justice since 2018, said the judiciary is serious about courthouse mask mandates.

“It will have to be handled with some degree of diplomacy — how to artfully deal with those not wearing masks,” Melton said. “They can first offer a mask to someone and work up the level of severity from there.”

DeKalb District Attorney Sherry Boston said it could take three years for her office to rebound from the shutdown. DeKalb jury trials are nowe xpected to resume shortly after the beginning of next year.

“This is a disease that kills,” she said. “We will use common sense, compassion and empathy to get through this.”

Many attorneys are anxious about the onset of jury trials, Marietta lawyer Lawrence Zimmerman said.

“As a lawyer, you’ll have concerns about your personal safety at the same time you’re fighting for your client,” said Zimmerman, president of the Georgia Associatio­n of Criminal Defense Lawyers. “It’s going to be distractin­g.”

Henry County Superior Court Chief Judge Brian Amero has asked the state Department of Public Health if there is a number of coronaviru­s cases a county needs to be under before it’s safe to restart jury trials. He suggested having a rate of no more than 100 cases per 100,000 county residents.

“Everything that is above 100 is called uncontroll­able community spread,” he said.

On Thursday, the health department posted Henry County’s rate: 169 for every 100,000 residents. The rates for Fulton were 160 per 100,000; DeKalb, 152; Clayton, 155; Cobb, 129; and Gwinnett, 158, the state data said. Those numbers reflect the infection rate for the past two weeks.

“When you have uncontroll­ed community spread and jury trials, you’re going to have people coming into your building with COVID,” Amero said.

Responding toa jury summons, however, is far different from needing to stock up on groceries, the judge added.

“People can choose whether they want to go to Publix or eat at a local restaurant,” Amero said. “They can’t choose whether they want to see us.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States