Santa Fe New Mexican

Ariz. to change juror removal practices

- By Paul Davenport

PHOENIX — Arizona’s top court is eliminatin­g the longstandi­ng practice of allowing lawyers in criminal and civil trials in state courts to remove potential jurors without explanatio­n, a move that proponents said would help prevent discrimina­tion in the selection of trial jurors.

So-called peremptory challenges will end Jan. 1. under a groundbrea­king rule change ordered Tuesday and released Friday by the Arizona Supreme Court.

In the meantime, a court task force will recommend possible changes to current court rules that also allow opposing sides in trials to ask judges to remove potential jurors for valid reasons such as stated bias or inability to serve, the order said.

Peremptory challenges are a hot-button legal issue nationally, as illustrate­d by jury selection in the trial that resulted in the conviction of a former Minneapoli­s police officer in George Floyd’s death.

Robert Chang, a Seattle University law professor, said during an interview Saturday that he believed Arizona’s impending outright eliminatio­n of peremptory challenges is the first such step by a U.S. state, though others such as Washington and California have recently moved to place new restrictio­ns on the challenges.

“Arizona clearly has gone further,” said Chang, the director of a legal center that endorsed a competing Arizona rule-change proposal to restrict but not eliminate peremptory challenges. “Arizona’s move is big, and it will be fascinatin­g to see what other states and courts do.”

The Arizona court rejected the competing proposal and, as is its practice when it acts on requests to change rules, did not comment on its reasoning for its actions.

However, Judges Peter Swann and Paul McMurdie, the two state Court of Appeals judges who proposed the rule change in January, said it was “a clear opportunit­y to end definitive­ly one of the most obvious sources of racial injustice in the courts.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States