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79 Judicature 266 (1995-1996)
The Impact of Sequestration on Juries

handle is hein.journals/judica79 and id is 268 raw text is: The impact of
sequestration on juries
Although intended to shield the jury and ensure
a fair trial, sequestration's potentialfor unnerving and
even infuriating jurors may in fact
undermine the pursuit ofjustice.
by James P. Levine

W ander into the Holiday
~Inn on New York City's
Staten Island most any
evening and you will en-
counter a rather puzzling sight. At ei-
ther end of one or more corridors
armed law enforcement officials will
be on guard, poised to jump into ac-
tion should one of the doors on the
floor open. The visitor observing this
scene might well proceed with trepida-
tion, imagining that the room of a
criminal suspect or fugitive is under
surveillance. In fact, what is taking
place is the routine monitoring of a se-
questered jury.
JAMES P. LEVINE is a professor at John
Jay College, City University of New York.
Jury sequestration refers to the
physical isolation of the jury from the
rest of society. It is the opposite of what
is technically called separation of the
jury, the condition that exists when
266 Judicature Volume 79, Number 5

jurors are permitted to go their sepa-
rate ways when court is not in session.
Sequestration can take place at two
points in the judicial process, during
the trial itself (a rare phenomenon) or
during deliberations. Its primary pur-
pose is to shield jurors from biasing
outside influences that might vitiate
the integrity of the trial and deprive
defendants of their right to verdicts
based on law and evidence. It is thus
seen as an instrument to further due
process of law.
When sequestration is ordered, ju-
rors are kept together as a group and
forbidden to have significant contact
with anyone but each other. Access to
the media is denied or strictly limited:
exposure to trial coverage is pre-
vented; newspapers are banned or cen-
sored; television viewing is off limits or
highly restricted. Jurors are cut off
from family, friends, and neighbors;
they become a world onto themselves.
They are confined to the courtroom or
the juryroom during working hours,
March-April 1996

and they are required to eat and sleep
in special quarters. Court officers keep
track of their every activity, sometimes
even following them into bathrooms.
Sex is normally off-limits, physical ac-
tivity is severely constrained, and soli-
tude is all but impossible.
Jurors can be held in contempt of
court and are subject to fines and im-
prisonment if they depart from court-
imposed restrictions. Says University
of Texas law school professor Michael
Tigar, an opponent of sequestration:
There are prison systems that provide
more privileges than some seques-
tered jurors receive.'I It is no exag-
geration to call sequestered juries pris-
oners of the court.
Much attention has recently been
An earlier draft of this paper was delivered at the
1995 Annual Meeting of the Academy of Criminal
Justice Sciences, Boston, March 7-11, 1995. Thanks
go to G. Thomas Munsterman and Thomas
Hafemeister for their useful comments.
1. Quoted in Hansen, Sequestration Little Used,
Little Liked, 81 ABAJ. 16, 17 (October 1995).

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