See No Evil: Study Says Judges Don't Find Jurors Using Social Media
Citizen Media Law Project 2012-03-08
Summary:
The Federal Judicial Center
has released a study which
concludes that "detected social media use by jurors is
infrequent, and that most judges have taken steps to ensure jurors do
not use social media in the courtroom," and implies that juror use of
the Internet and social media during trial is not a growing problem.
Alison Frankel of Thompson-Reuters is skeptical about this conclusion, and I agree with her.
The
FJC report was based on a survey e-mailed to all active and senior
federal judges in October 2011. Of the 952 judges who received the
survey, 508 responded – a response rate of 53 percent – from all 94
federal districts.
Of
the 508 judges who responded, only 30 (six percent) said that they had
experienced jurors using social media during trials and deliberations. Most
(23 judges) had seen this during trial, rather than deliberations (12
judges), and judges reported seeing such activity more often in criminal
cases (22 judges) than in civil cases (five judges). Three judges had
experience with jurors using social media during both criminal and civil
cases. Only two had experienced this in more than two cases of either
type.
Among
the sites and services that the judges observed jurors using, use of
Facebook and Google were the most common, both reported by nine judges.
Use of instant messaging was noticed by seven judges, while use of
Twitter or an Internet chat room was detected by three each. One judge
reported juror use of an Internet bulletin board, while one reported
juror use of MySpace.
Seventeen
of the judges also reported the substance of the jurors' activities: Five said jurors had done research on the case; four said that they had
shared information about the case, such as its progress; three judges
found jurors "friending" trial participants; and the same number of
judges discovered jurors otherwise communicating with trial
participants.
Of
the 30 judges who discovered social media use by jurors, 28 indicated
how they learned of the activity. Thirteen heard of it from fellow
jurors, five were told by attorneys, and five said they found out via
post-trial motions or interviews. Three found out from court staff, and
two observed it themselves.
As
the report itself points out, "the data from the survey represent
judges’ reported experiences and perceptions of jurors’ use of social
media to communicate about proceedings in which they are involved. The
data are not actual empirical measures of such behavior." Study at 2.
And it seems dubious that the usage judges observed is all the usage there is, given how widespread Internet use is among the larger community from which jurors are drawn. While there is "no requirement that petit juries actually chosen must mirror
the community and reflect the various distinctive groups in the
population," Taylor v. Louisiana, 419 U.S. 522, 538 (1975), the jury pool from which trial juries are selected must "reasonably reflect[] a cross-section of the population suitable in character and intelligence for that civic duty." Brown v. Allen, 344 U.S. 443, 474 (1953).
Two recent studies comparing juror and population demographics in New York reported on by the Cornell Journal of Law & Public Policy blog – one statewide, the other focused on Monroe County, which includes Rochester – found that generally jury pools generally reflect the demographics
of the larger community, although the statewide report found racial and
ethnic disparity in individual counties. Academics have given a number
of reasons why racially-neutral jury pool selection processes can result
in unrepresentative juror pools. See, e.g., Kim Forde-Mazrui, Jural Districting: Selecting Impartial Juries Through Community Representation, 52 Vand. L. Rev. 353, 356 (1999) (discussing various impediments to adequate racial representation).
But the issue here is how the jury pool correlates with frequent users of the Internet and social media, and then whether jurors
who are such users can be convinced – or compelled – to not use these
services while serving jury duty.
According to the Pew Internet and American Life Project,
overall 78 percent of adults use the Internet. (There are, however,
some variations on usage based on age and education level.) About 77 percent of adults do so on a daily basis.
If a jury pool is representative of the adult population, it certainly includes these daily Internet users.
The fact that only two of the judges in the survey discovered the social
media use on their own shows that such activity is hard to detect, both
inside the courthouse and – especially – outside of it.
There are certainly numerous anecdotal instances in which jurors have
been found to be using the Internet or social media during trial. The problem
is that it may be impossible to really know how many jurors are doing
this.
But that doesn't mean that it isn't happening.
Eric P. Robinson is the deputy director of the Donald W. Reynolds
Center for Courts and Media at the University of Nevada, Reno. He
p