Kenosha trial update:
A jury of 12 has been randomly selected from the pool of 18 and is deliberating, and the judge sounds different today. Possibly sick.
That's how it's done in the US(/Wisconsin/Kenosha)? I thought I knew about the defender/prosecutor bargaining what mix of people would be on the jury (from OJ Simpson era), but still
before the case was ever fully put to/argued against. This sounds like "we've made our cases, now who do we ask to think about what we said?", which doesn't sound proper.
(From a UK perspective, SFAICT in my own stint on Jury Duty the eventual twelve of us were initially sitting in the nury-suite, along with dozens of others similarly 'on call' and either enjoying or fretting about the enforced paid absence from work. Then we got called in to hear a case by some sort of next-on-the-master-list order (I think we'd all been attending for about a week, out of a planned four, at this stage, but I couldn't keep track, we weren't encouraged to introduce ourselves socially and I go face-blind for most recent acquaintences). After being formally asked if any of us knew anything/had other reason to be excused this sitting given some very basic details (no-one did? If anyone did, they were to be immediately swapped out before hearing more details), we were there for the duration, deliberation and verdict. Whether the counsels/lawyers/solicitors/whatever pre-approved our little group by whatever legal mysticism/omniscient Sorting Hat they had at hand, I don't really know.)
But 'tis Merika. Of course it's done differently.