Author: Michael Shammas

Thoughts on Optimizing Time & Attention in Virtual Trials

By Michael Shammas, Research Fellow & Attorney By some estimates, a COVID-19 vaccine may be delayed until mid-2021. I’ve previously examined the logistical difficulties affecting virtual trials and hearings. Two as-yet unexamined aspects involve technology’s impact on (1) judicial time

A Report on the Civil Jury Project’s Mock Zoom Jury Trial

By Michael Pressman, Research Fellow Last Thursday, the Civil Jury Project—with the help of many contributors—conducted a mock jury trial over Zoom. This endeavor had several goals: (1) demonstrating to judges and attorneys across the country that jury trials can

The Dawn of the Civil Jury in Argentina

By Andrés Harfuch[1]and Juan Sebastián Lloret[2] Trial by jury was guaranteed in Argentina since 1853, when three different sections of our country’s constitution established jury trial not only for criminal trials but also for other branches of the law. As

Advocacy Through the Computer Screen: Best Practices for Effective Remote Advocacy

By the Hon. Mark Drummond (Ret.), Judicial Advisor I am writing this column in my “home office,” which is our dining room table. The world outside has changed. Keeping my social distance, I can jaywalk across 5 th Avenue at

Bench Trial By Videoconference

By Michael Pressman, Research Fellow In various courts across the country, judges have been beginning to conduct civil bench trials over videoconference platforms (such as Zoom). Among the first of such videoconference trials was a one-day civil bench trial conducted

Memorandum: The Permissibility & Constitutionality of Jury Trial by Videoconference

By Michael Pressman & Michael Shammas, Research Fellows Below, our research fellows analyze, in the form of a legal memorandum, whether online jury trials are constitutional and permissible under federal and local rules. This question is likely to be met

What Online Jury Trials Could Look Like

By Richard Gabriel Federal and state courts in all 50 states have postponed jury trials and are struggling to try and maintain court functions and access to the justice system in light of the COVID-19 pandemic and public health concerns.

Seating a Civil Jury During a Pandemic

By the Honorable David Keenan, Judicial Advisor It’s early on a Monday morning.  You lost an hour’s sleep yesterday because of Daylight Saving Time.  Your city recently emerged from a record-breaking 30 days with rain in a single month and

Time Limits in Civil Jury Trials

By the Honorable Nathaniel Gorton, Judicial Advisor As a United States District Judge, I almost invariably impose time limitations on counsel in civil jury trials.  I find that such limitations benefit not only the jurors who are, of course, required

The Trial of Counting Trials

By Michael Elias Shammas, Research Fellow “It is clear that the number of jury trials declined in many, perhaps most, jurisdictions … over the last fifty years.”[1] As Professor Marc Galanter writes, this decline reflects a long-term phenomenon with roots

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