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Tuesday, April 05, 2011

An Oldie but a Goodie: Tips for Voir Dire

In reviewing the traffic on my website recently, I was struck by how much more often one particular article was accessed than any other. I used to write a column on trial strategy for Lawyers USA (formerly Lawyers Weekly USA), and this particular article on voir dire strategy from 2006 seems to be very popular, even today. So, in the spirit of giving the public what it wants, here is that article in its entirety.

Enjoy!


Indirect Questions Reap Most Information in 
Oral Voir Dire 
By Edward P. Schwartz 
October 9, 2006 

In my last column, I discussed many of the advantages of using a 
supplemental juror questionnaire as part of jury selection – the primary 
advantage being that jurors tend to be more truthful in their responses on a 
written form than they are when questioned orally in open court.  
But the written form – at least in courts that allow traditional voir dire – should 
only be seen as a supplement to oral questioning conducted in both a group and 
an individualized setting.  

Group voir dire 

By necessity, group voir dire questions are typically framed as “yes or no” 
inquiries. Jurors are asked to raise their hands if they answer any question in the 
affirmative. Each party notes who raised a hand in response to each question 
and then follows up with questions either in open court, at sidebar or in the 
judge’s chambers, depending on the court’s prevailing practices. 

My first word of advice is not to expect to learn very much from group voir 
dire. The need to ask “yes or no” questions, coupled with the public setting, 
conspire to limit how much information you can get from potential jurors. The 
studies cited in my last column all reveal that jurors lie during group voir dire – a 
lot. Most of these lies stem from an unwillingness to volunteer information about 
private and/or sensitive subjects. 

My second bit of advice is to treat group voir dire as an entrĂ©e into 
individualized voir dire. The more often a juror raises her hand, the more 
individual questions she will have to answer. Since these follow-up questions are 
where the action is, craft your group voir dire questions in a way that prompts as 
many people to respond as possible. Instead of asking whether “you or a loved- 
one has ever been a party in a law suit,” ask whether “you know anyone who has 
participated in a lawsuit.” Many panel members will construe a question as 
narrowly as possible in order to avoid raising their hand and setting themselves 
up for additional questions.   

Ask each juror whether he or she has ever been in a courthouse before. 
Almost everyone has been at some point or another. Whether it concerns traffic 
court, small claims court or family court, you should try to learn something about 
each juror’s experience with the legal system.  

Try to keep your list of group voir dire questions short. The jurors don’t want 
to raise their hands anyway. The longer the process lasts, the less inclined 
anyone will be to volunteer information.  

I recently consulted on a trial for which the group voir dire lasted 1½ hours. 
For the last 10 minutes, not a single juror raised his or her hand. Fortunately, the 
questions from my team had been asked at the beginning. 

Some jurors are forthcoming, while others won’t raise their hands unless they 
absolutely have to. These jurors can slip through voir dire because questions are 
almost always phrased so that it is the jurors who raise their hands who are 
asked additional questions. To avoid this, I recommend that you phrase some of 
your questions so that it is the jurors who don’t raise their hands who are subject 
to individualized voir dire. So instead of asking, “Who has a relative who works in 
the health field?,” ask “Who doesn’t have a relative who works in the health 
field?” Even if the voir dire will be conducted entirely by the judge, try requesting 
that the judge mix it up in this way. 

Finally, it is a complete waste of time to ask jurors directly whether there is 
anything that would prevent them from being impartial in the case. Most people 
who answer affirmatively are just trying to get out of jury duty. The people whose 
biases are really a source of concern are rarely self-aware enough to recognize 
the problem. Finally, such questions are usually so poorly worded, and cluttered 
with negatives and dependant clauses, that jurors can’t decipher them in time to 
volunteer a response. 

Individual voir dire 

A good question in a written juror questionnaire typically does not make a 
good voir dire question. The main reason is that while people hate to write, they 
love to talk. An open-ended question on a written questionnaire is an invitation to 
leave a blank space. As I discuss in my last column, multiple-choice and sliding- 
scale questions are preferable on a written form.  

But in oral voir dire, open-ended questions provide an opportunity for jurors to 
tell you who they really are. The goal is to get potential jurors to want to tell you 
about themselves in their own words. 

Don’t ask leading or challenging questions. If you try to put words in jurors’ 
mouths, they will either repeat them back to you or clam up, depending on 
whether they like what you are saying on their behalf. So, if you ask a juror what 
she thinks about the “torts crisis” in America, she will either tell you that she 
thinks it is a “crisis” or that she doesn’t have much of an opinion about it. Such a 
question will not get her to tell you about her own experience (or those of her 
friends and family) with the civil justice system, which is what you really want to 
learn about.  

Instead, ask the juror about the most interesting court case she has ever 
heard about. What case she chooses, along with her take on the outcome, will be 
much more informative than some canned response about “fairness” or “justice.” 
Prospective jurors will instinctively try to figure out why a lawyer is asking a 
particular question. The more sensitive the topic – and the more the question 
reflects the fundamental controversy of the case – the more likely a juror is to try 
to “game” the process. One way to avoid this is to ask jurors to tell stories about 
themselves, as I mention above. Another is to ask questions about topics that 
proxy well for what you are really interested in.  

For example, I recently worked on a case involving the purchase of a firearm 
by someone who was mentally ill. We wanted to learn whether jurors were 
sensitive to the plight of people facing mental challenges and whether they 
believed society is responsible for keeping such people safe.  

To get at these attitudes, we asked a very open-ended question about each 
juror’s recollection of the Columbine tragedy. If a juror did not offer an opinion on 
her own about who was responsible, we followed up with a question about the 
juror’s initial thoughts about who was to blame.  

Some jurors blamed only the shooters. Others expressed frustration with the 
parents. A few articulated the position that everyone (parents, school, 
government, media, etc.) has a responsibility to look out for the well-being of our 
children. The jurors were generally willing to talk about Columbine because it did 
not have a direct bearing on our case. 

Another ripe area to explore is people’s relations with those close to them. 
People love to talk about their children. Rather than ask prospective jurors about 
religious preferences, ask where their kids go to school. To get a sense of how a 
juror feels about people in different professions, ask what their children want to 
be when they grow up. If one answers, “Joey, my 6-year-old, wants to be a 
policeman,” you can follow up with, “How do you and your wife feel about that?” 
A person whose son is on the debate team or who plays in the orchestra is likely 
to have different attitudes than one whose son plays on the football team and has 
joined ROTC. A person who is self-conscious about their own life can still be 
expansive about her children; use this to your advantage. 

There is another advantage to “asking around the topic.” If the other side has 
not thought through the voir dire process as thoroughly, the jurors’ responses will 
be more useful to you than they will be to your opponents. 

Be Prepared for any jury 

I have devoted the last two columns to jury selection strategies. I don’t want 
you to get the idea, however, that choosing a jury is the only, or even the most 
important, opportunity for you to improve your chances of winning at trial. As I 
always tell my clients, in terms of impact on verdict choice, who the jurors are is 
almost always swamped by what the jurors see. By all means, do all you can to 
identify and strike jurors who really will be unfair to your client; but, make sure to 
concentrate  your energy and resources on presenting your case in its most 
favorable light.