Essay/Term paper: Court experience
Essay, term paper, research paper: Politics
Free essays available online are good but they will not follow the guidelines of your particular writing assignment. If you need a custom term paper on Politics: Court Experience, you can hire a professional writer here to write you a high quality authentic essay. While free essays can be traced by Turnitin (plagiarism detection program), our custom written essays will pass any plagiarism test. Our writing service will save you time and grade.
Court Experience
I went to the court session on Wednesday afternoon at 2:00 and stayed
until around 4:35. They did not start court though until a little after 2.
Before court started everyone was talking to each other and having a good time.
There was only one other person in the courtroom besides myself watching the
trial and that person was also from this class.
When court resumed the lawyers were trying to agree to certain things
concerning the trial before the jury came back in. Since I had not seen the
beginning of this trial, I had no idea who was suing whom or what was going on.
Finally after they had got those things ironed out and a map set up, the jury
was finally called back into the courtroom for closing arguments.
To give the basics that I picked up from closing arguments was that Guge
who owns the Exxon on 105 extension was wanting more money from the state for
some property that they were confiscating for construction. The state was
offering around $60,000 and he wants $300,000. The lawyer for Guge went first.
He went on forever it seemed like. It was over an hour that he went on talking.
Some of the jurors were falling asleep as well as the judge while he was
speaking. It seems that he could have been more concise with his argument.
Pretty bad when even the judge nods off. The judge even got up and left during
part of the closing arguments.
The states attorney began his closing arguments. His name was McKinney.
His argument was straight to the point. He got his point across and actually
kept members of the jury awake. While he was giving his closing arguments, the
two attorneys for Guge and Guge himself were whispering between one another.
After McKinney finished his closing arguments, which was about 30 minutes or so,
Guge's attorney had his last say so. I believe that man talked to hear his
ownself!
After the closing arguments, the judge asked the jury if they wanted a
break. They indicted that they wanted one so the judge called for a break.
During the break, one of the jurors asked to be removed from the jury. She said
that she was sick. The judge conferred with the attorneys and they let her go
home. The first alternate took her place. He also released the second
alternate juror to go home since she was not needed. Then when they came back
in the judge gave them instructions concerning the deciding on the case. The
judge seemed bored during this process as well. Finally the judge sent the jury
to the room to deliberate. When I left the jury was still deliberating.
The judge's name was Johnston and the bailiff was Collins. Collins told
us that Johnston was the judge from Charlotte that was on that big murder case
where a man had killed all those women. As I was leaving the courtroom, the
lawyers for Guge stopped me. Talked to me for a few minutes and then asked me
what I would do if I was on the jury. Just from the closing arguments, I
wouldn't give Guge much more than the $60,000 if any. If I had to listen to
Guge's attorney for the entire trial, I probably vote against him for that
reason.