Chestnut
Real trials can be complex and the evidence can be very difficult to understand. I think the jurors should:
1/ have a decent level of education
2/ speak English as their first language or at least be fully fluent.
3/ no criminal record and no serious trauma in their life
We have seen here that in coming to a verdict people go by their own experiences and instead of studying the evidence they work out what THEY would have done. They are not analytical in their judgement, they are emotional, and some of those jurors should not have been there.
Who decides the above though? In a flawed world you can never get perfection- I think there were some good ideas put forward at the end of the programme about how other countries do it, and one brief example of the Danes do it.
Point 1- education is importnat but if all the population are well educated (certainly not the case here in the UK) then this wouldn't be an issue. In Denmark they receive training which make a lot more sense.
Point 2- as far as I'm aware jurors have to fulfil this criteria, I don't know if translators are available and what the implications for this would be.
Point 3- eradicating serious trauma! How would you possibly do that? What if people don't want to make their business everyone else's business?
I also think people are forgetting this was television, not a serious court case- so the jury were not representative. However, I do think it ipens up some very necessary and important issues regarding our criminal justice system.