September 3, 2021
By Brendan Pierson
(Reuters) – A U.S. judge this week dismissed from a jury pool nine people who were unvaccinated against COVID-19. He said his aim was to keep jurors and their families healthy but might his decision skew the jury pool?
U.S. District Judge Edward Davila, presiding over the California fraud trial of Theranos founder Elizabeth Holmes, took the action on Tuesday.
While choosing an all-vaccinated jury may be within a court’s power to safeguard jurors, critics say it could reduce the fairness of trials.
“If you excuse those (unvaccinated) people, you no longer have a representative jury,” said Christina Marinakis, a jury consultant with litigation consulting company IMS.
The gender, age and ethnicity of the nine excused jurors could not be determined, but vaccinated Americans are more likely to be older, female, white, college educated and Democratic.
Data compiled by the Kaiser Family Foundation shows 70% of white Americans have been vaccinated, compared to 65% of Black Americans; 71% of females, compared to 63% of males; and 86% of Democrats, compared to 54% of Republicans.
“I think it’s a reasonable decision in the midst of the pandemic, but yes, the elimination of unvaccinated people is likely to affect the makeup of the jury pool,” said Valerie Hans, a professor at Cornell Law School.
Experts said the issue was likely to arise more frequently as in-person trials resume amid the pandemic.
While both the prosecution and defense in the Holmes’ trial backed the decision to excuse unvaccinated jurors, the issue could be grounds for challenging a verdict in cases where the parties do not agree.
A lawyer for Holmes and a representative of the U.S. Attorney for the Northern District of California, whose office is prosecuting the case, did not immediately respond to requests for comment.
“Any unusual restrictions on who is eligible to serve on the jury in a particular case could raise issues on appeal,” said Kaspar Stoffelmayr, of the law firm Bartlit Beck.
Stoffelmayr confronted the question earlier this year, as the lawyer for Walgreens Boots Alliance in litigation over the pharmacy operator’s alleged role in fueling the opioid epidemic.
The Ohio federal judge overseeing that case initially ordered that all jurors be vaccinated, but reversed course after Walgreens and other defendants argued that requirement would skew the jury.
They cited race and sex disparities and noted that vaccinated jurors were more likely to be older, wealthier, educated and more politically liberal.
AN IMPARTIAL JURY
The 6th Amendment of the U.S. Constitution guarantees criminal defendants the right to trial by an “impartial jury,” and courts have found that excluding jurors based on race or sex violates that right.
Hadar Aviram, a professor at University of California Hastings College of the Law who specializes in civil rights, said that in general, the demographic disparities resulting from excusing unvaccinated jurors would not run afoul of the Constitution, since the rationale for excluding them was not discriminatory.
But she said screening by vaccination status could lead to a jury that is unrepresentative of the general population in meaningful ways. Unvaccinated jurors are more likely to be politically conservative than liberal, she said.
Marinakis, the jury consultant, said those who do not get vaccinated tend to be critical of both companies and government.
“The trend we’ve found consistently across jurisdictions is that people who are unvaccinated tend to have more anti-corporate attitudes,” she said. “Those jurors tend to be distrustful of government bodies, tend to feel things aren’t always what they seem.”
While that could be good for criminal defendants in many cases, she said, conservative jurors in the Holmes case might be more likely to view her claim that she was under the control of an abusive romantic partner, former Theranos chief operating officer Ramesh Balwani, as “just an excuse.”
Balwani has denied the allegations.
Stoffelmayr, however, cautioned against trying to predict how jurors would behave based on their vaccination status.
“I would not assume that demographic differences, or differences in personal beliefs and attitudes, between vaccinated and unvaccinated jurors would necessarily favor one side or the other in the Holmes case,” he said.
(Reporting By Brendan Pierson in New York; Editing by Noeleen Walder and Howard Goller)
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