FRESH
YARN PRESENTS:
Trial
by Jury Duty
By
Mimi Friedman
PAGE
TWO
Okay,
it's ludicrous, but I knew I was being judged as unsympathetic and
I didn't like it. I could relate to this person because no matter
where we came from, we were both human beings. I have to just accept
the defense's request and let it go. But, I can be as fair as anyone
else. After all, I am a Libra. Balancing scales. Justice is supposedly
in my true nature. The fact that I am thinking about my astrological
sign might be reason enough to excuse me. "Thank you number
2193. Please return to the Assembly room."
This
process repeats itself four more times over the course of several
days. In between, I wait. And wait. And read. And wait. I am called
to panel, questioned, thanked and excused.
On
my ninth day of service, I see from the signs taped to the walls
that it is Jury Appreciation Week. It will be celebrated by domino
and spades tournaments during lunch hour. There will also be a rubber
stamp artwork demonstration by a retired volunteer. The drab assembly
room is decorated with balloons and streamers, which magically transform
it into a drab assembly room with balloons and streamers.
I look
next to me at a large lady in an orange pantsuit with matching lipstick
as she eats day-glo orange Cheetos from her long curved nails. They
look like the brightly colored talons of some exotic bird. She holds
a tiny television and watches Star Jones talk about the pros and
cons of spanking children. We exchange weak smiles when the P.A.
system clicks on. The monotone voice announces that there will be
a raffle with prizes because of Jury Appreciation Week. Well, at
least it'll help pass the time
precious wasted time that I
wanted to waste in my own way.
The
raffle tickets are being passed out by a woman whose bone colored
heels are so high, they cause her to teeter dangerously from side
to side. She really needs someone to spot her as she moves perilously
around the room. A large plastic container of free vending machine
treats are offered in appreciation of jurors on a chair directly
in front of me. This friendly gesture causes a fierce stampede.
A young woman, wearing a large gold necklace spelling out "I
Love Jesus," is scolded by an older craggy faced man for taking
two treats instead of one. I wonder if her necklace refers to the
Jesus or maybe her boyfriend. A very tall man wearing red suspenders
and two pair of glasses simultaneously, steps hard on my foot on
the way to his foil wrapped Rice Krispie treat. The combination
of free food and agonizing boredom doesn't bring out the best in
this group.
The
P.A. clicks on again and the monotone voice begins announcing the
raffle prizes and winners. The first giveaway is a package of six
ball point pens. The response is lukewarm, but it's a free gift,
so there is still a measure of excitement. A number is announced
and a woman with a long thick braid and very large teeth, who had
been knitting constantly, gets up to collect her prize. She is happy
but clearly embarrassed to have been singled out. The next item
is a C.D. holder. There's another mild but detectable response from
the crowd. Another number is announced and a rail thin man in a
seersucker suit and new white sneakers talks on his cell phone as
he receives his new C.D. holder.
Then,
the last prize is announced. The monotone voice says that the last
prize will be completion of jury service for the next ticket holder,
no matter where you were in your ten days. A hush falls over the
large room. Voices start filling the air in waves of excited anticipation.
Everyone wants that prize. This will mean freedom. And soon. This
is the motherlode of Jury Appreciation Week. The voices die down
and a crackling silence fills the room. There is an almost religious
air about the place. It feels like a chapel full of silent prayers
to whomever and whatever people pray. I have a clear, strong, direct
moment with my mother who passed away seven years before. I say,
"Idah, please. Help me out here." There are a few more
seconds of loaded silence as I stare at numbers on my ticket. As
they are read, I match up every number with the ones called. I
won.
In
this moment, I couldn't have been more thrilled if I had won a million
dollars in the lottery. It feels like I have been sprung from the
Big House. I jump up and look out at all the people in the room
who are cheering. Even though they hadn't won, there is clearly
a vicarious thrill that at least somebody, somebody is getting to
leave. I take a spontaneous bow and feel the need to apologize to
the cheering crowd, because they have to stay. The lady in orange
says, "Don't apologize, Honey! Get out of here and enjoy your
life!" I gather my things, thank the monotone-voiced lady who
scans my juror's badge for the last time, and wave goodbye to the
room.
I am
euphoric. The only thing I have ever won was six pork barbecue sandwiches
in high school. And I was a vegetarian. As I walk the distance to
my car, I don't know whether I am more grateful for my liberation
or the way it had happened. My mother had been my partner in this
victory. I asked for help, she heard me, and came through. Maybe
it was just blind luck, but it sure felt like something else.
So, I never actually got to serve on a jury. Yes, my normal routine
had been disrupted but sometimes it's the disruptions in life that
allow for things that otherwise would never happen.
During
the juror's lunch hour, I got to know downtown Los Angeles. I took
advantage of the wide array of incredible multi-cultural eating
opportunities: Japanese, Chinese, Lebanese, Korean and Kosher Burritos.
I watched people at the amazing Central Market. I saw storefront
wedding chapels crowded with immigrants eager for citizenship. I
mourned the passing of an era as I stared at the grandeur of a faded
movie house marquee. I watched an artist paint a colorful folk art
mural on the side of a building. I saw homeless people living in
a city-within-a-city of cardboard boxes. I went to MOCA. I marveled
at the magnificent eight story wrought iron and wood lobby of the
Bradbury building. I walked in Los Angeles.
This
is a city of extreme geographic isolation and social segregation.
The eclectic mix of humanity downtown and at the Criminal Court
revealed many, many different aspects of life. It's way too easy
to not see things here. Too easy to go about your business in your
car and stay in your little protected bubble and not see what's
around you. I was grateful for the reminder.
All
in all, I think I came out way ahead. And now, with the "one
day, one trial" system, the citizens of Los Angeles have been
spared that ten day drudgery. So, next time that pink document arrives
in my mailbox, and it will, I won't have any of my past hesitations.
Oh,
who am I kidding?
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