Vol. 39, Number 11 November 2007
eJuror Aimed at Making Jury Service More User Friendly
As federal courts continue
working to make jury service as
positive an experience as possible,
a planned website will allow
prospective jurors to complete
qualification questionnaires and
obtain relevant reporting information
online.
The new technology, called
eJuror, is an enhancement to the
courts’ Jury Management System
(JMS) that will save time and
money for both the courts and
those citizens contacted about jury
service. It is anticipated that eJuror
will be available to federal district
courts sometime in 2008.
“With the web page, jury participants
will be provided 24-hour
service without requiring additional
court staff time,” said David
Williams, an attorney-advisor in
the Administrative Office and JMS
co-project manager.
Some federal courts are ahead
of the curve, such as the Eastern
District of Virginia in Norfolk,
where the number of people who
respond to jury questionnaires
online has grown each year the
technology has been used.
A majority of districts use a twostep
process in which a questionnaire
is mailed out before a jury
summons, while courts using a
one-step process mail the questionnaire
and summons at the
same time. In both one-step and
two-step courts, eJuror will give
a prospective juror the option of
responding to the qualification
questionnaire online.
Once qualified, prospective
jurors in two-step courts can
answer questions for a summons
online. For all courts, jurors can request a deferral, excusal, or
partial excusal online as well.
(A partial excuse can be available
if prospective jurors cannot
serve the full term of their service
due to business travel, schooling,
or some other personal reason.)
In both one-step and twostep
courts, prospective jurors
can access their reporting status
through the eJuror application.
That status will be viewable on a
separate page via an easily
accessible link.
Among other reporting information,
prospective jurors may be
told, “You are expected to appear,”
or “You are postponed to a date
on or after . . .,” or “You are not
required to report.”
Also available online will be an
exit survey, which will be used to
measure an eJuror user’s experience
with the application and the
process as a whole. And eJuror will
be able to provide documented
proof of jury service, required by
some employers. |