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 October 5, 2012 in 

This is my talk on jury selection—the law, the science, and the practice—from the State Bar of Texas Advanced Criminal Law Course in San Antonio in July 2012.

[jwplayer mediaid=”4545″]

My accompanying paper on Texas’s law of jury selection is here.

My paper on simple rules for better jury selection is here.

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7 Comments

  1. Gideon October 6, 2012 at 5:46 pm - Reply

    I found this very informative. I will bookmark it for future reference.

    No, seriously. Thanks.

  2. Mana Yegani October 7, 2012 at 2:20 pm - Reply

    Thanks for posting the video. It’s very detailed and thus quite helpful. Too bad I could not get CLE credit for it. :)

  3. […] or against all without mentioning the specific facts of the case at hand. As Mark Bennett says in his lecture on jury selection (more on that in a second), what we really want to do, as lawyers, is to take each juror aside and […]

  4. Thomas R. Griffith October 15, 2012 at 1:58 pm - Reply

    Mr. B., on the heels of viewing the “Bennett Method”, I had the opportunity to receive a Jury Summons. This time, instead of filling in the Disqualifications box – I have been convicted of a theft or a felony and hoping the next notice is properly delivered so I can rinse & repeat, I’m going to participate up until the point I’m shown the door.

    One question I’ll be pondering the answer to is – In the pre-cherry-picking process of jury selection would it be considered a rights violation when the wrongfully convicted are disqualified due to being lumped in with the rightfully convicted in one vague question? Despite this itch, thanks for sharing the inspiring lecture for the: clients, voters & taxpayers of tomorrow will have you to thank if the methods are utilized and jurors are treated like humans vs. numbers up front.

  5. Jill Nelson October 20, 2012 at 1:52 pm - Reply

    Mark, something is off when I print from the PDF on the Texas Law of Jury Selection paper (and maybe its just me), but pages 14-17 print out with the numbers 11-14 making it appear that pages are missing.

  6. Noah Clements October 23, 2012 at 3:53 pm - Reply

    With regard to the question of “how many of you have religious beliefs that preclude you from judging others?”, do you think that the defendant has standing to assert the people’s rights to serve on a jury?

    • Mark W. Bennett October 23, 2012 at 4:17 pm - Reply

      If it’s anything like Equal Protection, they can. See, for example, Batson and McCollum.

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