[nfb-talk] mistake made in jury duty pool; would like advice
Ray Foret Jr
rforetjr at att.net
Wed Mar 28 00:54:18 UTC 2012
No, he did not specify print; but, that, I think, was what he meant.
Sincerely,
The Constantly Barefooted Ray!!!
Now a very proud and happy Mac user!!!
Skype name:
barefootedray
Facebook:
facebook.com/ray.foretjr.1
On Mar 27, 2012, at 7:24 PM, Loren wrote:
> He did not ask if you could read and write it in print, did he? And it's
> nice to hear of a blind person not trying to get out of jury duty because he
> is blind.
>
> Loren
>
>
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: nfb-talk-bounces at nfbnet.org [mailto:nfb-talk-bounces at nfbnet.org] On
> Behalf Of Ray Foret Jr
> Sent: Tuesday, March 27, 2012 7:03 PM
> To: NFB Talk Mailing List
> Subject: [nfb-talk] mistake made in jury duty pool; would like advice
>
> Frankly, I feel like shit. I really screwed up. I won't bore y'all with
> every detail of what happened; but, it boils down to this.
>
>
> The judge started asking question, and everything was going well.
> Then, he asked if we could all read and write the English language. Here's
> where I fucked up. YOu see, if your answer was yes, you kept your hand
> down; if no, you raised it. forgetting that for the moment, I raised my
> hand. The judge then confirmed that I was blind and had counsel approach.
> I was then dismissed. didn't even get a chance to explain how I could
> handle stuff. So, I tried to save the situation by having it officially
> entered in to the court records that I wished for my name to remain in the
> potential jury pool for next summons. My only recourse, now, as I see it,
> is to write the judge a letter explaining how I would deal with things like
> that as a blind person. When I said to the judge, "I want to make it clear
> that I do NOT want to have my name removed from the potential jury pool!",
> the judge said,
> "I will certainly not have your name removed. I wish more people
> had your attitude.".
> that's why a well written print or typed letter might, I feel, make
> an impression on the mind of the judge. e-mail will just simply not do;
> and, a phone call would be even worse. What I would like to know is this.
> Given the circumstances, such things as the KNFB reader are just not
> feasible because I don't have nor can afford one. Human readers seem
> doubtful because one would have to be sworn to the trial before dealing with
> documentation and other visual evidence. Would it be possible for other
> blind people who have successfully served on juries before give me advice on
> what I can do to convince the judge of our competence? I suspect that with
> the right approach, the judge might be willing to consider what I have to
> say. It seems that it always hangs on the visual question.
>
> So, there's my sucky day.
>
> Oh if only I had kept my damn hand down!!
>
>
> Sincerely,
> The Constantly Barefooted Ray!!!
>
> Now a very proud and happy Mac user!!!
>
> Skype name:
> barefootedray
>
> Facebook:
> facebook.com/ray.foretjr.1
>
>
>
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