Rape case jurors were quizzed
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Marisa O’Neil
Prospective jurors in a high-profile gang-rape case answered queries
in a 23-page questionnaire, released this week, about their views on
teen sex and drug use and about the media exposure the case has
received.
A jury of eight men, four women and three alternates has already
heard the first three days of the case, but Orange County Superior
Court Judge Francisco Briseno did not release the questionnaire until
Wednesday, two weeks after the jury was selected. Only blank copies
of the 100-question document were made public.
The juror questionnaire in another high-profile case -- the
Michael Jackson child-molestation case in Santa Barbara County -- is
eight pages and 41 questions long. Jury selection in that case is not
yet complete.
The lengthy questionnaire helped speed up the process of jury
selection, said John Barnett, attorney for 20-year-old Kyle
Nachreiner, one of three defendants in the case. The court
pre-screened nearly 800 jurors last month and whittled that down to
some 120 who filled out the questionnaires.
Interviews of prospective jurors took a day and a half before a
jury was impaneled.
“That made it a lot faster,” Barnett said of the lengthy
questionnaires. “A lot of questions didn’t have to be asked
individually. Most of the work was done in the evaluation of the
questionnaires.”
The first trial of 19-year-old Greg Haidl, Nachreiner and
20-year-old Keith Spann -- on charges they gang-raped an allegedly
unconscious 16-year-old girl in 2002 -- ended with a hung jury. The
case generated enormous publicity, at least partially due to the
position of Greg Haidl’s father, Don Haidl, who was an Orange County
Assistant Sheriff at the time.
That publicity, though small compared to that of the Jackson case,
raised concerns among attorneys that the jury pool in Orange County
was tainted.
The questionnaire in the gang-rape retrial asked prospective
jurors what, if anything, they had heard about the case and if they
had formed opinions on it. And if they had, it continued, could they
put those aside and make a decision based on the evidence alone?
It also asked them to identify their primary sources of news.
“The questions were on the sensitive matter of the trial and
whether they had preconceived notions they could not put aside,” said
Deputy Dist. Atty. Susan Schroeder.
Other questions ask jurors how common they feel date rape is in
our society and how common group sex is among teenagers. Jurors with
children were asked if their children drank alcohol, smoked
marijuana, engaged in sexual behavior or visited pornographic
websites as teenagers.
“Would you be able to watch a videotape that shows foreign objects
being inserted into the body of a teenage girl and still a remain
fair and impartial juror throughout the entire trial?” one entry on
the questionnaire reads.
A videotape of the July 2002 incident is a key piece of evidence
in the case. The three defendants are accused of sexually assaulting
the girl with objects including a Snapple bottle, a pool cue and a
lighted cigarette.
The jury had this week off because of one member’s
previously-scheduled vacation. The trial is scheduled to resume
Tuesday with defense attorneys continuing their cross-examination of
Jane Doe, the alleged victim.
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