Thursday, November 7, 2019
Courtroom Observation essays
Courtroom Observation essays    The courthouse itself was abuzz on a Monday morning. Just about every     courtroom was filled, some with trials for petty traffic violations, some     with murder trials. The courtroom I selected for observation had a small     group of people milling about outside, most of them men and women in     business suits. Obviously there to witness the trial, I also believed that     a few of the people standing outside the room were slated to be witnesses     in the case. Usinger -v- Bartholemew Roofing was a criminal negligence suit     filed by a man who claimed that the roofing company he hired had     deliberately used substandard materials and performed shoddy work. A     section of the Usinger home had been destroyed because the roof suddenly     caved in over the dining room. Luckily, no one was injured. This was the           A few minutes before 9 o'clock, most of the people outside the     courtroom meandered inside to take their seats. The courtroom seated about     two hundred people in addition to the courtroom officials. I sat in the     second-to-last row, next to a man who told me he had just enrolled in law     school. After introducing myself as a fellow observer, I realized the trial     was about to begin and took out my notebook. One of the  first things I     noticed was that the atmosphere was somewhat similar to television     courtrooms but that setting seemed more relaxed somehow and quieter. I was     surprised how many visitors and observers there were, and was equally taken     aback by the relative informality of the interactions between judge and     attorney. The judge spoke in a fairly subdued voice, and only one of the     lawyers spoke loudly, directing his attention to the jury as if he were an     actor. The jury I noticed consisted of a heterogeneous group of men and     women, several of whom were minorities.           The defendants, including a representative from Bartholemew Roofing     and the two contractors who completed the bulk of the work at t...     
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