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Café conversation with juror's colleague lands lawyer in hot water

Author
Open Justice,
Publish Date
Wed, 12 Oct 2022, 11:43am
A lawyer who tried to initiate contact with a jury foreperson by approaching one of the woman's colleagues in a cafe, has been censured. Photo / 123RF
A lawyer who tried to initiate contact with a jury foreperson by approaching one of the woman's colleagues in a cafe, has been censured. Photo / 123RF

Café conversation with juror's colleague lands lawyer in hot water

Author
Open Justice,
Publish Date
Wed, 12 Oct 2022, 11:43am

A lawyer has been censured for trying to make contact with a jury foreperson soon after a trial ended.

A recently-released decision of a Lawyers Standards Committee did not name the parties involved but found the lawyer breached conduct and client care rules when she initiated a conversation with a colleague of the foreperson.

The committee censured the lawyer and ordered her to pay $500 costs but did not impose a fine.

The lawyer – who worked in the same building as the foreperson – spoke to a colleague of the woman's while they were each waiting for coffee at a local cafe.

The colleague relayed the conversation to the foreperson, who formally complained.

The colleague told the committee that after initially asking if he worked with the foreperson, the lawyer said she was interested in discussing the case but was not allowed to approach the woman directly.

In contrast, the lawyer told the committee she anticipated crossing paths with the foreperson at some point as they worked in the same building and that she only wanted to pass on her reassurance she would not ask about the trial.

She also said the foreperson was "free to make comment about my performance or matters of the like to me but that I would not address the matter with her".

The committee found the conduct unsatisfactory.

While the exact nature of the exchange was not clear, there was no doubt a conversation took place and that it was only because of the trial, the committee said.

The lawyer had at least referred to the foreperson being "free to approach" her with comments.

That conduct "amounted to initiating contact with a juror after the verdict which invited, encouraged or welcomed further discussions… regardless of the intent or purpose of further discussions", the committee said.

It noted the exchange left the foreperson feeling apprehensive and reluctant to be a juror in the future.

In the situation where a verdict has already been given, a lawyer "must not initiate contact with jurors… where the contact is likely to bring the system of justice into disrepute", the committee said.

- Sarah Curtis, Open Justice

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