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Do I have to perform jury service if Im over 70 years of age? There is no age exemption for jury service. If you are 70 years of age or older, the California Rules of Court allow you to be excused due to a medical condition without a doctors note.
The judge and the attorneys then ask the potential jurors questions to determine their suitability to serve on the jury, a process called voir dire. The purpose of voir dire is to exclude from the jury people who may not be able to decide the case fairly.
You may not serve on a jury if you have been convicted of a malfeasance in office and your civil rights have not been restored. See California Code of Civil Procedure, Section 203(a) (5).
The judge will advise the jury that it is the sole judge of the facts and of the credibility (believability) of witnesses. He or she will note that the jurors are to base their conclusions on the evidence as presented in the trial, and that the opening and closing arguments of the lawyers are not evidence.
Twenty-two states have rejected the charge by judicial decision: Alaska. Arizona. California. Colorado. Hawaii. Idaho. Kentucky. Louisiana.

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Allen charges (also referred to as dynamite, nitroglycerin, shotgun, or third-degree charges) refer to jury instructions given to a hung jury urging them to agree on a verdict.
Jury instructions are instructions for jury deliberation that are written by the judge and given to the jury. At trial, jury deliberation occurs after evidence is presented and closing arguments are made.
You can only be excused from jury duty for: Any reason deemed sufficient by the court. Medical reasons. Public necessity. Undue hardship. Dependent care. Student Status. Military conflict.
An Allen charge, derived from this Courts decision in Allen v. United States, 164 U.S. 492 (1896), is a set of supplemental instructions that encour- age deadlocked jurors to reexamine the grounds for their opinions and continue deliberations in an effort to docHub a verdict. The government agreed.
A jury instruction is a guideline given by the judge to the jury about the law they will have to apply to the facts they have found to be true. The purpose of the instructions is to help the jury arrive at a verdict that follows the law of that jurisdiction.

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