The idea is to identify jurors whose experiences could render them unable to be fair and impartial. By this logic, it may seem reasonable to ask potential jurors during selection for a sex crime trial whether they have ever experienced sexual violence. Lawyers on both sides may have good reasons for wanting to know. But the search for impartiality in a sex crime trial must be handled differently. Questions like the one to the Maxwell jury show how far American courts are from reflecting some basic truths about sexual violence and send the wrong message about what impartiality means.
For one thing, sexual violence is extremely pervasive. According to the National Sexual Violence Resource Center, one in five American women will experience rape or attempted rape at some time in her life, to say nothing of other sorts of assault. One in four American men will experience some form of sexual violence, including rape, coercion or unwanted sexual contact. Furthermore, when an inquiry includes sexual harassment — which encompasses behavior that may not even be illegal — how many women can confidently tick the box “no”? Even assuming some people can truthfully attest to having experienced none of the above, questionnaires like the one in the Maxwell case want to know what friends and family have suffered, too, making it tough to imagine who could possibly say “no” — if people are paying attention.
These queries can turn a sacred civic responsibility into a source of humiliation and disrespect. We know how underreported sex crimes are. According to the most recent estimates, up to some three-quarters of the time the victim never goes to the police. Many victims often express fears of being defined by the worst thing that happened to them. If you are among the vast majority who choose silence after such a crime, imagine how jarring it would be to be required to identify yourself as a victim in court — under time pressure, maybe even in writing, on a form whose future disclosure you can’t control — simply because you reported for jury duty.
These questions also imply that sexual violence carries a taint and makes for defective jurors. This is troubling in itself. Consider where it leaves us: Do we really want to stack our juries with “objective” people who believe — no doubt often incorrectly — that they don’t know anyone who has ever been sexually harassed, abused or assaulted? Wouldn’t such a jury have biases of its own? Studies show that rape myths (that a woman should do everything she can to repel her attacker, for example, and that her resistance is a critical factor in determining the rapist’s culpability) affect deliberations in rape cases. To signal a preference for the supposedly unencumbered juror may produce a jury pool even more burdened by false and prejudicial views.
Alison J. Nathan, the presiding judge, took care to note before the hearing that there’s nothing wrong with jurors relying on their experience when deliberating in a case like Maxwell’s: “To be clear, the potential impropriety is not that someone with a history of sexual abuse may have served on the jury. Rather, it is the potential failure to respond truthfully to questions during the jury selection process that asked for that material information so that any potential bias could be explored.” In fact, we should not just tolerate jurors drawing from experience; we should recognize it as the reason our Constitution empowers a diverse jury, not the same judges over and over again, to decide criminal convictions.