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Case 22-1426, Document 79, 06/29/2023, 3536060, Page63 of 93 50 questions on his written questionnaire. After an exten- sive hearing, Judge Nathan concluded that the juror’s error was inadvertent, and in any event, she would not have struck the juror for cause had he answered those question accurately because he was not biased in any way against Maxwell and was qualified to serve as a juror. Judge Nathan therefore found that Maxwell failed to meet the high bar for a new trial and denied her motion. This Court should affirm that careful de- termination. A. Relevant Facts 1. The Jury Selection Process In November 2021, in advance of trial, 694 jurors completed a juror questionnaire approved by the Dis- trict Court. (Dkt.529 at 2). The juror questionnaire was 29 pages and consisted of 51 questions, many of which contained subparts. (A.290-317). After the par- ties reviewed the questionnaires, 231 of the 694 pro- ceeded to voir dire. (Dkt.529 at 2-4). The District Court then examined prospective jurors, asking them about questions in the jury questionnaire that prospective jurors had answered affirmatively. The District Court asked the prospective jurors whether the information or experiences resulting in the affirmative answer would interfere with their ability to be fair and impar- tial. At the conclusion of voir dire, the District Court qualified 58 jurors. (Voir Dire Tr.717). Of the 58 indi- viduals who were qualified to serve as jurors, eight in- dividuals responded to Question 48 of the juror ques- tionnaire that they themselves had been a victim of DOJ-OGR-00021710

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Filename DOJ-OGR-00021710.jpg
File Size 630.2 KB
OCR Confidence 95.3%
Has Readable Text Yes
Text Length 1,601 characters
Indexed 2026-02-03 20:16:18.869029