Online Jury Trials

By on June 6, 2013 in Ideas


eJury is a website that allows an attorney the opportunity to “pre-try” the case before it goes to trial in front of an actual jury at the courthouse. Cases at the courthouse are usually tried to juries of 12 people. At eJury, each case is tried to a minimum of 50 people. This provides the attorney with a tremendous amount of feedback which he/she will use to establish a settlement value, find strengths and weaknesses in the evidence, learn “public” attitudes, improve jury selection, discover the most effective arguments

Jurors are paid for each verdict rendered. eJurors are paid $5 – $10 depending on the length of the case. Attorneys pay a minimum of $350.

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Business Opportunities Weblog editor and publisher Dane Carlson lives in the Sierra Nevada mountains of California, just 15 miles from Yosemite National Park. He accidentally became a professional blogger in 2001. He has added 12,208 posts to the site.

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  • http://wahm.business-opportunities.biz Angela Shupe

    I hate to admit it, but I think that is pretty cool. It’s important for lawyers to find the holes in their case, and this sounds like a good opportunity to do that. Considering how much some lawyers make per hour, that doesn’t sound like a bad price either.

  • Nayo Tawken

    Brilliant! If they earn enough respect for just verdicts, they could carry the same weight as private arbiters and eventually be ceded enough authority by the general public for State Courts to merely rubber-stamp their verdicts or raise questions of why they are overturned. This is the beginning of privatizing the justice system with no other motive than finding justice! This is the prime necessity towards curbing the abuses of State sovereignty by politicians and bureaucrats who systematically provoke enemies in far-off lands to bring about unnecessary wars, cripple whole economies in pursuit of special-interests that harm others and even commit democide (see wikipedia) against their fellow citizens.

  • http://www.AchieveTheGreenBeretWay.com/welcome Michael Martel

    Great way to twist an existing service and make it even better. Mock juries have been around for decades, if not centuries.

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