B. Statutory Admonitions
G.S. 15A-1236(a) requires the trial judge at appropriate times to admonish the jurors that it is their duty:
•
not to talk among themselves about the case except in the jury room after their deliberations have begun;
• not to talk to anyone else or to allow anyone else to talk with them or in their presence about the case, and to report to the judge immediately the attempt of anyone to communicate with them about the case;
•
not to form an opinion about the guilt or innocence of the defendant, or express any opinion about the case until they begin their deliberations;
• to avoid reading, watching, or listening to accounts of the trial; and
• not to talk during trial to parties, witnesses, or counsel.
Source:
http://www.ncids.org/Def Manual Info/Defender_Manual_Vol 2/DefenderManual_CH24.pdf
Because it certainly appears (to me, anyway) that on June 14th, when the jurors asked to see that evidence, marked
State's #313, that they had to be discussing the case amongst themselves, since 'they' asked the judge to see it again.
If these above laws apply in FL Criminal Trials (which I don't see why they wouldn't), then I think these jurors should be charged with Jury Misconduct.
And, how Judge Perry didn't pick up on this is just beyond my comprehension. I thought he was the 'cream of the crop', being he is Chief Judge of the Ninth Circuit Court.