I think there is a completely different way to view the information about J17 that was available during the voir dire process.
She's an Hispanic woman who claims to have witnessed and been involved in DV with what I assume would be her first husband? A violent felon. If there is someone who knows what DV really is, it should be her right? According to her she was in an abusive relationship in which she was married to the perp, living with him, and had two children with him. So technically you'd think she'd understand that JA's situation was not DV and that TA was an angel compared to the man who abused her. The kind of juror that I think it was mentioned more than once during the trial, that some people hoped had actually made it onto the jury. And JA does not identify with her Hispanic culture, another thing for an Hispanic woman to question about her right? Well wrong apparently. Also, technically, while JM may have been the prosecutor in her first husband's murder trial, he got off very lightly from what I've seen on the court records. So why would she have a problem with JM?
I guess that's the other way to look at it. For all the reasons that J17 should have "gotten it" that the defence team was lying about TA, DV, PTSD, etc, she, for some reason, did not. I have my own opinion on that but I just wanted to point out how the PT might have thought she was a good candidate.
Perhaps my question is why did the defense think it was a good idea to have a real DV victim on the jury? Someone who watched snippets of a made for TV movie that depicted JA as a manipulating monster? And since the court records don't show it, IS she a real DV victim?
MOO