Legally Bland
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From the link:There are several differences between a death penalty trial and other criminal trials in Florida, including the size of the jury.
The jury doubles from six people to 12 people during capital cases, according to the Florida Rules of Criminal Procedure.
“In addition to being asked general questions about whether they can be fair, jurors are asked a series of questions related their beliefs about capital punishment,” Dunham said.
"You are also excluded from service if you say you'd automatically impose the death penalty, but virtually nobody says that,” he said.
Florida Statue outlines 16 aggravating factors, including some related to the defendant’s criminal history and the age and person of the victim.
Sievers had five life insurance policies under his wife's name totaling $4.4 million and planned to pay Curtis Wayne Wright, another defendant in the case, to kill her, according to an affidavit released by the State Attorney’s Office in 2015.
https://www.news-press.com/story/news/crime/2019/09/27/teresa-sievers-murder-trial-what-to-know-about-death-penalty-florida/2369836001/
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Sara Miles, a public information officer for the 20th Judicial Circuit, said if either case goes to trial Tuesday, she expects Rodgers would be tried first. Each trial is expected to last four weeks, she said.
Kathleen Fitzgeorge, Rodgers’ public defender, confirmed one of the jury trials is scheduled to start Tuesday but said she wasn’t sure which defendant would be tried first.
Michael Mummert, Sievers’ defense attorney, could not be reached for comment.