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I suspect DAs have a natural affinity for police officers, and judges may have as well. I doubt any of them have "no opinion" at the start of a trial.
But they don't have to have "no opinion" at the start of a trial. They're not the ones deciding someone's fate. They're expected to their jobs, for which they have trained for years, professionally, and I believe they can even with an opinion. Their duty isn't the same as jurors.
Yet, the system depends on DAs to charge fairly and on judges to be unbiased as to guilt or innocence.
For this to be true, such persons have to be able to compartmentalize their preconceived notions of guilt and innocence, just as jurors are asked to do. True, judges are professionals, but they aren't the only professionals who are required to hold their judgments in abeyance while they look at evidence. The same is true of scientists and other academics. Even theater critics (at least in theory)!
Individual results will vary, of course.
Compartmentalizing what you "feel" in order to do your job by the book is easier, IMO. I'd argue that most of us do that every day in our jobs. I'm talking about ordinary citizens "unseeing" things they've seen. Pretending they don't know things they know. Those things absolutely color your opinion which is why so many already have a guilt-or-innocence opinion in this case. I'm going to give a wild example and I know this would never happen, but just as an example to illustrate my point, I ask that you go with it. Let's say the judge says "you can't introduce the cell phone evidence in the trial" for whatever reason. So let's say jurors who didn't really study the case or the PCA (again, it's just an example and I know it wouldn't happen) don't remember anything about BK's cell phone, but the jurors who were sleuthing this case not only know his cell pinged in the area 12 times before the murders, but they also know that the cell was turned off at the time of the murders and that the cell pinged in the area the morning after the murders. Do you really expect a juror to forget that tidbit? Because, IMO, even if the juror tries to, it would be exceedingly difficult, if not impossible, to do that.
I'd also say that there are many possibilities for seating a jury. I would be shocked to find either a defense attorney or prosecutor who would seat an active BK sleuther on the BK jury. Again to clarify, I'm not saying that sleuthers can never serve on any jury. I'm saying that I wouldn't want someone on the jury of the case they sleuthed.
I'll agree that it's difficult to come up with 12 totally impartial individuals who don't serve in various professional capacities that could color their views AND who aren't connected to victim or defendant and who don't know much about the case AND don't sleuth, etc, etc, etc. I get it. I'm just saying that to me, seating jurors with engaged in thorough sleuthing of the case (as us here on this thread) is not my idea of justice. Obviously, YMMV.
MOO.