I believe it is clear that the jurors did not understand reasonable doubt. At least number three did not nor did the alternate. I base this on the fact that number 3 and number 14 both said there was no cause of death nor motive shown. Neither are necessary to proving murder. And "reasonable" doubt does not mean no doubt at all.
The majority of Americans, from both sides of the aisle, and from all walks of life, feel that there was no reasonable doubt. Those able and willing to serve for several weeks on a sequestered jury simply do not represent a good cross sampling of U.S. citizens. The proof is in the pudding - most attorneys, legal analysts and trial watchers are stunned, shocked and outraged by the verdict.
However, I am against professional juries (even though my dear ol' dad thought that was the way to go!). I think professional juries would be to vulnerable to corruption or biases based on relationships with attorneys they get to know, etc.
I feel that the answer, which is not a great one or one easy to implement, is to concentrate much more on critical thinking skills in school. Now, we teach to the test rather than allowing our students to use their logic and reasoning skills. There is a great inability of many students graduating from high school to apply logic to many situations.
I worried greatly about juror number 4. I said that when a person lacks the ability to understand complicated forensics, etc., they go back to how things "appear". A nice, friendly lawyer would never lie to them. A sweet, female defendant cranking her chair down low to appear small, smiling at the jurors, looking appropriately sad when called to do so, could not have killed her kid. Little did I know that my fears would apply to the jury as a whole.
The fact is, as can be seen by the dearth of Americans who can participate intelligently or knowingly in the political process, many of whom do not know the names of their local representatives or of key political figures making decisions that affect our lives, and as can be seen by the woeful lack of knowledge among many of us about the larger world outside our borders, points to the dumbing down of America. It's been going on for awhile.
This is not to say that we are stupid. But it is to say that we have wandered away from a solid K-12 education that involves teaching us to use our brains to solve problems, rather than memorizing, and that has neglected some seriously important and useful information as part of that learning process. When combined with the ridiculous rules that govern the jury system, like punitive sequestration and virtually no compensation for jurors, we can have major problems in cases all across the country, not only ones where people like casey or OJ walk free, but also where the innocent are convicted of crimes they do not commit. :twocents: