New York and New Jersey Want To Let Felons Serve on Juries. Here's Why.
Bans have resulted in what some have called the "whitewashing" of American juries.

The vast majority of states—44, to be exact—suspend people from serving on juries when they are convicted of a felony, and in many states the suspension is permanent. That means millions of people—especially groups of people convicted at relatively high rates, such as black and Hispanic men—are disqualified from jury service, quietly resulting in what some have called the "whitewashing" of American juries.
At least two states, New York and New Jersey, would like to change that.
The New York proposal, which is currently under review by the state's Senate Judiciary Committee, would repeal the clause in the state's judiciary law that blocks individuals convicted of felonies from serving on juries. New Jersey's bill, which was introduced in January and endorsed by Gov. Phil Murphy on May 1, would amend the equivalent clause in its code to permit most felons to serve on juries, barring only people convicted of murder and aggravated sexual assault.
"Jury exclusion laws bar more than 20 million people nationwide from serving," said Wanda Bertram, a spokesperson for the Prison Policy Initiative. "With this bill, New Jersey has the chance to reverse one of the harshest jury exclusion laws in the country, and to set an example that other states can follow to make their criminal legal systems fairer and more effective."
In New Jersey, between 438,000 and 533,000 people cannot serve on a jury due to a previous criminal conviction. Of those, between 219,000 and 269,000 are black, representing between 23 percent and 29 percent of the African American population, meaning black New Jerseyans are five times less likely than average to be allowed to serve on a jury.
New Jersey is not alone, nor is its example the most alarming. Some states, such as Texas, disqualify individuals from jury service for lesser crimes such as misdemeanor theft. In other areas of the country, the racial disparity caused by jury disqualification is even more pronounced: the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) of New York found that 40 percent of black men in Manhattan cannot serve on juries due to their criminal histories, and in one county in Georgia, 63.7 percent of black men are barred.
The result is that some districts' juries do not fairly represent the racial composition of the community, according to a coalition of 50 nongovernmental organizations that wrote an open letter to New Jersey's Gov. Murphy in April. "By denying so many people—particularly Black and other people of color—from serving on juries, our juries become whitewashed, failing to reflect the diversity of our state, and people of color accused of crimes are not judged by a jury of their peers," the coalition stated.
Advocates for reform have some reason to be hopeful, according to James Binnall, a law professor at California State University at Long Beach and the author of Twenty Million Angry Men: The Case for Including Convicted Felons in Our Jury Process, which was published in 2021. Binnall tells Reason that, since he began working on the issue a decade ago, legislative efforts to eliminate or reduce jury duty suspension for felons have succeeded in California, Louisiana, Connecticut, and Washington, D.C., and are ongoing in Michigan, New Jersey, and New York.
Marleina Ubel, a senior policy analyst for the think tank New Jersey Policy Perspective, commended reform efforts in a statement provided to Reason via email: "More diverse and representative juries will not only enhance the legitimacy of verdicts but also improve the quality of deliberations, and that makes the justice system more just for everyone involved."
Editor's Note: As of February 29, 2024, commenting privileges on reason.com posts are limited to Reason Plus subscribers. Past commenters are grandfathered in for a temporary period. Subscribe here to preserve your ability to comment. Your Reason Plus subscription also gives you an ad-free version of reason.com, along with full access to the digital edition and archives of Reason magazine. We request that comments be civil and on-topic. We do not moderate or assume any responsibility for comments, which are owned by the readers who post them. Comments do not represent the views of reason.com or Reason Foundation. We reserve the right to delete any comment and ban commenters for any reason at any time. Comments may only be edited within 5 minutes of posting. Report abuses.
Please
to post comments
Could Trump serve on a jury?
Is this the new Godwin? Make everything about the former crybaby in chief?
Could he, Sarckles?
Boy, talk about talking about pots and kettles and Trump! You're the Trumpet-in-chief for hauling Trump into every discussion.
Probably just jealous that Gaear Grimsrud beat you to it.
Damn you're funny.
Appeal to hypocrisy is the most powerful argument I mean fallacy in these comments.
Hypocrisy is redundant when talking about you.
Only in the once and future New Jersey , where indicted felons are entitled by law to trial by a jury of twelve good felons and true.
Yeah,let's further destroy what's left of our legal system.
I always figured the reason to bar felons from juries is to prevent victims of unjust laws from committing jury nullification.
Hey! You left out Trump! A bit off your game today.
Leave the wet-brained loser alone!
You're not wrong. A convicted felon knows the system is rigged and might not do what the Prosecutor tells them to do. God forbid a juror think for themselves.
Show me someone who trusts the system, and I’ll show you someone who profits from it or has no experience with it.
I think it's a problem because they can't be impartial when it comes to the crime they committed.
I would not bar them completely, but if you are a car jacker, then you should probably not be a juror on a car jacking trial.
And it goes both ways. I was not deemed suitable for a juror in a trial claiming self defense, because I once chased off car thieves with a shotgun, and so the prosecution thought I would be biased towards claims of self defense
I was thrown off a jury for a dubious reason by the defense,but I was ready to vote for acquittal.
New York metro cosmotarian magazine
Seriously. I get the logic that criminals should not be able to influence government and trials in their own self interest. Like, hey lets just legalize rape if we can get enough rapists in the legislature. But that requires me to believe that the state is infallible when it declares someone to be a felon. Everybody commits at least 3 felonies a day thanks to a labyrinth of statutes intersecting federal, state and local law. And even if they can’t deprive you of your ability to serve on a jury they can bankrupt you for not mowing your lawn. It’s like the death penalty. Seems like a good idea until you look at all of the innocent people now dead for crimes they didn’t commit. I’m not worried about felons on juries. It’s those libertarians voting for Chase Oliver that scare me.
.
Even if it were the case that the "average" person commits an "average" of three felonies a day, it is almost certainly not the case that every person commits at least three felonies every day.
How many felonies is a newborn committing every day - esp. given that mens rea is required for most felonies? Or someone in a coma or permanent vegetative state?
More to the point though, I'm quite certain that I didn't commit any felonies yesterday (and almost certainly will not today). Is there someone who committed twelve felonies yesterday that offset my zero felonies both days yielding an average of six or more per day over those two days when considering just me and that other person? Perhaps - but that's quite a different situation than the claim made.
Seems reasonable, just as non-violent felons should have other rights, like voting and KBA, restored at the end of their sentence.
New York doesn’t think anyone has 2nd Amendment rights.
The logic applied to juries and voting should apply to 2nd amendment rights, too.
Agreed,
"Bans have resulted in what some have called the "whitewashing" of American juries."
Why do the anti-racists always make such incredibly racist insinuations?
Skin color is the most important thing.
True!
Call out the Oompa Loompas to puzzle out this riddle!
Seriously, they act like getting out if jury duty is a bad thing.
The hypocrisy of supposedly anti-racist universities continuing to give admission preference to donor children and legacies is the best example of systemic racism today.
Blacks and their enslavers are the only racists left,most others have become color blind.
No consideration of the fact that juries proportionally represent the law abiding population?
The real problem is the inflation of so many crimes into felonies. They used to be so serious that felons could be killed on sight with no repercussions, I believe, back before the Normans took over. Now it doesn't take much at all to become a felon.
How's about we think about that instead, eh, Mr Patrick McDonald?
They used to be so serious that felons could be killed on sight with no repercussions, I believe, back before the Normans took over.
Minor detour:
In the days when all felonies were capital offences in Britain, it was legitimate to kill a fleeing suspect because had they been caught, they were liable to be executed anyway.
There were also cases in England where juries valued items below the felony threshold for theft of five pounds to avoid the defendant's being liable for the DP. This led on one occasion to a jury deciding that a stolen £5 note was worth four pounds and ten shillings (£4.50).
While there has been definite creep downward in what crimes have been classified as felonies, the answer to this is not make the classification of "felony" meaningless. Also, the fact that more black people are likely to commit serious crimes is not a good reason to make dduly convicted felons eligible for jury duty.
It is a bit strange that felons can run for almost any office but can't serve jury duty. They only lose one right and I don't agree with that.
Jury duty is not a right. Is it supposed to be a privilege they're taking away?
Got called for jury duty this last winter. Called in the day before and informed that I had to show up or the sheriff would show up on my porch. SWAT team? Maybe. Just dug out of 13 inches of snow. Temps when I left the next day 14 below zero. Sat for cattle call all day praying (okay I'm not actually affiliated with any particular deity but ya know port/storm) that I could just go home and leave this nightmare behind. No such luck. Ended up in the courtroom and forced to answer questions that are nobody's fucking business. Next day, now 18 below, I show up and waste hours while justice is served. Judge calls a 2 hour lunch break. I decide that sitting in an idling car trying desperately to not freeze to death would not be a wise move so I put it in gear and headed for home. Got home and found my wife stuck in the driveway. Dug her out and headed back to the courtroom. Arrived 10 minutes late. This pissant judge threatened to hold me in contempt for holding up the proceedings. I explained the situation and apparently my genuflection was enough to earn his mercy. In the end I was stricken from the panel by either the defense or prosecution, don't know which but I'm guessing the state. I think jury duty is an obligation but please don't call it a privilege.
It's a duty = the clue is in the phrase. Hence it's neither a right nor a privilege.
What's the legal theory on the definition of peers? Some fart sniffing lawyers will sort it out and they won't care what we think.
Originally it just meant that commoners were entitled to a jury of commoners rather than being judged by their lords.
yo if you want to be on a jury panel so fucking hard maybe lean towards civic-minded and less felonious intent
Aaaaah! AAAAAH! ah-chJuryNullification!
Excuse me.
That means millions of people—especially groups of people convicted at relatively high rates, such as black and Hispanic men—are disqualified from jury service, quietly resulting in what some have called the “whitewashing” of American juries.
Blow it out your tailpipe Patrick. They’re disqualified from jury service because blacks and hispanics commit relatively high amounts of crime.
Why are you not decrying THAT?
Why is the lede of this story not, “GET YOUR ACT TOGETHER BLACK/HISPANIC AMERICA!” They’re undermining their own chances at a jury of their peers, by virtue of the fact that TOO MANY OF THEIR PEERS ARE CRIMINALS.
Why not tell them to STOP DOING CRIME? Why is THAT not your article, Patrick?
There is absolutely no denying the fact that black men are wildly overrepresented in crime statistics. It's been that way for a very long time and black cops in predominantly black jurisdictions like Baltimore and Detroit are very much aware of this fact. Black men will be convicted of more felonies relative to the population at large due to this inescapable reality. Innocent black men will be presumed guilty because they are part of that cohort. That is also an inescapable reality. I don't have any good answers to that inevitable injustice except to advise non criminal black men to get the fuck out of those jurisdictions.
The only public policy change that would help would be to stop subsidizing the reproduction of indigent unmarried women. Beyond that, it would take a spiritual revival in the urban Black community to turn things around. We need a Black John Wesley.
Not a conversation I'm eager to have but black people will have to put up with this shit until they face the fact that their culture is destroying every generation that comes behind. I'm happy to blame LBJ but he's long gone. Get your shit together or STFU.
Black Rednecks and White Liberals should be mandatory reading in the U.S. Hint, it’s not black culture, it’s gang/welfare culture.
As for this abolish incarceration or make felonies into misdemeanors crap, it’s usually wealthy white liberals (Glenn Greenwald/Matt Taibbi) surrounded by armed security guards or in gated communities talking that game.
Blacks in urban communities pre-judge their fellow blacks are statistically a criminal threat. They put bars on the windows of their ground floor homes without self consciousness or hesitation.
As Chris Rock said, "When I go to the ATM, I'm not looking over my shoulder for Mike Wallace."
"New York and New Jersey Want To Let Felons Serve on Juries."
Why not?
Just look how many felons are governors, state legislature members, judges, DA's, etc.
In Seattle we solved this problem by making it much harder to become a felon. Like, really hard. Like... almost impossible hard.
Repeal all laws, and there will be no more crime. /jeffy
I would keep several other felonies as disqualifiers. Perjury, for example, which would prevent trusting someone during voir dire.
I would feel comfortable getting justice from a jury with my prison pen pal on it. It was a War on Drugs conviction, "conspiracy to distribute", when her life before and after was working to better herself legally. Her brains and perceptiveness would be an asset.
Seems kind of racist to say that a lot of black people are felons.
They just want felons to have a jury of their peers.
It makes sense for a whole raft of civic responsibilities (voting, jury duty, holding office, military officer commission) to be suspended both during and after a criminal sentence.
However, the restriction period following the end of a sentence should be limited to something like the length of the original sentence. So a two year sentence, even if suspended, would be four years without voting etc.
Now is the time for all good villains to come to the aide of their jury.
I want to see the arithmetic on this claim: "438,000 and 533,000 people cannot serve on a jury due to a previous criminal conviction. Of those, between 219,000 and 269,000 are black, representing between 23 percent and 29 percent of the African American population, meaning black New Jerseyans are five times less likely than average to be allowed to serve on a jury."
How can excluding only 1/4 of blacks - leaving 3/4 of blacks eligible - mean that they are 5 times less likely to be allowed to serve on a jury? That's impossible. What is possible is that about 25% of blacks and 5% of whites were convicted of felonies, so blacks are 5 times as likely to be excluded - and a mathematically illiterate "journalist" reversed this statistic.
Dumb fucking idea. Juries need to be more elitist, not less, regardless of race. Too many idiots and fools are already voting and sitting on juries.
Surely since felons are allowed to exercise their constitutional right under the Second Amendment to keep and bear arms, they should also be allowed to serve as jurors.
Oh, wait...