| Date | Event Type | Description | Location | Actions |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| N/A | Book publication | Jurors from high-profile trials (O.J. Simpson, Scott Peterson, Manson) published books about thei... | N/A | View |
This document, a page from a legal filing dated March 1, 2022, argues that jurors in high-profile trials often seek to profit from their experience, becoming 'instant celebrities'. It cites numerous examples from the Michael Jackson, O.J. Simpson, Scott Peterson, Derek Chauvin, and Robert Durst trials where jurors sold trial materials, received book advances, gave paid interviews, and secured employment as consultants. The filing suggests that the proliferation of media has increased the opportunities and incentives for jurors to capitalize on their service, potentially influencing their behavior.
This document is page 8 of a legal filing (Document 307) from the criminal case against Ghislaine Maxwell, filed on June 25, 2021. The text argues against Maxwell's attempt to suppress deposition transcripts from a civil case, citing legal precedents (Oshatz, Wong, Knox) to establish that even if a protective order was modified, the testimony can be used, particularly in a perjury trial where the statements themselves are the crime. The government asserts that civil deposition testimony does not violate rights against self-incrimination in this context.
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