Event Details

January 01, 1992

Description

The case of Hunley v. Godinez, where bias was implied for two jurors who were victims of burglaries similar to the one in the murder case they were deliberating.

Participants (2)

Name Type Mentions
Hunley person 13 View Entity
Godinez person 13 View Entity

Source Documents (1)

DOJ-OGR-00009038.jpg

Unknown type • 684 KB
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This legal document, part of a court filing from February 24, 2022, defines and analyzes the concept of "implied bias" as a basis for challenging potential jurors. It cites numerous legal precedents to explain that implied bias is presumed by law, regardless of a juror's stated impartiality, especially when a juror's personal experiences are similar to the issues being litigated. The document provides examples from past cases, such as jurors who were victims of crimes similar to those in the case they were hearing.

Related Events

Events with shared participants

The case of Hunley v. Godinez was decided, holding that bias should be implied where two jurors were victims of similar burglaries in a murder/burglary case.

1992-01-01 • 7th Cir.

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Legal case cited: Hunley v. Godinez, 975 F.2d 316 (7th Cir. 1992).

1992-01-01

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Event Metadata

Type
legal case
Location
7th Cir.
Significance Score
5/10
Participants
2
Source Documents
1
Extracted
2025-11-20 15:37

Additional Data

Source
DOJ-OGR-00009038.jpg
Date String
1992

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