25 January 2010

Well, duh


Rico says Katherine Skiba has an article in the Los Angeles Times about cluelessness in Illinois:
If Cook County, Illinois had its druthers, President Obama would be showing up for jury duty today. But court officials were told several weeks ago the prospect was a no-go, a White House official said Sunday. The summons arrived at the president's Chicago home. Obama, a 1991 graduate of Harvard Law School, president of the Harvard Law Review and later a professor at the University of Chicago Law School, would have been bound for the courthouse in suburban Bridgeview had he not been otherwise occupied.
With his first State of the Union address scheduled for Wednesday, it's a busy week for the president. But he'll be having a little fun too. His official schedule today calls for a meet-and-greet with the Los Angeles Lakers, the reigning NBA champions. The White House said players would be joined by coaches, team staffers, NBA officials and former Laker greats. Then, no doubt, it's back to business.
The Christian Science Monitor reported in 2006 that "in fact, no modern court has had a sitting president on a jury. Ronald Reagan came the closest, when he was summoned in the 1980s by Santa Barbara County, California; he was granted a deferment until he was out of office. Former President Bill Clinton was willing to serve on a case involving a gang-related shooting when he was called in 2003, but the judge dismissed him."
Rico says he'd love to be the defense counsel, arguing against seating "a 1991 graduate of Harvard Law School, president of the Harvard Law Review, and later a professor at the University of Chicago Law School" (let alone a sitting president) on any jury.

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