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Lawyer:
Elderly Client Denied Jury of Her Peers
in Nursing Home Love Triangle Murder
By Errin Haines
The Associated Press
June 20, 2006
ATLANTA -- A 79-year-old
woman accused of fatally shooting her 85-year-old ex-beau is being
deprived of her constitutional right to a fair trial, her attorney
said, because the potential jurors are not old enough for her to be
judged by a jury of her peers.
As Lena Sims Driskell
peered over her gold-rimmed glasses Monday at potential jurors in
her murder trial, some of the 58 candidates were young enough to be
her great-grandchildren. Only five seemed close to 70, the legal age
for exemption as a juror in the state of Georgia.
"This is the youngest jury
pool I've ever seen," said Driskell's attorney, Deborah Poole. "Most
of these people look under 30. How does one have a trial when you
are not able to include a whole class of people in the jury?"
Driskell is accused of
fatally shooting Herman Winslow on June 10, 2005, as he read the
newspaper at the senior citizens home where the two lived. After
dating for a year, police said Driskell became angry when Winslow
broke off their relationship and started seeing another woman.
Driskell is charged with
murder, aggravated assault and possession of a firearm.
Police say she was wearing
a hairnet, stockings, a bathrobe and slippers when she confronted
Winslow at his apartment. Winslow complained and a security guard
tried to calm Driskell down, but when he turned around she drew an
antique handgun she had hidden behind her back, put the gun to
Winslow's head and fired up to four times, Detective D.B. Mathis
said.
"I did it and I'd do it
again!" Driskell was quoted as yelling to the officers who found her
waving the gun and holding her finger on the trigger when they
arrived.
At the jury selection
Monday, only three potential jurors said they would be unable to
pass judgment on someone older than themselves. And when asked
whether there were any members of advocacy groups for elderly
people, none raised a hand.
Fulton County Superior
Court Jury Clerk Jennifer Lawson said that while senior citizens are
not excluded from jury service, any person 70 or older may be
excused from jury duty with the submission of an age affidavit.
Opening statements in the
trial could begin Tuesday. The trial is expected to last no more
than three days.
Senior Assistant District
Attorney Fani Willis, who is prosecuting the case, declined to
comment.
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