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Home/Legal Glossary/Voir Dire

Voir Dire

/vwɑːr dɪr/
ProcedureLegal Rule: Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 47; Federal Rule of Criminal Procedure 24; 28 U.S.C. § 1870

Etymology & Origins: From Old French 'voir dire' meaning 'to speak the truth,' combining 'voir' (true, from Latin 'verum') and 'dire' (to say, from Latin 'dicere').

Definition

Voir dire is the process by which prospective jurors are questioned to determine their qualifications, biases, and ability to serve impartially. The term is Law French meaning "to speak the truth." During voir dire, attorneys and the judge question the jury panel to identify grounds for challenges for cause and to make informed peremptory challenges. The process also serves the strategic purpose of beginning to develop rapport with jurors and introduce case themes.

Step-by-Step Process

1

Jury Panel Assembly

The court clerk randomly selects a panel of potential jurors (venire) from the community and brings them to the courtroom.

2

Preliminary Instructions

The judge explains the case type, estimated trial length, and basic jury duties. Jurors with obvious hardships may be excused.

3

Judge's Questions

The judge asks initial questions about jurors' backgrounds, potential conflicts of interest, and ability to be fair and impartial.

4

Attorney Questioning

Each side's attorneys ask questions designed to identify biases, life experiences, and attitudes relevant to the case.

5

Challenges for Cause

Attorneys request removal of jurors who demonstrate actual bias or inability to follow the law. There is no limit on cause challenges.

6

Peremptory Challenges

Each side exercises a limited number of strikes to remove jurors without stating a reason (subject to Batson restrictions against racial/gender discrimination).

7

Jury Empanelment

The remaining jurors are seated, sworn in, and the trial begins.

In the Courtroom

Voir dire is the first opportunity attorneys have to interact with jurors. The process varies by jurisdiction — in some courts, the judge conducts primary questioning with limited attorney participation; in others, attorneys lead the examination. Attorneys use voir dire to identify jurors who may harbor biases, have relevant life experiences, or hold attitudes unfavorable to their case. Challenges for cause are unlimited and require a showing that a juror cannot be fair and impartial. Peremptory challenges are limited in number and allow attorneys to remove jurors without stating a reason, subject to Batson v. Kentucky constraints prohibiting race-based or gender-based exclusions.

Examples

1

Attorney: "Ms. Rodriguez, have you or anyone close to you ever been involved in a car accident?" Juror: "Yes, my son was seriously injured in a crash last year." Attorney: "I'm sorry to hear that. Given that experience, do you think you could evaluate the evidence in this case fairly and without being influenced by your personal experience?"

2

Attorney: "Your Honor, I challenge Juror Number 7 for cause. He stated that he could never believe a police officer would lie under oath, which demonstrates an inability to evaluate witness credibility impartially." Judge: "Challenge granted."

3

Attorney: "The defense exercises a peremptory challenge to excuse Juror Number 12." Opposing Counsel: "Your Honor, I raise a Batson challenge. This is the third African-American juror counsel has struck." Judge: "Counsel, please provide a race-neutral explanation."

Common Mistakes

Students often underestimate voir dire's strategic importance, viewing it merely as a selection process. Effective voir dire also serves to educate jurors about key legal concepts, build rapport, identify potential leaders on the jury, and subtly introduce favorable case themes.

Federal vs. State Differences

In federal court, judges typically conduct most of the voir dire questioning under FRCP 47(a), with limited attorney participation. In many state courts, attorneys conduct the primary questioning directly, allowing more extensive jury selection strategies.

Landmark Cases

Batson v. Kentucky(1986)

Batson v. Kentucky, 476 U.S. 79 (1986)

Held that the Equal Protection Clause prohibits prosecutors from using peremptory challenges to exclude jurors solely on the basis of race.

J.E.B. v. Alabama ex rel. T.B.(1994)

J.E.B. v. Alabama ex rel. T.B., 511 U.S. 127 (1994)

Extended the Batson framework to prohibit gender-based peremptory challenges, holding that intentional discrimination on the basis of gender in jury selection violates equal protection.

Flowers v. Mississippi(2019)

Flowers v. Mississippi, 588 U.S. 284 (2019)

Reaffirmed Batson by reversing a conviction where the prosecutor struck 41 of 42 Black prospective jurors across six trials, emphasizing that the full history of jury selection is relevant to a Batson challenge.

Frequently Asked Questions

What happens during voir dire?

During voir dire, attorneys and sometimes the judge question prospective jurors to determine their fitness to serve on the jury. The process identifies biases, prejudices, or connections that might prevent a juror from being impartial. Attorneys use this information to exercise challenges for cause and peremptory challenges.

How long does voir dire usually take?

Voir dire duration varies widely depending on the case complexity and jurisdiction. Simple civil cases may complete jury selection in a few hours, while high-profile criminal cases can take days or even weeks. Federal courts tend to conduct shorter voir dire than state courts because judges often conduct most of the questioning themselves.

What is the difference between a peremptory challenge and a challenge for cause?

A challenge for cause requires the attorney to state a specific reason why the juror cannot be impartial, and the judge must agree. There is no limit on challenges for cause. A peremptory challenge allows an attorney to dismiss a juror without stating a reason, but the number is limited and they cannot be used to discriminate based on race, gender, or ethnicity.

Can a lawyer ask jurors anything during voir dire?

Lawyers cannot ask jurors anything they want during voir dire. Questions must be relevant to determining juror fitness and impartiality. Judges may restrict questions that are argumentative, intended to indoctrinate jurors, or invade privacy without sufficient justification. The scope of permissible questioning varies by jurisdiction and judge.

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