The authors of the report acknowledge that it was a small sample and that those jurors surveyed may not have been willing to disclose violations of the judges' admonitions regarding social media and the Internet. Still, they drew these interesting conclusions (at p. 7):
1. Few jurors reported committing misconduct of any kind-- with the Internet, friends or families
2. A substantial portion of the jurors could not recall that the judge had given an admonishment about new media use or incorrectly believed such searches were permissible
3. A sizable proportion of actual and prospective jurors indicated a desire to use the Internet to obtain information relevant to the trial
4. A significant proportion indicated they would be unable to refrain from Internet use for the duration of the trial.
The authors recommend further study of these issues.
LINK http://www.ncsc-jurystudies.org/What-We-Do/~/media/Microsites/Files/CJS/New%20Media%20Study/NCSC-Harvard-005-Juror-and-Jury-Use-of-New-Media-Final.ashx
A blog about the very small percentage of jurors who fail to follow the judge's instructions, including doing independent Internet research, using social media (such as Facebook) to contact parties and lawyers, and blogging about the trial. Juror misconduct frequently results in mistrials and a waste of resources. Links will be provided to sample jury summonses, jury instructions, and other resources to improve juror education and minimize juror misconduct, thereby promoting fairness of trials.

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