CSSB 353(JUD) - PEREMPTORY CHALLENGE OF JURORS Number 180 CHAIRMAN VEZEY opened CSSB 353(JUD) for discussion. He observed CSSB 353(JUD) in essence reduces the number of peremptory challenges from ten to six. He believed the companion bill already had gone through Judiciary, and possibly Finance, because it is was in Rules now. REPRESENTATIVE ULMER inquired whether or not CSSB 353(JUD) was similar to how the law was previously in the state of Alaska. She assumed at one point there had been an equal number and it was changed. If so, why was it changed and why is it being changed back. CHAIRMAN VEZEY answered ten is bigger than six. From testimony he has heard, the amount of work required to select of jury can be reduced. The amount of jurors called for a jury hearing can be a smaller number. A cost savings method. The legal history of the change, he said, went too far back for him to have knowledge of. REPRESENTATIVE ULMER questioned if there had been a public policy reason or rationale for the decision that one side should have six and the other should have ten. She said she would be happy to have Margot Knuth, who was observing, answer the question. Number 247 MARGOT KNUTH, ASSISTANT ATTORNEY GENERAL, DEPARTMENT OF LAW, answered REPRESENTATIVE ULMER's question. She stated CSSB 353(JUD) is raising the number of peremptory challenges to ten that the state will have, as well as leaving the defendants number at ten. She commented the Office of Pubic Advocacy and the Public Defender's office stated they would like to see the levels fair. The change would not be a cost reducing measure as once believed, but it would level the playing for the state. She did not know why the discrepancy had existed for so many years. She mentioned when both the prosecutors and the defense bar now agree that ten each is the right number, the Governor's office was happy to comply. REPRESENTATIVE OLBERG asked why not six each to save money. MS. KNUTH answered six each would save money, but the defense bar was concerned it would not give them enough flexibility to pick the jury they want. The initial House Bill version was a compromise version of eight preempts for each side, however, it was amended in the Senate to bring the number back up to ten. She pointed out any version with an equal number is acceptable to the state. CHAIRMAN VEZEY clarified there was no cost savings. MS. KNUTH responded correct, CSSB 353(JUD) is now an equalizing bill. Number 278 REPRESENTATIVE KOTT asked if was a national standard. MS. KNUTH answered there is; however, she could not recall whether it was eight or ten. She believed there was eight on each side at the general level. They had patterned after this trend originally. CHAIRMAN VEZEY inquired the number of preempts in the companion bill currently in Rules. MS. KNUTH answered HB 528, with only a Judiciary referral, reflects six each. The Senate amended it to bring the state up to ten. REPRESENTATIVE OLBERG noted the final line in the analysis states allowing both six challenges "may" reduce the cost of criminal trials. CHAIRMAN VEZEY clarified the state did not care what the number was as long as there was a level playing field. MS. KNUTH replied correct. CHAIRMAN VEZEY asked the pleasure of the committee. Number 317 REPRESENTATIVE OLBERG moved to pass CSSB 353(JUD) with individual recommendations. CHAIRMAN VEZEY asked the committee secretary to call the roll. IN FAVOR: REPRESENTATIVES VEZEY, KOTT, ULMER, B. DAVIS, G. DAVIS, SANDERS, OLBERG. MOTION PASSED