In-person jury trials suspended in New Jersey due to rise in coronavirus cases
TRENTON, N.J. (AP) - Jury trials in New Jersey have been suspended as COVID-19 cases in the state make a resurgence.
A state Supreme Court order released Monday suspended in-person jury trials until further notice, with the exception of one trial that is in progress. In-person grand juries are suspended, but can meet virtually.
Reported cases in New Jersey have risen recently to levels not seen since the start out of outbreak.
The seven-day average for the second week in November, according to state figures, reached more than 3,500 cases daily, compared with about 900 case a day in October. In September, the average was about 460.
Hospitalizations are also up, reaching more than 2,300, compared with about 760 a month ago and roughly 400 the month before that.
On Tuesday, Democratic Gov. Phil Murphy said there had been 38 new deaths reported overnight, bringing the total to 14,817 since the pandemic started.
Since March, judges have conducted more than 100,000 remote court events involving more than a million participants, according to the state judiciary.
In-person jury trials were suspended for six months in New Jersey, one of the states hardest hit by the pandemic. To resume jury trials on a limited basis — and reduce a backlog of thousands of cases — the state Supreme Court released a plan in August that provided for jury selection to be conducted mostly online, with some individual questioning of jurors done in person.
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