§ 9-9-23 — Investigation of names drawn Lists of persons well qualified to serve.
(a) The jury commissioner, either personally or by such assistant as he or she
may employ as provided in § 9-9-7, shall investigate the names of all
persons drawn as provided in § 9-9-14.1, and as far as possible in the
order in which the names appear upon the lists. The investigation may be made
by the mailing of questionnaires to such persons, or by other written inquiries
deemed by the jury commissioner to be appropriate, but where the jury
commissioner considers further investigation to be necessary or desirable, the
investigation may include a personal interview by the jury commissioner or by
one of his or her duly appointed assistants. The jury commissioner shall make
lists of all grand and petit jurors for each town not exempted as provided in
§ 9-9-3, and in the order in which they were originally drawn, as he or
she shall deem well qualified to serve, being persons of good moral character,
of sound judgment, and free from all exception, which lists shall be kept on
file in the office of the jury commissioner. The jury commissioner shall
preserve a full record of the investigation, which shall not be disclosed to
any person except by order of a justice of the superior court, or by order of
the chief judge or associate justice of the family court, and may summon before
him or her any person subject to serve as a juror, or any person who in the
jury commissioner's opinion has particular knowledge of a juror's fitness to
serve as a juror, and for this purpose may administer oaths, and have the same
powers as are by law provided for the summoning of witnesses by a coroner. Any
person so summoned shall be entitled to the same fees as a witness summoned
before a coroner. No rejection of a juror by the jury commissioner shall take
final effect until it has been approved by a justice of the superior court,
appointed for this purpose by the presiding justice, and he or she may appoint
different justices from time to time for each county. A justice of the family
court who has been appointed by the chief judge for the purpose of considering
the recommendations of the jury commissioner concerning the fitness of jurors
may also reject jurors. The chief judge may appoint different justices from
time to time for each county.
(b) The jury commissioner shall not place any person upon the
list who is not qualified as provided in § 9-9-1.1, nor shall he or she
fail to place any person upon the list who is qualified, and if the
commissioner or any of his or her assistants shall willfully violate any of the
provisions of this section they shall be fined not exceeding one thousand
dollars ($1,000) or be imprisoned for the term of not more than one year, or
both.