“…A jury's decision to acquit or convict a defendant is authoritative, forbidding or allowing state punishment (Culver, 2017). Although very few cases reach a jury trial (Diamond & Rose, 2018), the jury has been central to United States legal thought and culture; as Constable (1994, p. 1) writes, “the jury constitutes a practice in which matters of community membership, truth, and law are inextricably intertwined.” Moreover, the possibility of adjudication by a jury influences the decision‐making of prosecutors (Albonetti, 1986), defense attorneys (Kramer et al, 2007), and defendants (Clair, 2020) throughout the court process. Court officials' racialized and gendered efforts to exclude people with criminal legal association from jury service likely function to reproduce inequality in the structure of the law by removing the voices of perceived offenders (see Smith & Sarma, 2012, p. 406; Wheelock, 2011, p. 354 on felon‐juror exclusion) and victims of crime.…”