What to Expect from the Upcoming Jodi Arias Retrial

The Jodi Arias retrial will determine Arias's punishment for murder
The Jodi Arias retrial will determine her punishment for murder.
Image: Rob Schumacher/Arizona Republic/Reuters/Landov
Jodi Arias is a name that by now, most American adults have heard of. Last year, she was tried and convicted for the grisly murder of her ex-boyfriend, in a trial and subsequent media circus that captivated television viewers across the country. This summer, Arias made headlines again when news broke that she would be allowed a retrial to determine her punishment, and that she would be acting as her own defense lawyer.

Selena Hill of The Latin Post reports, “Back in May 2013, Arias was found guilty of the first-degree murder of her ex-boyfriend Travis Alexander, who was killed in his Phoenix home in 2008. […] Although Arias was convicted of the murder, the jurors failed to reach a unanimous decision on her sentencing,” of the cause for the September retrial.

Arias was already convicted of the brutal murder of Alexander, in which he was found stabbed, shot, and nearly decapitated. Her original trial drew immense media attention, and because of its high profile nature, live video footage will be restricted from the courtroom. However, Arias’ name and image has already flooded headlines this summer because of her controversial decision to defend herself on the stand.

Many Americans have weighed in on what might happen during the retrial. Noted legal analyst Kendall Coffey isn’t convinced that a jury will sympathize with Arias, but notes that all it takes is one dissenting juror to remove the death penalty from the table. “Just maybe there’ll be one person on that jury – which is all it takes to save her from the death penalty – who feels sorry for her or sees something in her that’s humanity, [which] should be saved,” Coffey told Bill Hoffmann on Newsmax last month. “But I wouldn’t count on it,” he adds, of the possible outcome of the retrial.

News broke just this week that Arias gave up her intent to defend herself against the death penalty in her upcoming retrial. “I hereby relinquish my pro per status and re-assert my Sixth Amendment right to counsel,” Arias wrote earlier this week and a pre-trial meeting. Many legal analysts and social commentators, including Coffey, did not find Arias’ request to act as her own lawyer to be compelling, and few are surprised that she has given up this right.

It appears that Arias is doing everything in her power to further delay the retrial, which has been pushed back to later this month.

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