Former President Barack Obama extends his hand as
he attends Cook County jury duty at the Daley Center on November 8, 2017 in
Chicago, Illinois. Jurors receive $17.20 for each day of jury service. PHOTO:
Joshua Lott /Getty Images
Former US president Barack Obama answered a jury
summons Wednesday but was dismissed soon after arriving at a Chicago courthouse
to perform the civic duty asked of all Americans.
As a prospective juror, Obama joined fellow
citizens at Cook County’s Daley Center courthouse, all waiting to see if they
would be chosen to serve on a trial.
The former leader of the free world was the only
juror to arrive by motorcade, however, accompanied by tight security and met
with a throng of news media and court staff trying to snap a picture.
“He gorgeous!” one court clerk exclaimed upon
spotting the former president, the Chicago Tribune reported. Potential juror
Kelly Bulik told the newspaper she felt like a “piece of melting butter” as she
shook his hand.
Obama thanked everyone for showing up, and was
surprised by some who presented him with copies of his books to sign.
“Thanks everybody for serving on the jury. Or, at
least being willing to,” he said to laughter.
The former law professor left by midday, along with
a number of others who were randomly selected for dismissal, according to the
Tribune.
Before heading to court, the former president
tweeted in the morning about Tuesday night’s high-profile state and mayoral
election results seen as a sweeping repudiation of the politics of his White
House successor Donald Trump.
“This is what happens when the people vote,” Obama
wrote. “Every office in a democracy counts!”
Obama is not the first US president to show up for
service that some Americans either dread or find excuses to avoid. Obama’s
predecessor in the White House, George W Bush, responded to a jury summons in
2015.
Bush was not selected to serve as a juror, but
images of the smiling former president posing with delighted citizens at the
courthouse in Dallas, Texas quickly showed up on social media.
Chicago has some experience with high-profile
jurors. In 2004, media titan Oprah Winfrey, who at the time produced her talk
show out of the midwestern city, was a juror on a three-day murder trial ending
in a conviction.
While the Obamas currently live in Washington, the
ex-president and first lady Michelle Obama maintain a home in Chicago, the city
where he got his political start.
The south side of Chicago is also where the future
Obama presidential centre will be built, near the former leader’s home.
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