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Heavily armed security officers follow a vehicle transporting Rayful Edmond III from U.S. District Court to jail after opening arguments in his trial. Perhaps the most notable local case using anonymous jurors was the trial of the cocaine kingpin. Edmond was arrested in 1989 and convicted on drug-dealing charges. The jurors, who remain anonymous to this day, were enclosed in bulletproof glass because the court considered Edmond and his associates an immense threat to the jurors' safety. (The Washington Times)
Photo by: Tracy A. Woodward
Heavily armed security officers follow a vehicle transporting Rayful Edmond III from U.S. District Court to jail after opening arguments in his trial. Perhaps the most notable local case using anonymous jurors was the trial of the cocaine kingpin. Edmond was arrested in 1989 and convicted on drug-dealing charges. The jurors, who remain anonymous to this day, were enclosed in bulletproof glass because the court considered Edmond and his associates an immense threat to the jurors' safety. (The Washington Times)

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