Is there not something -in law- which prevents jury members from speaking out about what transpired in high profile cases? I ask because it has just occurred to me HOW rarely one comes across stories told by jury members.
At one time jurors were free to discuss anything they wanted about the case after the end of the trial, as is the case in the USA. However, after the Jeremy Thorpe murder trial at the Old Bailey in the 1970s a juror gave an interview to I believe the New Statesman explaining exactly how the jury had reached their not guilty verdict (in essence, they were sure he conspired, but were not sure whether he conspired to kill or just to commit GBH). There was an outcry and the law was changed. Now a juror must not reveal anything about the deliberations in the jury room. However, a juror is allowed to express his or her own opinion about the evidence and what happened in open court.