Tuesday night’s episode of FX’s American Crime Story: The People vs. O.J. Simpson focuses on the jury. The group – made up of 10 women, and 2 men — spent 8 1/2 months sequestered — half as long as the time O.J. Simpson himself was incarcerated before and during his trial.The episode depicts the jurors growing frustrated, suffering from cabin fever, and growing upset after barely having any contact with their friends and families. Yes, all of that happened in real life.

What were the living conditions like?

Jurors were sequestered for 8 1/2 months. They stayed at a hotel five blocks from the courthouse. According to the ABC report (below), jurors could never lock their rooms, never go for a walk alone, never talk on the phone without a deputy listening. They ate cafeteria style — with no alcohol allowed. They watched from only two television sets, and were only allowed court approved movies.

Here is reporter Tom Foreman’s report on the jurors following the conclusion of the trial:

Did the jurors really show up to Judge Ito’s courtroom dressed in black?

Yes, they sure did. An April 22, 1995 article in The New York Times described what happened:

In one of the strangest turns yet in the murder trial of O. J. Simpson, a clear majority of jurors staged a virtual insurrection today, sparked by Judge Lance A. Ito’s decision on Thursday to replace three of the sheriff’s deputies assigned to protect them…The judge’s move prompted today’s protest, when a majority of the jurors refused to leave their hotel until Judge Ito talked with them. Told that the judge would do so only in court, at least 13 of the panelists arrived dressed partly or totally in black. In one of the most extraordinary spectacles of the trial, they wound their way into and out of court, looking like a funeral procession in a Mediterranean village.

Who were the jurors?

See the list below from an a USA Today Article from 10/18/1996

Did the jurors ever speak out after the trial?

Yes, on many occasions. Watch this very interesting special that Geraldo Rivera conducted which includes an interview with jury foreperson, Armanda Cooley. Also, you might notice, a much younger, Nancy Grace in there.

[screengrab via NBC News]