This work sets out the constitutional, statutory, and common law applicable to television’s intrusion into the jury room. The first section addresses federal constitutional considerations focusing on Article III Section 2, the Sixth Amendment, and the First Amendment. The second section analyzes certain federal rules and particular statutes applicable to televising federal judicial proceedings, as well as the rationale behind their enactment. Finally, the third section discusses comparative approaches addressing television’s intrusion into the courtroom, particularly focusing on recent jurisprudence from the European Court of Human Rights and the Scottish Court of Session
Modem American law is, in a sense, a system of compartments. For understandable curricular reasons, ...
This is a thesis on the interaction between the ideologies and discourses of legal and-media profes...
The Supreme Court recently held in Chandler v. Florida, that absent a showing of actual prejudice, i...
This Note analyzes the conflicting interests involved in televising state criminal trials and propos...
For several years there has been an ongoing dispute between members of the media and members of the ...
This Note advocates recognition of a constitutional right of press access to evidentiary recordings ...
Criminal trials make for inherently compelling television. There are very few things as dramatic as ...
The note examines the current law regarding media coverage of jury trials and the effect of such pub...
In his Introduction, author Ronald L. Goldfarb explains that his purpose is to address all the argum...
The Supreme Court recently handed down a unanimous decision dealing with the respective rights of th...
The allowance of cameras in the courtroom and televised trials have seemed to cause a debate within ...
The rising importance of television journalism in the 1960\u27s has resulted in the Supreme Court de...
A peripheral but hotly contested issue in the Abscam trials was whether the media could copy and bro...
Today in most states, electronic coverage of court proceedings is permitted. States are classified a...
Legislation recently enacted in California attempts to preserve further the right of the accused to ...
Modem American law is, in a sense, a system of compartments. For understandable curricular reasons, ...
This is a thesis on the interaction between the ideologies and discourses of legal and-media profes...
The Supreme Court recently held in Chandler v. Florida, that absent a showing of actual prejudice, i...
This Note analyzes the conflicting interests involved in televising state criminal trials and propos...
For several years there has been an ongoing dispute between members of the media and members of the ...
This Note advocates recognition of a constitutional right of press access to evidentiary recordings ...
Criminal trials make for inherently compelling television. There are very few things as dramatic as ...
The note examines the current law regarding media coverage of jury trials and the effect of such pub...
In his Introduction, author Ronald L. Goldfarb explains that his purpose is to address all the argum...
The Supreme Court recently handed down a unanimous decision dealing with the respective rights of th...
The allowance of cameras in the courtroom and televised trials have seemed to cause a debate within ...
The rising importance of television journalism in the 1960\u27s has resulted in the Supreme Court de...
A peripheral but hotly contested issue in the Abscam trials was whether the media could copy and bro...
Today in most states, electronic coverage of court proceedings is permitted. States are classified a...
Legislation recently enacted in California attempts to preserve further the right of the accused to ...
Modem American law is, in a sense, a system of compartments. For understandable curricular reasons, ...
This is a thesis on the interaction between the ideologies and discourses of legal and-media profes...
The Supreme Court recently held in Chandler v. Florida, that absent a showing of actual prejudice, i...