This Note examines the ongoing electronic media access dispute and suggests methods to establish access. Because reform of current law would be implemented largely at the judicial front lines -the 700-plus U.S. district judges\u27 courtrooms ---the concerns and desires of district judges are of primary importance to any proposed change. The survey documented an institutional resistance to an expanded media presence in federal courtrooms; this institutional inertia may be the strongest single reason that change has not occurred. Part I of this Note presents the federal rules, canons, and resolutions comprising the current prohibition against video and audio-equipment access, as well as case law illustrating an insistence upon maintaining se...
From the introduction: News media, legal blogs, and law reviews routinely cite a panoply of reasons ...
This Note advocates recognition of a constitutional right of press access to evidentiary recordings ...
Cameras are an understandable yet inapt target for Supreme Court Justices apprehensive about televis...
This Note examines the ongoing electronic media access dispute and suggests methods to establish acc...
Since the advent of film and video recording, society has enjoyed the ability to capture the lights ...
This Note analyzes the conflicting interests involved in televising state criminal trials and propos...
For over a decade the public has had remote access to federal court records held in electronic forma...
Article published in the Michigan State University School of Law Student Scholarship Collection
The Illinois Supreme Court recently authorized the use of television cameras and other recording de...
Despite the pervasive integration of technology into various social institutions, one public body—th...
With in-person hearings limited during the COVID-19 pandemic, many courts pivoted to proceedings hel...
In spite of a communications revolution that has given the public access to new media in new places,...
This paper explains why electronic broadcasting devices, including both video and audio, shoul...
English and American common law have long recognized the public\u27s right of access to judicial rec...
Today in most states, electronic coverage of court proceedings is permitted. States are classified a...
From the introduction: News media, legal blogs, and law reviews routinely cite a panoply of reasons ...
This Note advocates recognition of a constitutional right of press access to evidentiary recordings ...
Cameras are an understandable yet inapt target for Supreme Court Justices apprehensive about televis...
This Note examines the ongoing electronic media access dispute and suggests methods to establish acc...
Since the advent of film and video recording, society has enjoyed the ability to capture the lights ...
This Note analyzes the conflicting interests involved in televising state criminal trials and propos...
For over a decade the public has had remote access to federal court records held in electronic forma...
Article published in the Michigan State University School of Law Student Scholarship Collection
The Illinois Supreme Court recently authorized the use of television cameras and other recording de...
Despite the pervasive integration of technology into various social institutions, one public body—th...
With in-person hearings limited during the COVID-19 pandemic, many courts pivoted to proceedings hel...
In spite of a communications revolution that has given the public access to new media in new places,...
This paper explains why electronic broadcasting devices, including both video and audio, shoul...
English and American common law have long recognized the public\u27s right of access to judicial rec...
Today in most states, electronic coverage of court proceedings is permitted. States are classified a...
From the introduction: News media, legal blogs, and law reviews routinely cite a panoply of reasons ...
This Note advocates recognition of a constitutional right of press access to evidentiary recordings ...
Cameras are an understandable yet inapt target for Supreme Court Justices apprehensive about televis...