Defendant judge, believing that great harm to public morals and decency was to be apprehended from the testimony in the vice trial of Minot F. Jelke, exercised his discretion to exclude the general public including plaintiff newspapers from the court room during the state\u27s case. The family and friends of the accused along with officers of the court, witnesses, and jury were not excluded. The plaintiffs applied for a writ of prohibition to restrain the defendant from enforcing his order. The court denied the application on the grounds that the defendant judge had the power to make the exclusion order and that the Supreme Court, Special Term of New York County, could not substitute its judgment for that of the defendant. On appeal, held, ...
Defendant was indicted for murder by a grand jury. The trial court denied a motion by defendant requ...
In a prosecution for murder, a special venire was summoned and a list thereof served on the accused....
Much has been written about the evils of, and solutions to, the problem of trial by newspaper. It is...
Plaintiff newspapers sent reporters to the trial of Minot Jelke. Defendant judge, exercising his dis...
The criminal trial has been traditionally open to the public in Anglo-Saxon procedure, as it was in ...
A trial court may, in a dissolution of marriage proceeding, exclude the public and the press from tr...
Defendant wrote two letters to the grand jury, then in session, asking leave to appear before it to ...
State ex rel. Dayton Newspapers v. Phillips, 46 Ohio St. 2d 457, 351 N.E.2d 127 (1976). Sensational ...
Defendant, a district attorney, issued a statement to the press accusing eight parish judges of lazi...
Gag orders directed at trial participants do not directly intrude into the media\u27s editorial proc...
The Superior Court of Pennsylvania has held, sub silentio, that juror prejudice may be presumed and ...
Defendant published in its newspaper the contents of confessions made to a prosecuting attorney by t...
In Mu\u27Min v. Virginia, the United States Supreme Court held a defendant has no right to ask juror...
Gag orders directed at trial participants do not directly intrude into the media\u27s editorial proc...
Respondents, former employees of the Office of Rent Stabilization, brought a libel action against pe...
Defendant was indicted for murder by a grand jury. The trial court denied a motion by defendant requ...
In a prosecution for murder, a special venire was summoned and a list thereof served on the accused....
Much has been written about the evils of, and solutions to, the problem of trial by newspaper. It is...
Plaintiff newspapers sent reporters to the trial of Minot Jelke. Defendant judge, exercising his dis...
The criminal trial has been traditionally open to the public in Anglo-Saxon procedure, as it was in ...
A trial court may, in a dissolution of marriage proceeding, exclude the public and the press from tr...
Defendant wrote two letters to the grand jury, then in session, asking leave to appear before it to ...
State ex rel. Dayton Newspapers v. Phillips, 46 Ohio St. 2d 457, 351 N.E.2d 127 (1976). Sensational ...
Defendant, a district attorney, issued a statement to the press accusing eight parish judges of lazi...
Gag orders directed at trial participants do not directly intrude into the media\u27s editorial proc...
The Superior Court of Pennsylvania has held, sub silentio, that juror prejudice may be presumed and ...
Defendant published in its newspaper the contents of confessions made to a prosecuting attorney by t...
In Mu\u27Min v. Virginia, the United States Supreme Court held a defendant has no right to ask juror...
Gag orders directed at trial participants do not directly intrude into the media\u27s editorial proc...
Respondents, former employees of the Office of Rent Stabilization, brought a libel action against pe...
Defendant was indicted for murder by a grand jury. The trial court denied a motion by defendant requ...
In a prosecution for murder, a special venire was summoned and a list thereof served on the accused....
Much has been written about the evils of, and solutions to, the problem of trial by newspaper. It is...