Dear Friends:

This is the lead story in today's Independent UK (28 03 2012).


-bhuban





Ban on filming in British courts to be lifted




Legislation allowing television cameras into major criminal trials to be 
announced in May



PAUL CAHALAN  , NIGEL MORRIS
 
 
WEDNESDAY 28 MARCH 2012

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Television cameras are to be allowed into courts for the first time to film the 
sentencing of serious criminals.

The move, to be announced in the Queen's Speech in May, is designed to reduce 
the "mystique" of courtrooms and their sometimes arcane jargon, and to help the 
public re-engage with the criminal justice system.
Ministers and lawyers support the initiative and victims' groups have given it 
a guarded welcome, but some observers warn that broadcasters will inevitably 
concentrate on the most salacious and gruesome trials.
Under the plans, cameras will only be allowed in court to record judges' 
summing-up at the end of trials, as well as the sentencing. Broadcasters will 
not be permitted to film other parts of a trial, such as barristers' opening 
and closing statements or the cross-examination of witnesses – preventing 
showboating by lawyers, defendants and witnesses. Nor will be cameras be 
present at the moment when juries deliver their verdict.
Whitehall sources confirmed last night that the plans would be included in the 
Queen's Speech on 9 May, stressing they would be strictly limited, introduced 
first in Court of Appeal proceedings and then in Crown Court prosecutions. They 
said the Government was determined to stop trials becoming US-style television 
spectacles and to protect the identities of witnesses, victims and jury members.
Photography is banned in courts under a parliamentary Act of 1925 – four years 
before the first television broadcast in Britain.
The initiative – strongly supported by David Cameron – follows lobbying by the 
BBC, ITN and Sky News. In a joint letter last month they argued: "The ability 
to witness justice in action, in the public gallery, is a fundamental freedom. 
Television will make the public gallery open to all."
Supporters argue that public awareness of the judicial system has been piqued 
by the hacking scandal – through the Leveson Inquiry and the appearances of 
Rupert and James Murdoch before Parliament.
Televised proceedings have also been backed by the Director of Public 
Prosecutions, Keir Starmer, because it would allow the public to "see justice".
John Battle, head of compliance at ITN, said the reform would bring England and 
Wales into line with many other countries, including Scotland, where cameras 
have been allowed in courts under limited circumstances for nearly 20 years. 
"The public in this country see justice being done all over the world but they 
don't see it in their own," he said. "It will bring greater engagement between 
the public and the judicial system."
Baroness Kennedy, a barrister and Labour peer, said she backed allowing cameras 
into civil hearings, such as the Leveson Inquiry, but had "considerable 
reservations about cameras in criminal courts". She said: "These cases are 
salacious, they catch the public imagination and so it will be cases that are 
titillation, that are gruesome and I think it actually isn't conducive to 
justice.
"What happens is people tune into the small bits that appear in the news and 
think they know what the case is about and in fact haven't heard all the 
evidence. The cameras don't stay for the difficult, complicated stuff... So 
they don't get the complete picture but they think they do."
John Whittingdale, chairman of the Culture Select Committee, said the public 
had benefited from being able to view its high-profile hearings. "It is a 
fundamental principle of justice seen to be done," he said.
A spokesman for Victim Support said: "There may be a case for broadcasting some 
trials, or parts of trials, but witnesses in criminal trials should never 
appear on camera against their wishes. The justice system does need to be more 
transparent and accessible. But this does not mean that court cases should 
become a new form of reality TV. Any move towards an increased role for the 
media needs safeguards to protect victims and witnesses."
A Ministry of Justice spokesman said: "Open justice is a longstanding and 
fundamental principle of our legal system. Justice must be done and be seen to 
be done if it is to command public confidence. The Government and judiciary are 
determined to improve transparency and public understanding of courts. That is 
why we announced in September that we are planning to remove the ban... as soon 
as parliamentary time allows."
In the frame: Why ban came in
Concerns about newspapers publishing sensationalist photographs of notorious 
murderers led to the ban on cameras in court 100 years ago.
The most famous case was in 1912 when Frederick Seddon, convicted of poisoning 
one of his tenants, was filmed being sentenced to death. Similar cases 
followed, and in 1925 photography was banned by Parliament – along with the 
practice of making sketches inside a court, meaning that to this day legal 
artists have to move to another building before drawing their pictures of 
defendants, witnesses and judges from memory.
The Criminal Justice Act 1925 came to be interpreted as a ban on filming as 
well as taking still photographs.
Rob Hastings



 
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