Featuring fresh takes and real-time analysis from HuffPost's signature lineup of contributors
Simon Bucks

GET UPDATES FROM Simon Bucks
 

Britain Could Finally Catch Up By Allowing Cameras in Court

Posted: 30/03/2012 00:00

If the reports are true, and it seems they are, we are on the verge of something quite historic. British broadcasters have finally prised open the door to the last bastion of public life which remains closed to TV cameras, courtrooms.

It appears the Coalition government will announce in May that it intends to overturn the law banning any photography, let alone video, of a court case. It's the result of a campaign by Sky News and the other broadcasters dating back 10 years to effectively open up the public gallery to everyone.

Our argument, put simply, is that every citizen has the right to sit in a court, to view and hear the proceedings but few do because they don't have the opportunity. If you have a day job, or just don't happen to live nearby, it is impractical. The law banning cameras in court was passed in 1925 and was never targeted at television (Britain didn't even have a TV service then). In fact it seems that the main reason for the original law was to clear out photographers with exploding magnesium flash guns. The law is outdated.

Today most people get their information either from TV or the internet in all its forms, where video is rapidly becoming as important as text and pictures. Opponents of televising courts invariably suggest that broadcasters want to turn trials into Judge Judy style entertainment. It is time to nail this disinformation.

Initially we will only be allowed to show legal argument and judgments in the Court of Appeal; no defendants or witnesses. The existing rules governing court reporting (which in Britain are very strict) will also apply: so even if there were juries in the appeal courts, we could not identify them. Down the road, it is probable we will be able to video the sentencing remarks by judges in Crown Court criminal trials. But so far, that is all that is being discussed.

Why has the government decided to overturn a 97-year-old law, when successive previous governments resisted? Chiefly because it has a "transparency agenda" to open up the workings of the system to public scrutiny. The courts are a cornerstone of democracy, and the right of everyone to see justice being done fairly is, in my view, an integral part of that proposition. It's a small start.

Although the Court of Appeal frequently decides important cases of significant public interest, some will doubtless argue that watching lawyers and judges making arcane arguments will make drying paint looks positively dramatic. That's not the point. Our ambition is simply to be able to report more effectively, by showing the protagonists speaking, in their own voices, rather than reporting them second hand.

Finally, it seems, Britain is catching up with most other civilised countries which, to a greater or lesser extent, allow their citizens access to the judicial system through TV.

 

Follow Simon Bucks on Twitter: www.twitter.com/SimonBucks

FOLLOW UK
If the reports are true, and it seems they are, we are on the verge of something quite historic. British broadcasters have finally prised open the door to the last bastion of public life which remain...
If the reports are true, and it seems they are, we are on the verge of something quite historic. British broadcasters have finally prised open the door to the last bastion of public life which remain...
 
 
  • Comments
  • 13
  • Pending Comments
  • 0
  • View FAQ
Comments are closed for this entry
View All
Recency  | 
Popularity
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
dbrett480
08:09 PM on 04/12/2012
In America, cameras are also not allowed in many court rooms and there really isn't a problem with that.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Laatab
All The Worlds A Stage
07:36 AM on 04/01/2012
Sounds like the author is wringing his hands with relish at the thought of the getting at the this rare meat of human tragedy which he can package and sell. It's no good arguing a point with this kind of journalism, their moral compass atrophied long ago so they just wont get it.
03:48 PM on 03/31/2012
Of course the author of this article thinks its a good idea, he's a worker in the media industry. I myself and many other ordinary people I'm sure, think it is a awful idea and anyone of intelligence who has lived or visited the US over an extended period will probably say the same. It turns the serious business of dispensing judgement into a joke, an entertainment of the most sick and abhorrent type. It would become trial by the mob like it is any day you turn on that terrible TV station Fox News, brainless trash for the masses and yes it would influence the courts and all those who work in them. Celebrity would caress their ego's and likely interfere with the correct dispensing of justice.
03:57 PM on 03/31/2012
I would like to add one more thing that I forgot to mention. The articles author states 'Finally, it seems, Britain is catching up with most other civilised countries which, to a greater or lesser extent, allow their citizens access to the judicial system through TV' could I just remind people that most the worlds law is based of British law and not the other way round. The type of article being slanted here is, we are somehow behind the rest of the world and we need to catch up. Well as someone who has travelled extensively worldwide, nothing could be further from the truth, the vast majority of the world is light years behind us even including many parts of the US. I will never forget when people were being brainwashed into supporting Sunday trading and longer opening hours, the US was somehow held up as a country we should emulate. Again another lie, most shops and business close in the US on Sundays and apart from the large cities and holiday venues, do not open late but of course we all fall for the propaganda and are therefore more easily manipulated, baa baa.
11:41 AM on 03/31/2012
The Courts have a serious job to do. They are not entertainment.
This will distract the courts from their real job.
11:12 PM on 03/30/2012
Still no reform or transparency in the highly secretive and misandric family courts where families lives are ruined on a daily basis.

Perhaps you ought to be shining more light into that particular corner of the judiciary.
03:48 PM on 03/30/2012
It will start off small and then turn into the judge judy scenario that the author claims will not happen.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
photo
03:33 PM on 03/30/2012
Some criminals might love the idea of being on the telly. Many want the accolade of notoriety.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Edgar H
Keep the Press free!
09:44 AM on 03/30/2012
I just wonder how it will improve justice and how long before the Press ask for the right to name and show witnesses, jurors, etc in order to get to the real nitty gritty and make better TV.
photo
hearthammer
If left is right and right is wrong, decide!
08:57 AM on 03/30/2012
How could "Britain" catch up? The law is different in various parts of the UK and how would "Britain" solve that?

Do you, once again, mean "England?"
06:46 PM on 03/30/2012
You are quite right, the proposals apply to England and Wales. My apologies.
photo
hearthammer
If left is right and right is wrong, decide!
09:48 AM on 04/01/2012
No problem. You're not the only one to confuse "Britain" with "England"!

After all, even Simon Schama thinks England is an island!
01:26 AM on 03/30/2012
Shorthand will become so irrelevant if this goes ahead (which I hope it does).