Congressional Rep. Webcasts Hearing With Supreme Court Justices To Show How Easy It Is
from the just-like-that... dept
After a bit of a (very public) back and forth, a district court in the high-profile Tenenbaum case was recently told that it cannot broadcast courtroom proceedings online, saying that it violated certain rules. This is something that Congress could change... and it sounds like some in Congress really are interested in doing so. Rep. John Culberson, an early supporter of using tools like Twitter and Qik to communicate with constituents, apparently pulled out his camera phone in the middle of a hearing with Supreme Court Justices Breyer and Thomas and started broadcasting live to his website, trying to show them how easy it is to do these days, and why they should allow broadcasting of court proceedings in action.Thank you for reading this Techdirt post. With so many things competing for everyone’s attention these days, we really appreciate you giving us your time. We work hard every day to put quality content out there for our community.
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Filed Under: john culberson, supreme court, webcast
Companies: qik
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And then
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Re:
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Re: Dan
If anyone watched, maybe. But really, aside from a few high profile cases, most people couldn't care less. Give them a headline on news.google.com and that's all they care to know.
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Re: Re: Dan
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Re: Re: Re: Dan
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A couple of minor points
Finally, it's not about whether it is easy to have web-casting or not and it's never been (same for cameras for photography or broadcast in the courtroom); it's about whether judges want to allow it or not.
For the record, I fully support all forms of public access to court proceedings, broadcast, cable, web-cast, telegraph, semaphore, or jungle drums.
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