Opinion Why Televising the Trump Trial Is a Bad Idea - "It is different for the media. So everything you learn about this, you are learning from us. "

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Why Televising the Trump Trial Is a Bad Idea
The New York Times (archive.ph)
By Nick Akerman
2023-08-09 09:00:41GMT

As the indictments against former President Donald Trump multiply, TV and print media commentators as well as members of Congress have called for cameras in the courtroom. They claim that broadcasting the trials will increase the public’s understanding of the charges and the evidence against Mr. Trump and that it is the only way there can be full “transparency.” Even Mr. Trump’s lawyer John Lauro says he “personally” wants the American public to see “what kind of prosecution is going on.”

But the arguments in favor of broadcasting the trials do not give enough weight to the dangers that could pose to trial witnesses and jurors, or the potential to undermine the integrity of the trial processes themselves.

As an assistant United States attorney in the Southern District of New York, I tried a number of Mafia and organized crime cases. It was difficult, if not impossible, to convince ordinary citizens to testify in such cases because they were all fearful of physical retaliation. Even armed with subpoena power, I was reluctant to force people to testify, not only because of the real danger that existed but also because of the impact that fear would have on their testimony before the jury.

The Trump trials are no different. The judge who presided over the E. Jean Carroll civil (not criminal) rape trial, Lewis Kaplan, explicitly recognized the danger to the jury of being harassed and targeted by Trump partisans and ruled that the names of the jurors not be publicly disclosed. “If jurors’ identities [in this case] were disclosed, there would be a strong likelihood of unwanted media attention to the jurors, influence attempts, and/or of harassment or worse of jurors by supporters of Mr. Trump,” Judge Kaplan found on March 23. In reaching that decision, the judge referred to reports of Mr. Trump’s previous “violent rhetoric.”

The concern is the same for witnesses in the Trump criminal prosecutions. If there was any doubt that Judge Kaplan’s reason for protecting the safety of jurors applies equally to trial witnesses, it was obliterated last week when Mr. Trump threatened on social media: “IF YOU GO AFTER ME, I’M COMING AFTER YOU!”

It is one thing to testify in a public courtroom; it is a whole different level of public exposure to testify before the entire world on television. A witness who is named and pictured on television becomes a sitting duck for any Trump partisan intent on seeking retribution.

A major lesson from the O.J. Simpson murder trial, which gripped the nation when it was broadcast starting in 1995, is how the impact of television can undermine a trial when the judge, the lawyers, the defendant and the witnesses play to the viewing audience, as they did then. This turned a grave murder trial, with Mr. Simpson’s guilt or innocence hanging in the balance, into daily entertainment.

Mr. Trump likely wants cameras in the courtrooms precisely for that reason. His successes or failures as a president will likely always be debated, but almost everyone agrees that he excels at creating reality TV. No matter how experienced a judge is in controlling the courtroom, Mr. Trump could, through gestures or well-timed outbursts, try to use the broadcast to sway public opinion and in the process undermine the trial’s solemnity.

Concerns about witness intimidation and safety in this case certainly extend to potential TV coverage. Broadcasting trials is sometimes acceptable, but in this instance, because of concerns about protecting witnesses and jurors, shots and angles would almost certainly not include their faces nor jurors’ reactions to the evidence. But they are critical elements of understanding witness credibility and impact on a jury.

Judges have the power to enforce decorum in their courtrooms. A criminal defendant who defies the formalities of the courtroom risks being held in contempt and being fined or immediately incarcerated. Unfortunately, the threat of contempt will not restrain Mr. Trump, who has already personally and publicly issued verbal attacks against Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg and the judge presiding over the New York prosecution as well as Special Counsel Jack Smith.

Mr. Trump’s contemptuous behavior would likely have landed any other defendant in jail, but it is highly unlikely that any judge will take such a step with the former U.S. president.
To ensure greater transparency, the media can do more to, among other things, regularly rely on commentary from seasoned criminal trial lawyers who actually attend the trials and can provide in-depth, practical legal analysis.

For example, in the E. Jean Carroll case, the press extensively reported on the cross-examination of Ms. Carroll by Mr. Trump’s lawyer and the testimony he elicited from her. Far less commented on was the classic rookie mistake by Mr. Trump’s lawyer of enhancing Ms. Carroll’s credibility with an unnecessarily lengthy cross-examination, which permitted her to explain facts she could not include in her direct testimony.

Televising the Trump trials is no substitute for contemporaneous expert legal reporting and analysis to provide the public with real transparency.

Nick Akerman (@nickakerman), a lawyer in New York, was an assistant special Watergate prosecutor and an assistant U.S. attorney for the Southern District of New York.
 
They aren’t even trying to hide how blatantly they are going after him for political reasons anymore are they? Of course repubs are just as much niggercattle as the Dems so they won’t do anything about it. I’m just going to sit over here and enjoy my fish heads.
 
"Remember viewing Hillary's emails is a federal crime and you'll be raped in the ass in prison. But us trustworthy journalists at CNN are allowed to read them and we'll tell you the 100% hones truth"
 
To be fair the people at the top have probably realized if they televised the Trump trial, Trump would probably come off as more likable to the general public and that's bad for their attempted kangaroo court. For now all we have is questionable courtroom sketches.

sketch.png
 
I don't want them to broadcast the trial because then I'll have to talk about it with my co-workers and have an opinion other than "fuck these people."
The last time that happened was the submarine thing, and nobody appreciated my "fuck these people" opinion.
 
To be fair the people at the top have probably realized if they televised the Trump trial, Trump would probably come off as more likable to the general public and that's bad for their attempted kangaroo court. For now all we have is questionable courtroom sketches.

View attachment 5260858
Pictured: Sketch artist devotes time to cuff reflections on a table but fuck human hands right it's all just a fleshy bridge who cares.
 
I don't want them to broadcast the trial because then I'll have to talk about it with my co-workers and have an opinion other than "fuck these people."
The last time that happened was the submarine thing, and nobody appreciated my "fuck these people" opinion.
Guess what, you still will because they'll just parrot the Official Story of the Trial to Save Our Democracy. They wont broadcast the trial but they absolutely will still have an unquestionable narrative for the masses
 
God, we really have started the slide into becoming the new Soviet Union, haven't we?

When they start removing political enemies from official photos we'll know we've gone all the way.
 
TBH, El Comandante remembers the OJ Simpson trial/shitshow, and how OJ's corrupt lawyers ran circles around a tiny balled Japanese-American judge who was WAY out of his fucking depth. And it was wall to wall reality TV for nine fucking interminable months. Turn on the TV during the day, you got OJ. Change the channel, more OJ. It was basically a 1995 version of the Spanish American War-a dispute turned into a complete shitshow so that the newspaper kings of NYC could "win" a contrived battle over who sold more newspapers.

I really don't want to subject millenials and zoomers to another OJ trial, especially since Trump isn't some ghetto nigger whose money came from throwing a ball around. Trump and his Dream Team would make a mockery of what credibility the legal system has left. After a few months of wall to wall Rabid Orange Man, people would be taping M80s to their sets in a desperate bid to escape. LCD screens have some pretty toxic shit in them, and it needs to be kept out of the environment.
 
Televising the Trump trials is no substitute for contemporaneous expert legal reporting and analysis to provide the public with real transparency.
LOL, this palace eunuch really doesn't want the plebes getting the unfiltered/unedited look at Trump's political punishment for mildly defying the Cathedral.

Trump should have locked Her up.
Trump should have Ended the Fed.
Trump should have shuttered the FBI.
Trump should have cleared out the executive branch.
 
"Biden not campaigning at all in 2020 was good."

"Trump not campaigning at all in 2024 will be bad and cause him to lose."

I'm not so sure about that, prog-niggers.
 
I've heard this story before

We had to stop broadcasting Trump's daily coof briefings because they were making his approval numbers go up we had to protect the public!

Now we have to protect the public from seeing Trump live at trial so his numbers won't go up
 
I don't want them to broadcast the trial because then I'll have to talk about it with my co-workers and have an opinion other than "fuck these people."
The last time that happened was the submarine thing, and nobody appreciated my "fuck these people" opinion.
Upsetting your coworkers by expressing socially unpalatable opinions is the most fun you can have with your pants on, bro.
 
The Trump trials are no different. The judge who presided over the E. Jean Carroll civil (not criminal) rape trial, Lewis Kaplan, explicitly recognized the danger to the jury of being harassed and targeted by Trump partisans and ruled that the names of the jurors not be publicly disclosed. “If jurors’ identities [in this case] were disclosed, there would be a strong likelihood of unwanted media attention to the jurors, influence attempts, and/or of harassment or worse of jurors by supporters of Mr. Trump,” Judge Kaplan found on March 23. In reaching that decision, the judge referred to reports of Mr. Trump’s previous “violent rhetoric.”
What rhetoric is that again? Care to quote it? No of course not.

Remind me who was following the Rittenhouse jurors? Was it craaaaaaaaaaazy right wingers or was it a MSNBC 'freelancer' lol right. Fuck you.

Just be honest. You do not want people to see Jack Smith and the rest of the parade of faggots absolutely abuse the law.
Concerns about witness intimidation and safety in this case certainly extend to potential TV coverage.
Uh-huh...How many people testifying about Trump during impeachment trials had to go into hiding? OH RIGHT none of them.
Televising the Trump trials is no substitute for contemporaneous expert legal reporting and analysis to provide the public with real transparency.
Nick Akerman (@nickakerman), a lawyer in New York, was an assistant special Watergate prosecutor and an assistant U.S. attorney for the Southern District of New York.
Go fuck yourself with a cactus, Nick.
 
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