Media project publishes guide to live-blogging in courts

The Citizen Media Law Project has published a guide to live coverage in courts using the social media. Since not all judges allow electronic devices and local laws sometimes prohibit the devices, it is important to know how to avoid legal problems in live-blogging or tweeting in the courtroom.-DB

Citizen Media Law Project
December 10, 2009
By David Ardia

As part of our legal guide series on documenting public proceedings and events, today we published a guide to Live-Blogging and Tweeting from Court. Over the past year, we’ve published guides addressing how to stay out of legal trouble while documenting activities at polling places and covering the Presidential Inauguration, as well as aseries of videos on newsgathering and privacy. Today’s installment in the series looks at the impact of new media on one of our most tradition-bound institutions: the courts.

The question of who is a journalist – and by extension, what is journalism — has come into sharp relief in the context of media coverage of public events, including access to and reporting at court proceedings, election events, conferences, sporting events, and breaking news. A critical issue for coverage of these public events is, of course, access to the events in the first place. But once you are in, what tools can you use to supplement your reporting?

As we’ve noted in our blog many times, the popularity of Twitter and live-blogging has introduced a new dimension into a journalist’s coverage of court proceedings. The use of these real-time communications technologies has been met with a mixture of both acceptance and criticism from judges and lawyers.  While some judges allow electronic devices in their courtrooms, many others don’t. In fact, some local rules prohibit the use of electronic devices anywhere within the courthouse!

To help folks navigate these issues, we’ve written a guide chock full of practical advice on how to avoid legal trouble if you intend to provide live coverage from inside a courthouse. To supplement the guide, CMLP staff (thank you, David O’Brien and Rachel Gozhansky!) also conducted interviews with journalists and bloggers with experience live-blogging or tweeting from court and wrote up summariesdetailing their successes and failures.

You can find the new section on Live-Blogging and Tweeting from Court in our legal guide, along with general background on gaining access to courts and court records.

Copyright 2009 Citizens Media Law Project