Criminal Justice Reporting and Crime Reporting Distinguished: The Proper Role of the Media.

In light of the recent media blitz in the Trayvon Martin case, and indeed, more recent ones before it, like the Casey Anthony and Amanda Knox cases; it’s absolutely important that we properly contextualise the role of the media. In this connection, I find the article by two distinguished Attorneys – William R. Montross, Jr & Patrick Mulvaney – very apposite in understanding the polemics the media deploys in such situations. Both Attorneys deliberately set out to make a nuanced distinction, and rightly so, between ‘justice reporting and crime reporting’. Read this: ‘Where crime reporting purports to answer the questions, Who? What? When? and Where? criminal justice reporting attempts to initiate conversation and debate about the far harder question of Why? Why is the man on death row? Why are people who kill a white person 400 to 500 percent more likely to receive the death penalty than people who kill a black person. Why do courts seem more concerned with protecting a death verdict than ensuring that justice was done? Criminal justice reporting is the opposite of crime reporting. Where crime reporting is salacious, criminal justice reporting is reasoned; where crime reporting ignores nuance,  criminal justice reporting is full of complexity. Crime reporting appeals to a limited range of base emotions; criminal justice reporting elicits a far more complex emotional response, and, more importantly, it engages the intellect.

Read their full treatise in Volume 61, Issue 6 in the Stanford Law Reviewhttp://www.stanfordlawreview.org/sites/default/files/articles/Montross-Mulvaney.pdf. The article goes on to provide anecdotal evidence of these as it appears in the media. They were also scathing of Texas’ ignoble epithet of being America’s most notorious killing state.

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