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Nesson asks Court to reconsider RIAA webcasting decision
TameasDust
Date:
April 25, 2009 @ 12:39 PM
Posted by Richard Koman @ April 24, 2009 @ 4:40 PM
http://government.zdnet.com/?p=4698
Harvard prof Charles Nesson will ask the First
Circuit Court of Appeals for an en banc review of
a panel’s refusal to allow webcasting of the
Tenenbaum P2P trial – and a stay of the hearing
currently scheduled for April 30.
Last week, a First Circuit panel found that a
District Court rule bans the webcasting of
trials. Nesson responded by asking for an
expedited reconsideration of the rule, which was
rejected today:
“I have circulated your request to my
colleagues and received their responses,” wrote
the Honorable Chief Judge Mark Wolf in an e-mail
to Professor Nesson. “The District Court has
decided not to take any action on the expedited
basis that you request. In view of the imminence
of the April 30, 2009 in your case, I am
providing you this response by email.”
So now, Nesson is asking for the entire Court of
Appeals to consider the argument that the Judge
Nancy Gertner had the right to order webcasting
of Tenenbaum’s trial.
“In the meantime, we are respectfully
requesting a stay of this hearing,” said
Nesson. “It is in this hearing that Joel’s
Constitutional claims will be considered, and it
is only right that the public have a right ‘to
see and to hear’ as per its own Constitutional
right.”
“The public opinion is overwhelmingly in
favor of a public webcast of the trial even in
spite of differing opinions on file-sharing,”
said the Joel Fights Back team. “Between
comments on blogs and a petition circulating, we
are amazed at the support for this issue.”
Nesson also pointed to the dissenting opinion in
the webcasting decision, which called for a
revision of the Rule:
Since its adoption, dramatic advances in
communications technology have had a profound
effect on our society. These new technological
capabilities provide an unprecedented opportunity
to increase public access to the judicial system
in appropriate circumstances. They have also
created expectations that judges will respond
sensibly to these opportunities. With its
sweeping prohibition on the broadcasting or
recording of district court proceedings, Local
Rule 83.3 prevents such responses in civil cases.
So too do the Policy of the Judicial Conference
and the Resolution of the Judicial Council of the
First Circuit that underlie the Local Rule. As
the outcome of this proceeding demonstrates, the
Rule, the Policy, and the Resolution should all
be reexamined promptly.
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