1 / 106

Technology, Social Media & the Impact on the Courts

Technology, Social Media & the Impact on the Courts. Marcus Reinkensmeyer , Court Administrator Jessica Funkhouser , Special Counsel Superior Court in Maricopa County. Social Media Revolution. YouTube Video: Social Media Revolution 2 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lFZ0z5Fm-Ng.

homer
Download Presentation

Technology, Social Media & the Impact on the Courts

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Technology, Social Media & the Impact on the Courts Marcus Reinkensmeyer, Court Administrator Jessica Funkhouser, Special Counsel Superior Court in Maricopa County

  2. Social Media Revolution • YouTube Video: Social Media Revolution 2 • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lFZ0z5Fm-Ng

  3. What is “Social Media”? • “Use of web-based and mobile technologies to turn communication into interactive dialogue” – Wikipedia • Electronic communication via internet and mobile-based tools • Interactive • Networking • Sharing opinions, information & content • Building communities and networks • Encouraging participation and engagement

  4. Examples • Facebook – status updates, photos, videos, check-in • MySpace – similar posts • LinkedIn – professional networking • Twitter – 140-character updates • Blogs – anonymous and not • YouTube – on-line videos and blogging

  5. How to Access “Social Media” • Home and office computers • Laptops, netbooks & tablets • PDAs • Cell phones, Smartphones • Web TV

  6. Smartphone Capabilities • Access the internet • Photos – take, send, receive, edit • Videos – ditto • E-mail – synch with office and personal accounts • Read & edit documents • Skype and FaceTime • Tunes • “Apps”

  7. Apps • Google search • Maps – including satellite and street view • Facebook • GPS • Twitter • Newspapers, magazines, books • Wikipedia Mobile • Angry Birds & other games • Pandora Radio

  8. How Many Apps? • Apple’s App Store opened July 10, 2008 • January 2011 – 350,000 apps • May 2011 – 500,000 • Google’s Android market should surpass Apple by July 2011. • Apple Talk, Josh Lowensohn (May 24, 2011)

  9. Opportunities – Reaching a Broader Audience • Large segments of the population are using social media • Young people = largest group • And even Baby Boomers = largest increase in Facebook users: women 55 and older • Reporters

  10. “Facebook Demographics Revisited – 2011 Statistics” • Web Business by Ken Burbary, Mar 7, 2011

  11. “Facebook Numbers Feed IPO Outlook” • The Wall Street Journal, WSJ.com, Geoffrey A. Fowler (May 1, 2011) • Facebook on track to exceed $2 billion in earnings • It is one of the largest technology companies • More than 600 million users, who share photos, Web links and tastes….

  12. Facebook Statistics • 200 million people access Facebook via a mobile device each day • More than 30 billion pieces of content are shared each day • Facebook generates a staggering 700 billion page views per month • Source: facebook.com

  13. Where Do Young People Get News? • Where do young people get their political news and information? • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DKm6JYCfDLs

  14. YouTube – Others are Posting Information About the Court • Posting video clips from court’s “For the Record” system • Arizona’s court records rule requires release to individuals/media upon request (with exceptions - Rule 123) • Or filmed by media camera in the courtroom (Rule 122) • Some go “viral” • Then people blog about the video

  15. DMX on YouTube • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5EtET9Va9oM

  16. YouTube: Officer Swipes Notes From Lawyer • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UIoyJ-LyAaE

  17. “Who Tweets?” • Pew Research Center, Aaron Smith & Lee Rainie (Dec. 9, 2010) • “Do you ever use the internet to use Twitter or another service to share updates about yourself or to see updates about others?” • August 2008 – 6% of internet users • Sept. 2010 – 24% of internet users

  18. Twitter Use • Young adults 18-29 • Minority internet users more than twice as likely to use Twitter • Urban residents roughly twice as likely • Women and college-educated slightly more likely than average • 24% of Twitter users check several times a day

  19. Opportunities – Facebook Community Outreach • Access to court services • Self-help forms • Public information • Seminars for the public • New court services • Awards • Special projects • Volunteer opportunities • Job openings • Court locations & parking

  20. Opportunities – TwitterSpeed of Communication • “Real-time” communication by Court PIOs • Posting directly from courtroom vs. adding content to websites or sending emails from office • Immediate release vs. delayed press releases • Fewer phone calls to/from media & public

  21. Opportunities – Directs Court Customers to Court’s Website • Tweets • “Initial Appearance Video for Earl Simmons (DMX) is now on website” • High Profile case site has been updated on court’s website

  22. Opportunities – Reporters • Ensures they receive accurate information • Ensures they get information the Court wants them to have • Fewer reporters in courtrooms, taking up seats and places in long security lines • Media relations improved

  23. “Massachusetts Brings Social Networking to the Courtroom” • Yahoo News, Molly McHugh (May 2, 2011) • OpenCourt experiment • Partnership between court and Boston NPR station • Allows “journalists, bloggers, and anyone with an iPhone to use Wi-Fi to create real time updates and live stream cases as they unfold.”

  24. OpenCourt = camera = transparency = democracy? • Goal: “foster openness of the American courts with the idea that more transparent courts make for a stronger democracy.” • Controversy: invasion of privacy – defendant doesn’t want public to view his trial at home • Defense attorney: fraught with perils – attorney’s conversation can be picked up • Judge has discretion on whether stream goes live; can protect witnesses, etc.

  25. Tweets re: WikiLeaks Founder’s Hearing • One reporter told his Twitter followers: “judge just gave me explicit permission to tweet proceedings ‘if it’s quiet and doesn’t disturb anything’”. • Another reporter added: “In an amazing nod to the fact we live in digital age, judge has said we can tweet.” • The Telegraph, Shane Richmond (Dec. 15, 2010)

  26. News Flash from Arizona - 1979 • Since 1979, Rule 122, R.Ariz.S.Ct., permits cameras in the courtroom • Proceedings have been live-streamed from Arizona courtrooms for years • Reporters, the public and Court PIOs have been blogging & tweeting directly from the courtroom • No telephone photos – any photography must be pursuant to Rule 122, with the Court’s permission

  27. Pitfalls: “As Jurors Turn to Web, Mistrials are Popping Up” • New York Times, John Schwartz (Mar. 18, 2009) • 9 jurors doing internet research during federal court trial • Juror posted updates on Twitter and Facebook during a federal corruption trial

  28. Pitfalls – Misconduct / Mistrials • Lawyer disbarred for blogging while serving as a juror • New trial sought because 5 jurors became Facebook friends and “changed jury dynamics” • Maryland murder conviction reversed when juror researched definition of “lividity” on Wikipedia

  29. “Google” Mistrials • Juror watched an A & E report on the case • Jurors texted during trial & chatted with bailiff, and prosecutor posted a ditty about the trial on Facebook • Defendant “tweeted” during trial • “Until today I never understood the true depth that ineffective counsel could achieve. The 6th Amendment screams for justice.”

  30. More Juror Issues • Prospective juror in Casey Anthony trial posted info about the trial on Facebook, including “Book coming soon.” www.wesh.com, May 14, 2011. • Judge denies post-trial request to inspect internet records of juror. Dayton Daily News, Denise Callahan (May 23, 2011)

  31. Arizona’s “Google” New Trial • Aguilar v. State, 224 Ariz. 299, 230 P.3d 358 (App. 2010) • Bailiff discovered “extraneous documents” in foreman’s notebook • Reported to counsel • Motion for new trial • Trial judge held full evidentiary hearing

  32. Aguilar v. State – Facts • Foreman “Googled” – “first degree murder Arizona” • Printed definitions and brought them to jury room • Juror 9 researched “premeditation” • Jurors discussed and considered these definitions • They were “significantly different” than the Court’s instructions

  33. Aguilar v. State – Facts • Foreman “considered” his research • Juror 9 – confused but then internet definition “solidified my thinking” • Juror 11 – definitions “helped me understand” • Juror 2 – the jury “considered” them & information was “important” • Juror 7 – agreed it was “important” in the juror’s deliberation process.

  34. Aguilar v. State – Law • State must prove beyond a reasonable doubt that the misconduct did not taint the verdicts. • Defendant is entitled to new trial if it cannot be concluded beyond a reasonable doubt the extraneous information did not contribute to the verdict.

  35. Aguilar v. State – Factors to Consider • 1. Importance of the word or phrase being defined to the resolution of the case • 2. Extent to which the dictionary definition differs from the jury instructions or from the proper legal definition • 3. Extent to which the jury discussed and emphasized the definition

More Related