CONSTITUTIONAL RIGHTS FOUNDATION
Bill of Right in Action
Winter 1994 (11:1)
Updated July 2000
The Right to an Impartial Jury Trial and a Free Press
Today many criminal cases receive extensive media coverage. The public and prospective jurors are often aware of the details of a crime even before a trial has begun. This has led many to question if the defendant in these cases can receive a fair trial.
In this issue, we present three articles on the mass media and its influence on criminal trials.
U.S. Government: Is a Fair Trial Possible in the Age of Mass Media?
World History: The Dreyfus Affair and the Press
U.S. History: Sex, Crime, and Jazz-Age Journalism
Officers: Knox Cologne, President; Alan Friedman, Immediate Past President; Publications Committee: Jerome C. Byrne, Chairperson; Paul Cane, Gerald Chaleff, Peggy Saferstein, Marvin Sears, Eugene Shutler, Lloyd M. Smith, Marjorie Steinberg, Lois Thompson, Susan Troy, Daniel H Willick; Staff: Todd Clark, Executive Director; Marshall L. Croddy, Director of Program and Materials Development; Lisa Friedman, Associate Director of Program and Materials Development; Carlton Martz, Writer; Bill Hayes, Editor; Cristy Lytal, Web Editor; Andrew Costly, Production Manager; Marvin Sears, CRF Board Reviewer.
© 1994, Constitutional Rights Foundation, 601 South Kingsley Drive, Los Angeles, CA 90005, (213) 487-5590