Minnesota courtrooms need a good airing
out, and allowing the limited use of cameras and other recording devices
inside them would be a significant first step.
In
the voting booth, Minnesotans are asked to approve a long list of
judges, typically running unopposed, of whom they have very limited or
no knowledge.
The judiciary is the third branch of
government but one where the news media provides the public with no
perceptible ongoing coverage of its inner workings nor sorely needed
scrutiny. Imagine if the actions and decisions of our president,
governors and legislators were rarely covered by America's press.
Furthermore,
it's very common in news reports relaying a specific judge's legal
decision that the judge's name will not even be mentioned, referred to
only as "a judge."
The fact Minnesota lags far
behind other states in allowing cameras in courtrooms and that such a
collection of powerful interests is so vehemently opposed to it speaks
clearly to the need to bring Minnesota's courts out of hiding.
Full Article & Source:
Bring Minnesota's courts out of hiding
2 comments:
hiding is the proper word for it. protected is too.
You're right Anonymous. The time for transparency is now.
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