The Florida Supreme Court, following a pilot program for
televising judicial proceedings in the State, promulgated a revised
Canon 3A (7) of the Florida Code of Judicial Conduct. The Canon
permits electronic media and still photography coverage of judicial
proceedings, subject to the control of the presiding judge and to
implementing guidelines placing on trial judges obligations to
protect the fundamental right of the accused in a criminal case to
a fair trial. Appellants, who were charged with a crime that
attracted media attention, were convicted after a jury trial in a
Florida trial court over objections that the televising and
broadcast of parts of their trial denied them a fair and impartial
trial. The Florida District Court of Appeal affirmed, finding no
evidence that the presence of a television camera hampered
appellants in presenting their case, deprived them of an impartial
jury, or impaired the fairness of the trial. The Florida Supreme
Court denied review. The Florida courts did not construe
Estes
v. Texas, 381 U. S. 532, as
laying down a
per se constitutional rule barring broadcast
coverage under all circumstances.
Held: The Constitution does not prohibit a state from
experimenting with a program such as is authorized by Florida's
Canon 3A(7). Pp.
449 U. S.
569-583.
(a) This Court has no supervisory jurisdiction over state
courts, and, in reviewing a state court judgment, is confined to
evaluating it in relation to the Federal Constitution. P.
449 U. S.
570.
(b)
Estes v. Texas, supra, did not announce a
constitutional rule that all photographic, radio, and television
coverage of criminal trials is inherently a denial of due process.
It does not stand as an absolute ban on state experimentation with
an evolving technology, which, in terms of modes of mas
communication, was in its relative infancy in 1964 when
Estes was decided, and is, even now, in a state of
continuing change. Pp.
449 U. S.
570-574.
(c) An absolute constitutional ban on broadcast coverage of
trials cannot be justified simply because there is a danger that,
in some cases, conduct of the broadcasting process or prejudicial
broadcast accounts of pretrial and trial events may impair the
ability of jurors to decide the issue of guilt or innocence
uninfluenced by extraneous matter. The appropriate safeguard
against juror prejudice is the defendant's right
Page 449 U. S. 561
to demonstrate that the media's coverage of his case -- be it
printed or broadcast compromised the ability of the particular jury
that heard the case to adjudicate fairly. Pp.
449 U. S.
574-575.
(d) Whatever may be the "mischievous potentialities [of
broadcast coverage] for intruding upon the detached atmosphere
which should always surround the judicial process,"
Estes v.
Texas, supra at
381 U. S. 587,
at present no one has presented empirical data sufficient to
establish that the mere presence of the broadcast media in the
courtroom inherently has an adverse effect on that process under
all circumstances. Here, appellants have offered nothing to
demonstrate that their trial was subtly tainted by broadcast
coverage -- let alone that all broadcast trials would be so
tainted. Pp.
449 U. S.
575-580.
(e) Nor have appellants shown either that the media's coverage
of their trial -- printed or broadcast -- compromised the jury's
ability to judge them fairly, or that the broadcast coverage of
their particular trial had an adverse impact on the trial
participants sufficient to constitute a denial of due process. Pp.
449 U. S.
580-582.
(f) Absent a showing of prejudice of constitutional dimensions
to these appellants, there is no reason for this Court either to
endorse or to invalidate Florida's experiment. P.
449 U. S.
582.
376 So. 2d
1157, affirmed.
BURGER, C.J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which
BRENNAN, MARSHALL, BLACKMUN, POWELL, and REHNQUIST, JJ., joined.
STEWART, J., filed an opinion concurring in the result,
post, p.
449 U. S. 583.
WHITE, J., filed an opinion concurring in the judgment,
post, p.
449 U. S. 586.
STEVENS, J., took no part in the decision of the case.
Page 449 U. S. 562
CHIEF JUSTICE BURGER delivered the opinion of the Court.
The question presented on this appeal is whether, consistent
with constitutional guarantees, a state may provide for radio,
television, and still photographic coverage of a criminal trial for
public broadcast, notwithstanding the objection of the accused.
I
A
Background. Over the past 50 years, some criminal cases
characterized as "sensational" have been subjected to extensive
coverage by news media, sometimes seriously interfering with the
conduct of the proceedings and creating a setting wholly
inappropriate for the administration of justice. Judges, lawyers,
and others soon became concerned, and in 1937, after study, the
American Bar Association House of Delegates
Page 449 U. S. 563
adopted Judicial Canon 35, declaring that all photographic and
broadcast coverage of courtroom proceedings should be prohibited.
[
Footnote 1] In 1962, the House
of Delegates amended Canon 35 to proscribe television coverage as
well. 77 A.B.A. Rep. 61611 (1952). The Canon's proscription was
reaffirmed in 1972, when the Code of Judicial Conduct replaced the
Canons of Judicial Ethics and Canon 3A(7) superseded Canon 35. E.
Thode, Reporter's Notes to Code of Judicial Conduct 5659 (1973).
Cf. Fed.Rule Crim.Proc. 53. A majority of the states,
including Florida, adopted the substance of the ABA provision and
its amendments. In Florida, the rule was embodied in Canon 3A(7) of
the Florida Code of Judicial Conduct. [
Footnote 2]
In February, 1978, the American Bar Association Committee on
Fair Trial-Free Press proposed revised standards. These
Page 449 U. S. 564
included a provision permitting courtroom coverage by the
electronic media under conditions to be established by local rule
and under the control of the trial judge, but only if such coverage
was carried out unobtrusively and without affecting the conduct of
the trial. [
Footnote 3] The
revision was endorsed by the ABA's Standing Committee on Standards
for Criminal Justice and by its Committee on Criminal Justice and
the Media, but it was rejected by the House of Delegates on
February 12, 1979. 65 A.B.A.J. 304 (1979).
In 1978, based upon its own study of the matter, the Conference
of State Chief Justices, by a vote of 94 to 1, approved a
resolution to allow the highest court of each state to promulgate
standards and guidelines regulating radio, television, and other
photographic coverage of court proceedings. [
Footnote 4]
The Florida Program. In January, 1975, while these
developments were unfolding, the Post-Newsweek Stations of Florida
petitioned the Supreme Court of Florida urging a change in
Florida's Canon 3A(7). In April, 1975, the court invited
presentations in the nature of a rulemaking proceeding, and, in
January, 1976, announced an experimental program for televising one
civil and one criminal trial under specific guidelines.
Petition of Post-Newsweek Stations, Florida,
Inc., 327 So. 2d 1.
These initial guidelines required the consent of all parties. It
developed, however, that, in practice, such consent could not be
obtained. The Florida Supreme Court then supplemented its order and
established a new 1-year pilot program
Page 449 U. S. 565
during which the electronic media were permitted to cover all
judicial proceedings in Florida without reference to the consent of
participants, subject to detailed standards with respect to
technology and the conduct of operators.
In re Petition of
Post-Newsweek Stations, Florida, Inc., 347 So. 2d 402
(1977). The experiment began in July, 1977, and continued through
June, 1978.
When the pilot program ended, the Florida Supreme Court received
and reviewed briefs, reports, letters of comment, and studies. It
conducted its own survey of attorneys, witnesses, jurors, and court
personnel through the Office of the State Court Coordinator. A
separate survey was taken of judges by the Florida Conference of
Circuit Judges. The court also studied the experience of 6 States
[
Footnote 5] that had, by 1979,
adopted rules relating to electronic coverage of trials, as well as
that of the 10 other States that, like Florida, were experimenting
with such coverage. [
Footnote
6]
Following its review of this material, the Florida Supreme Court
concluded
"that, on balance, there [was] more to be gained than lost by
permitting electronic media coverage of judicial proceedings
subject to standards for such coverage."
In re Petition of Post-Newsweek Stations, Florida,
Inc., 370 So. 2d
764, 780 (1979). The Florida court was of the view that,
because of the significant effect of the courts on the day-to-day
lives of the citizenry, it was essential that the people have
confidence in the process. It felt that broadcast coverage
Page 449 U. S. 566
of trials would contribute to wider public acceptance and
understanding of decisions.
Ibid. Consequently, after
revising the 1977 guidelines to reflect its evaluation of the pilot
program, the Florida Supreme Court promulgated a revised Canon
3A(7).
Id. at 781. The Canon provides:
"Subject at all times to the authority of the presiding judge to
(i) control the conduct of proceedings before the court, (ii)
ensure decorum and prevent distractions, and (iii) ensure the fair
administration of justice in the pending cause, electronic media
and still photography coverage of public judicial proceedings in
the appellate and trial courts of this state shall be allowed in
accordance with standards of conduct and technology promulgated by
the Supreme Court of Florida."
Ibid.
The implementing guidelines specify in detail the kind of
electronic equipment to be used and the manner of its use.
Id. at 778-779, 783-784. For example, no more than one
television camera and only one camera technician are allowed.
Existing recording systems used by court reporters are used by
broadcasters for audio pickup. Where more than one broadcast news
organization seeks to cover a trial, the media must pool coverage.
No artificial lighting is allowed. The equipment is positioned in a
fixed location, and it may not be moved during trial. Videotaping
equipment must be remote from the courtroom. Film, videotape, and
lenses may not be changed while the court is in session. No audio
recording of conferences between lawyers, between parties and
counsel, or at the bench is permitted. The judge has sole and
plenary discretion to exclude coverage of certain witnesses, and
the jury may not be filmed. The judge has discretionary power to
forbid coverage whenever satisfied that coverage may have a
deleterious effect on the paramount right of the defendant to a
fair trial. The Florida Supreme Court has the right to revise these
rules as experience dictates, or indeed to bar all broadcast
coverage or photography in courtrooms.
Page 449 U. S. 567
B
In July, 1977, appellants were charged with conspiracy to commit
burglary, grand larceny, and possession of burglary tools. The
counts covered breaking and entering a well-known Miami Beach
restaurant.
The details of the alleged criminal conduct are not relevant to
the issue before us, but several aspects of the case distinguish it
from a routine burglary. At the time of their arrest, appellants
were Miami Beach policemen. The State's principal witness was John
Sion, an amateur radio operator who, by sheer chance, had overheard
and recorded conversations between the appellants over their police
walkie-talkie radios during the burglary. Not surprisingly, these
novel factors attracted the attention of the media.
By pretrial motion, counsel for the appellants sought to have
experimental Canon 3A(7) declared unconstitutional on its face and
as applied. The trial court denied relief, but certified the issue
to the Florida Supreme Court. However, the Supreme Court declined
to rule on the question, on the ground that it was not directly
relevant to the criminal charges against the appellants.
State
v. Granger, 352 So. 2d 175 (1977).
After several additional fruitless attempts by the appellants to
prevent electronic coverage of the trial, the jury was selected. At
voir dire, the appellants' counsel asked each prospective
juror whether he or she would be able to be "fair and impartial"
despite the presence of a television camera during some, or all, of
the trial. Each juror selected responded that such coverage would
not affect his or her consideration in any way. A television camera
recorded the
voir dire.
A defense motion to sequester the jury because of the television
coverage was denied by the trial judge. However, the court
instructed the jury not to watch or read anything about the case in
the media and suggested that jurors "avoid the local news and watch
only the national news on television."
Page 449 U. S. 568
App. 13. Subsequently, defense counsel requested that the
witnesses be instructed not to watch any television accounts of
testimony presented at trial. The trial court declined to give such
an instruction, for "no witness' testimony was [being] reported or
televised [on the evening news] in any way."
Id. at
14.
A television camera was in place for one entire afternoon,
during which the State presented the testimony of Sion, its chief
witness. [
Footnote 7] No camera
was present for the presentation of any part of the case for the
defense. The camera returned to cover closing arguments. Only 2
minutes and 55 seconds of the trial below were broadcast -- and
those depicted only the prosecution's side of the case.
The jury returned a guilty verdict on all counts. Appellants
moved for a new trial, claiming that, because of the television
coverage, they had been denied a fair and impartial trial. No
evidence of specific prejudice was tendered.
The Florida District Court of Appeal affirmed the convictions.
It declined to discuss the facial validity of Canon 3A(7); it
reasoned that the Florida Supreme Court, having decided to permit
television coverage of criminal trials on an experimental basis,
had implicitly determined that such coverage did not violate the
Federal or State Constitutions. Nonetheless, the District Court of
Appeal did agree to certify the question of the facial
constitutionality of Canon 3A(7) to the Florida Supreme Court. The
District Court of Appeal found no evidence in the trial record to
indicate that the presence of a television camera had hampered
appellants in presenting their case or had deprived them of an
impartial jury.
The Florida Supreme Court denied review, holding that the
appeal, which was limited to a challenge to Canon 3A(7),
Page 449 U. S. 569
was moot by reason of its decision in
In re Petition of
Post-Newsweek Stations, Florida, Inc., 370 So. 2d 764
(1979), rendered shortly after the decision of the District Court
of Appeal.
II
At the outset, it is important to note that, in promulgating the
revised Canon 3A(7), the Florida Supreme Court pointedly rejected
any state or federal constitutional right of access on the part of
photographers or the broadcast media to televise or electronically
record and thereafter disseminate court proceedings. It carefully
framed its holding as follows:
"While we have concluded that the due process clause does not
prohibit electronic media coverage of judicial proceedings
per
se, by the same token, we reject the argument of the
[Post-Newsweek stations] that the first and sixth amendments to the
United States Constitution mandate entry of the electronic media
into judicial proceedings."
Id. at 774.
The Florida court relied on our holding in
Nixon v. Warner
Communications, Inc., 435 U. S. 589
(1978), where we said:
"In the first place, . . . there is no constitutional right to
have [live witness] testimony recorded and broadcast. Second, while
the guarantee of a public trial, in the words of Mr. Justice Black,
is 'a safeguard against any attempt to employ our courts as
instruments- of persecution,' it confers no special benefit on the
press. Nor does the Sixth Amendment require that the trial -- or
any part of it -- be broadcast live or on tape to the public. The
requirement of a public trial is satisfied by the opportunity of
members of the public and the press to attend the trial and to
report what they have observed."
Id. at 610 (citations omitted).
The Florida Supreme Court predicated the revised Canon 3A(7)
upon its supervisory authority over the Florida courts
Page 449 U. S. 570
and not upon any constitutional imperative. Hence, we have
before us only the limited question of the Florida Supreme Court's
authority to promulgate the Canon for the trial of cases in Florida
courts.
This Court has no supervisory jurisdiction over state courts,
and, in reviewing a state court judgment, we are confined to
evaluating it in relation to the Federal Constitution.
III
Appellants rely chiefly on
Estes v. Texas, 381 U.
S. 532 (1965), and Chief Justice Warren's separate
concurring opinion in that case. They argue that the televising of
criminal trials is inherently a denial of due process, and they
read
Estes as announcing a
per se constitutional
rule to that effect.
Chief Justice Warren's concurring opinion, in which he was
joined by Justices Douglas and Goldberg, indeed provides some
support for the appellants' position:
"While I join the Court's opinion and agree that the televising
of criminal trials is inherently a denial of due process, I desire
to express additional views on why this is so. In doing this, I
wish to emphasize that our condemnation of televised criminal
trials is not based on generalities or abstract fears. The record
in this case presents a vivid illustration of the inherent
prejudice of televised criminal trials, and supports our conclusion
that this is the appropriate time to make a definitive appraisal of
television in the courtroom."
Id. at
381 U. S. 552.
If appellants' reading of
Estes were correct, we would be
obliged to apply that holding and reverse the judgment under
review.
The six separate opinions in
Estes must be examined
carefully to evaluate the claim that it represents a
per
se constitutional rule forbidding all electronic coverage.
Chief Justice Warren and Justices Douglas and Goldberg joined
Justice Clark's opinion announcing the judgment, thereby
creating
Page 449 U. S. 571
only a plurality. Justice Harlan provided the fifth vote
necessary in support of the judgment. In a separate opinion, he
pointedly limited his concurrence:
"I concur in the opinion of the Court, subject, however, to the
reservations and only to the extent indicated in this opinion."
Id. at
381 U. S. 587.
A careful analysis of Justice Harlan's opinion is therefore
fundamental to an understanding of the ultimate holding of
Estes.
Justice Harlan began by observing that the question of the
constitutional permissibility of televised trials was one fraught
with unusual difficulty:
"Permitting television in the courtroom undeniably has
mischievous potentialities for intruding upon the detached
atmosphere which should always surround the judicial process.
Forbidding this innovation, however, would doubtless impinge upon
one of the valued attributes of our federalism by preventing the
states from pursuing a novel course of procedural experimentation.
My conclusion is that there is no constitutional requirement that
television be allowed in the courtroom, and,
at least as to a
notorious criminal trial such as this one, the considerations
against allowing television in the courtroom so far outweigh the
countervailing factors advanced in its support as to require a
holding that what was done in this case infringed the fundamental
right to a fair trial assured by the Due Process Clause of the
Fourteenth Amendment."
Ibid. (emphasis added).
He then proceeded to catalog what he perceived as the inherent
dangers of televised trials.
"In the context of a trial of intense public interest, there is
certainly a strong possibility that the timid or reluctant witness,
for whom a court appearance, even at its traditional best, is a
harrowing affair, will become more timid or reluctant when he finds
that he will also be
Page 449 U. S. 572
appearing before a 'hidden audience' of unknown, but large,
dimensions. There is certainly a strong possibility that the
'cocky' witness having a thirst for the limelight will become more
'cocky' under the influence of television. And who can say that the
juror who is gratified by having been chosen for a front-line case,
an ambitious prosecutor, a publicity-minded defense attorney, and
even a conscientious judge will not stray, albeit unconsciously,
from doing what 'comes naturally' into pluming themselves for a
satisfactory television 'performance'?"
Id. at
381 U. S. 591.
Justice Harlan faced squarely the reality that these possibilities
carry "grave potentialities for distorting the integrity of the
judicial process," and that, although such distortions may produce
no telltale signs, "their effects may be far more pervasive and
deleterious than the physical disruptions which all would concede
would vitiate a conviction."
Id. at
381 U. S. 592.
The "countervailing factors" alluded to by Justice Harlan were, as
here, the educational and informational value to the public.
JUSTICE STEWART, joined by JUSTICES Black, BRENNAN, and WHITE in
dissent, concluded that no prejudice had been shown and that
Estes' Fourteenth Amendment rights had not been violated.
While expressing reservations not unlike those of Justice Harlan
and those of Chief Justice Warren, the dissent expressed
unwillingness to "escalate this personal view into a
per
se constitutional rule."
Id. at
381 U. S. 601.
The four dissenters disagreed both with the
per se rule
embodied in the plurality opinion of Justice Clark and with the
judgment of the Court that "the
circumstances of [that]
trial led to a denial of [
Estes'] Fourteenth Amendment
rights."
Ibid. (emphasis added).
Parsing the six opinions in
Estes, one is left with a
sense of doubt as to precisely how much of Justice Clark's opinion
was joined in, and supported by, Justice Harlan. In an area
Page 449 U. S. 573
charged with constitutional nuances, perhaps more should not be
expected. Nonetheless, it is fair to say that Justice Harlan viewed
the holding as limited to the proposition that "
what was done
in this case infringed the fundamental right to a fair trial
assured by the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment,"
id., 381 U. S. 587
(emphasis added), he went on:
"
At the present juncture, I can only conclude that
televised trials,
at least in cases like this one, possess
such capabilities for interfering with the even course of the
judicial process that they are constitutionally banned."
Id. at
381 U. S. 596
(emphasis added). Justice Harlan's opinion, upon which analysis of
the constitutional holding of
Estes turns, must be read as
defining the scope of that holding; we conclude that
Estes
is not to be read as announcing a constitutional rule barring still
photographic, radio, and television coverage in all cases and under
all circumstances. [
Footnote 8]
It does not stand as an absolute ban on
Page 449 U. S. 574
state experimentation with an evolving technology, which, in
terms of modes of mass communication, was in its relative infancy
in 1964, and is, even now, in a stage of continuing change.
IV
Since we are satisfied that
Estes did not announce a
constitutional rule that all photographic or broadcast coverage of
criminal trials is inherently a denial of due process, we turn to
consideration, as a matter of first impression, of the appellants'
suggestion that we now promulgate such a
per se rule.
A
Any criminal case that generates a great deal of publicity
presents some risks that the publicity may compromise the right of
the defendant to a fair trial. Trial courts must be especially
vigilant to guard against any impairment of the defendant's right
to a verdict based solely upon the evidence and the relevant law.
Over the years, courts have developed a range of curative devices
to prevent publicity about a trial from infecting jury
deliberations.
See, e.g., Nebraska Press Assn. v. Stuart,
427 U. S. 539,
427 U. S.
563-565 (1976).
An absolute constitutional ban on broadcast coverage of
Page 449 U. S. 575
trials cannot be justified simply because there is a danger
that, in some cases, prejudicial broadcast accounts of pretrial and
trial events may impair the ability of jurors to decide the issue
of guilt or innocence uninfluenced by extraneous matter. The risk
of juror prejudice in some cases does not justify an absolute ban
on news coverage of trials by the printed media; so also the risk
of such prejudice does not warrant an absolute constitutional ban
on all broadcast coverage. A case attracts a high level of public
attention because of its intrinsic interest to the public and the
manner of reporting the event. The risk of juror prejudice is
present in any publication of a trial, but the appropriate
safeguard against such prejudice is the defendant's right to
demonstrate that the media's coverage of his case -- be it printed
or broadcast -- compromised the ability of the particular jury that
heard the case to adjudicate fairly.
See 449 U.
S. infra.
B
As we noted earlier, the concurring opinions in
Estes
expressed concern that the very presence of media cameras and
recording devices at a trial inescapably gives rise to an adverse
psychological impact on the participants in the trial. This kind of
general psychological prejudice, allegedly present whenever there
is broadcast coverage of a trial, is different from the more
particularized problem of prejudicial impact discussed earlier. If
it could be demonstrated that the mere presence of photographic and
recording equipment and the knowledge that the event would be
broadcast invariably and uniformly affected the conduct of
participants so as to impair fundamental fairness, our task would
be simple; prohibition of broadcast coverage of trials would be
required.
In confronting the difficult and sensitive question of the
potential psychological prejudice associated with broadcast
coverage of trials, we have been aided by
amici briefs
submitted by various state officers involved in law enforcement,
the Conference of Chief Justices, and the Attorneys General
Page 449 U. S. 576
of 17 States [
Footnote 9] in
support of continuing experimentation such as that embarked upon by
Florida, and by the American College of Trial Lawyers, and various
members of the defense bar [
Footnote 10] representing essentially the views expressed
by the concurring Justices in
Estes.
Not unimportant to the position asserted by Florida and other
states is the change in television technology since 1962, when
Estes was tried. It is urged, and some empirical data are
presented, [
Footnote 11]
that many of the negative factors found in
Estes --
cumbersome equipment, cables, distracting lighting, numerous camera
technicians -- are less substantial factors today than they were at
that time.
It is also significant that safeguards have been built into
the
Page 449 U. S. 577
experimental programs in state courts, and into the Florida
program, to avoid some of the most egregious problems envisioned by
the six opinions in the
Estes case. Florida admonishes its
courts to take special pains to protect certain witnesses -- for
example, children, victims of sex crimes, some informants, and even
the very timid witness or party -- from the glare of publicity and
the tensions of being "on camera."
In re Petition of
Post-Newsweek Stations, Florida, Inc., 370 So. 2d at 779.
The Florida guidelines place on trial judges positive
obligations to be on guard to protect the fundamental right of the
accused to a fair trial. The Florida Canon, being one of the few
permitting broadcast coverage of criminal trials over the objection
of the accused, raises problems not present in the rules of other
states. Inherent in electronic coverage of a trial is the risk that
the very awareness by the accused of the coverage and the
contemplated broadcast may adversely affect the conduct of the
participants and the fairness of the trial, yet leave no evidence
of how the conduct or the trial's fairness was affected. Given this
danger, it is significant that Florida requires that objections of
the accused to coverage be heard and considered on the record by
the trial court.
See, e.g., Green v. State, 377 So. 2d
193, 201 (Fla.App. 1979). In addition to providing a record for
appellate review, a pretrial hearing enables a defendant to advance
the basis of his objection to broadcast coverage and allows the
trial court to define the steps necessary to minimize or eliminate
the risks of prejudice to the accused. Experiments such as the one
presented here may well increase the number of appeals by adding a
new basis for claims to reverse, but this is a risk Florida has
chosen to take after preliminary experimentation. Here, the record
does not indicate that appellants requested an evidentiary hearing
to show adverse impact or injury. Nor does the record reveal
anything more than generalized allegations of prejudice.
Page 449 U. S. 578
Nonetheless, it is clear that the general issue of the
psychological impact of broadcast coverage upon the participants in
a trial, and particularly upon the defendant, is still a subject of
sharp debate -- as the
amici briefs of the American
College of Trial Lawyers and others of the trial bar in opposition
to Florida's experiment demonstrate. These
amici state the
view that the concerns expressed by the concurring opinions in
Estes, see 449 U. S.
supra, have been borne out by actual experience.
Comprehensive empirical data are still not available -- at least on
some aspects of the problem. For example, the
amici brief
of the Attorneys General concedes:
"The defendant's interests in not being harassed and in being
able to concentrate on the proceedings and confer effectively with
his attorney are crucial aspects of a fair trial. There is not much
data on defendant's reactions to televised trials available now,
but what there is indicates that it is possible to regulate the
media so that their presence does not weigh heavily on the
defendant.
Particular attention should be paid to this area of
concern as study of televised trials continues."
Brief for the Attorney General of Alabama
et al. as
Amici Curiae 40 (emphasis added). The experimental status
of electronic coverage of trials is also emphasized by the
amicus brief of the Conference of Chief Justices:
"Examination and reexamination, by state courts, of the in-court
presence of the electronic news media,
vel non, is an
exercise of authority reserved to the states under our
federalism."
Brief for Conference of Chief Justices as
Amicus Curiae
2.
Whatever may be the "mischievous potentialities [of broadcast
coverage] for intruding upon the detached atmosphere which should
always surround the judicial process,"
Estes v. Texas, 381
U.S. at
381 U. S. 587,
at present, no one has been able to present empirical data
sufficient to establish that the mere
Page 449 U. S. 579
presence of the broadcast media inherently has an adverse effect
on that process.
See n 11,
supra. The appellants have offered nothing
to demonstrate that their trial was subtly tainted by broadcast
coverage -- let alone that all broadcast trials would be so
tainted.
See 449 U. S.
infra. [
Footnote
12]
Where, as here, we cannot say that a denial of due process
automatically results from activity authorized by a state, the
admonition of Justice Brandeis, dissenting in
New State Ice Co.
v. Liebmann, 285 U. S. 262,
285 U. S. 311
(1932), is relevant:
"To stay experimentation in things social and economic is a
grave responsibility. Denial of the right to experiment may be
fraught with serious consequences to the Nation. It is one of the
happy incidents of the federal system that a single courageous
State may, if its citizens choose, serve as a laboratory; and try
novel social and economic experiments without risk to the rest of
the country. This Court has the power to prevent an experiment. We
may strike down the statute which embodies it on the ground that,
in our opinion, the measure is arbitrary, capricious, or
unreasonable. . . . But in the exercise of this high power, we must
be ever on our guard, lest we erect our prejudices into legal
principles. If we would guide by the light of reason, we must let
our minds be bold."
(Footnote omitted.)
Page 449 U. S. 580
This concept of federalism, echoed by the states favoring
Florida's experiment, must guide our decision.
C
Amici members of the defense bar,
see n 10,
supra, vigorously
contend that displaying the accused on television is, in itself, a
denial of due process. Brief for the California State Public
Defenders Association
et al. as
Amici Curiae
5-10. This was a source of concern to Chief Justice Warren and
Justice Harlan in
Estes: that coverage of select cases
"singles out certain defendants and subjects them to trials under
prejudicial conditions not experienced by others." 381 U.S. at
381 U. S. 565
(Warren, C.J., concurring). Selection of which trials, or parts of
trials, to broadcast will inevitably be made not by judges, but by
the media, and will be governed by such factors as the nature of
the crime and the status and position of the accused -- or of the
victim; the effect may be to titillate, rather than to educate and
inform. The unanswered question is whether electronic coverage will
bring public humiliation upon the accused with such randomness that
it will evoke due process concerns by being "unusual in the same
way that being struck by lighting" is "unusual."
Furman v.
Georgia, 408 U. S. 238,
408 U. S. 309
(1972) (STEWART, J., concurring). Societies and political systems,
that, from time to time, have put on "Yankee Stadium" "show trials"
tell more about the power of the state than about its concern for
the decent administration of justice -- with every citizen
receiving the same kind of justice.
The concurring opinion of Chief Justice Warren, joined by
Justices Douglas and Goldberg, in
Estes can fairly be read
as viewing the very broadcast of some trials as potentially a form
of punishment in itself -- a punishment before guilt. This concern
is far from trivial. But whether coverage of a few trials will, in
practice, be the equivalent of a "Yankee Stadium" setting -- which
Justice Harlan likened to the public
Page 449 U. S. 581
pillory long abandoned as a barbaric perversion of decent
justice -- must also await the continuing experimentation.
D
To say that the appellants have not demonstrated that broadcast
coverage is inherently a denial of due process is not to say that
the appellants were, in fact, accorded all of the protections of
due process in their trial. As noted earlier, a defendant has the
right on review to show that the media's coverage of his case --
printed or broadcast -- compromised the ability of the jury to
judge him fairly. Alternatively, a defendant might show that
broadcast coverage of his particular case had an adverse impact on
the trial participants sufficient to constitute a denial of due
process. Neither showing was made in this case.
To demonstrate prejudice in a specific case, a defendant must
show something more than juror awareness that the trial is such as
to attract the attention of broadcasters.
Murphy v.
Florida, 421 U. S. 794,
421 U. S. 800
(1975). No doubt the very presence of a camera in the courtroom
made the jurors aware that the trial was thought to be of
sufficient interest to the public to warrant coverage. Jurors,
forbidden to watch all broadcasts, would have had no way of knowing
that only fleeting seconds of the proceeding would be reproduced.
But the appellants have not attempted to show with any specificity
that the presence of cameras impaired the ability of the jurors to
decide the case on only the evidence before them, or that their
trial was affected adversely by the impact on any of the
participants of the presence of cameras and the prospect of
broadcast.
Although not essential to our holding, we note that, at
voir
dire, the jurors were asked if the presence of the camera
would in any way compromise their ability to consider the case.
Each answered that the camera would not prevent him or her from
considering the case solely on the merits. App.
Page 449 U. S. 582
8-12. The trial court instructed the jurors not to watch
television accounts of the trial,
id. at 13-14, and the
appellants do not contend that any juror violated this instruction.
The appellants have offered no evidence that any participant in
this case was affected by the presence of cameras. In short, there
is no showing that the trial was compromised by television
coverage, as was the case in
Estes.
V
It is not necessary either to ignore or to discount the
potential danger to the fairness of a trial in a particular case in
order to conclude that Florida may permit the electronic media to
cover trials in its state courts. Dangers lurk in this, as in most
experiments, but unless we were to conclude that television
coverage under all conditions is prohibited by the Constitution,
the states must be free to experiment. We are not empowered by the
Constitution to oversee or harness state procedural
experimentation; only when the state action infringes fundamental
guarantees are we authorized to intervene. We must assume state
courts will be alert to any factors that impair the fundamental
rights of the accused.
The Florida program is inherently evolutional in nature; the
initial project has provided guidance for the new canons which can
be changed at will, and application of which is subject to control
by the trial judge. The risk of prejudice to particular defendants
is ever present, and must be examined carefully as cases arise.
Nothing of the "Roman circus" or "Yankee Stadium" atmosphere, as in
Estes, prevailed here, however, nor have appellants
attempted to show that the unsequestered jury was exposed to
"sensational" coverage, in the sense of
Estes or of
Sheppard v. Maxwell, 384 U. S. 333
(1966). Absent a showing of prejudice of constitutional dimensions
to these defendants, there is no reason for this Court either to
endorse or to invalidate Florida's experiment.
In this setting, because this Court has no supervisory authority
over state courts, our review is confined to whether
Page 449 U. S. 583
there is a constitutional violation. We hold that the
Constitution does not prohibit a state from experimenting with the
program authorized by revised Canon 3A(7).
Affirmed.
JUSTICE STEVENS took no part in the decision of this case.
[
Footnote 1]
62 A.B.A.Rep. 1134-1135 (1937). A s adopted on September 30,
1937, Judicial Canon 35 read:
"Proceedings in court should be conducted with fitting dignity
and decorum. The taking of photographs in the courtroom, during
sessions of the court or recesses between sessions, and the
broadcasting of court proceedings are calculated to detract from
the essential dignity of the proceedings, degrade the court, and
create misconceptions with respect thereto in the mind of the
public, and should not be permitted."
[
Footnote 2]
As originally adopted in Florida, Canon 3A(7) provided:
"A judge should prohibit broadcasting, televising, recording, or
taking photographs in the courtroom and areas immediately adjacent
thereto during sessions of court or recesses between sessions,
except that a judge may authorize:"
"(a) the use of electronic or photographic means for the
presentation of evidence, for the perpetuation of a record, or for
other purposes of judicial administration;"
"(b) the broadcasting, televising, recording, or photographing
of investitive, ceremonial, or naturalization proceedings;"
"(c) the photographic or electronic recording and reproduction
of appropriate court proceedings under the following
conditions;"
"(i) the means of recording will not distract participants or
impair the dignity of the proceedings;"
"(ii) the parties have consented, and the consent to being
depicted or recorded has been obtained from each witness appearing
in the recording and reproduction;"
"(iii) the reproduction will not be exhibited until after the
proceeding has been concluded and all direct appeals have been
exhausted; and"
"(iv) the reproduction will be exhibited only for instructional
purposes in educational institutions."
[
Footnote 3]
Proposed Standard 8-3.6(a) of the ABA Project on Standards for
Criminal Justice, Fair Trial and Free Press (Tent. Draft 1978).
[
Footnote 4]
Resolution I, Television, Radio, Photographic Coverage of
Judicial Proceedings, adopted at the Thirtieth Annual Meeting of
the Conference of Chief Justices, Burlington, Vt., Aug. 2,
1978.
[
Footnote 5]
Alabama, Colorado, Georgia, New Hampshire, Texas, and
Washington.
[
Footnote 6]
The number of states permitting electronic coverage of judicial
proceedings has grown larger since 1979. As of October, 1980, 19
States permitted coverage of trial and appellate courts, 3
permitted coverage of trial courts only, 6 permitted appellate
court coverage only, and the court systems of 12 other States were
studying the issue. Brief for the Radio Television News Directors
Association
et al. as
Amici Curiae. On November
10, 1980, the Maryland Court of Appeals authorized an 18-month
experiment with broadcast coverage of both trial and appellate
court proceedings. 49 U.S.L.W. 2335 (1980).
[
Footnote 7]
At one point during Sion's testimony, the judge interrupted the
examination and admonished a cameraman to discontinue a movement
that the judge apparently found distracting. App. 15. Otherwise,
the prescribed procedures appear to have been followed, and no
other untoward events occurred.
[
Footnote 8]
Our subsequent cases have so read
Estes. In
Sheppard v. Maxwell, 384 U. S. 333,
384 U. S. 352
(1966), the Court noted
Estes as an instance where the
"totality of circumstances" led to a denial of due process. In
Murphy v. Florida, 421 U. S. 794,
421 U. S. 798
(1975), we described it as "a state court conviction obtained in a
trial atmosphere that had been utterly corrupted by press
coverage." And, in
Nebraska Press Assn. v. Stuart,
427 U. S. 539,
427 U. S. 552
(1976), we depicted
Estes as a trial lacking in due
process where "the volume of trial publicity, the judge's failure
to control the proceedings, and the telecast of a hearing and of
the trial itself" prevented a sober search for the truth.
In his opinion concurring in the result in the instant case,
JUSTICE STEWART restates his dissenting view in
Estes that
the
Estes Court announced a
per se rule banning
all broadcast coverage of trials as a denial of due process. This
view overlooks the critical importance of Justice Harlan's opinion
in relation to the ultimate holding of
Estes. It is true
that Justice Harlan's opinion "sounded a note" that is central to
the proposition that broadcast coverage inherently violates the Due
Process Clause.
Post at
449 U. S. 585.
But the presence of that "note" in no sense alters Justice Harlan's
explicit reservations in his concurrence. Not all of the dissenting
Justices in
Estes read the Court as announcing a
per
se rule; JUSTICE BRENNAN, for example, was explicit in
emphasizing
"that only four of the five Justices [in the majority] rest[ed]
on the proposition that televised criminal trials are
constitutionally infirm, whatever the circumstances."
381 U.S. at
381 U. S. 617.
Today, JUSTICE STEWART concedes,
post at
449 U. S.
585-586, and n. 3, that Justice Harlan purported to
limit his conclusion to a subclass of cases. And, as he concluded
his opinion, Justice Harlan took pains to emphasize his view
that
"
the day may come when television will have become so
commonplace an affair in the daily life of the average person as to
dissipate all reasonable likelihood that its use in courtrooms
may disparage the judicial process."
381 U.S. at
381 U. S. 595
(emphasis added). That statement makes clear that there was not a
Court holding of a
per se rule in
Estes. As noted
in text, Justice Harlan pointedly limited his conclusion to cases
like the one then before the Court, those "utterly corrupted" by
press coverage. There is no need to "overrule" a "holding" never
made by the Court.
[
Footnote 9]
Brief for the Attorneys General of Alabama, Alaska, Arizona,
Iowa, Kentucky, Louisiana, Maryland, Montana, Nevada, New Mexico,
New York, Ohio, Rhode Island, Tennessee, Vermont, West Virginia,
and Wisconsin as
Amici Curiae.
[
Footnote 10]
Brief for the California State Public Defenders Association, the
California Attorneys for Criminal Justice, the Office of the
California State Public Defender, the Los Angeles County Public
Defenders Association, the Los Angeles Criminal Courts Bar
Association, and the Office of the Los Angeles County Public
Defender as
Amici Curiae.
[
Footnote 11]
Considerable attention is devoted by the parties to experiments
and surveys dealing with the impact of electronic coverage on the
participants in a trial other than the defendant himself. The
Florida pilot program itself was a type of study, and its results
were collected in a post-program survey of participants. While the
data thus far assembled are cause for some optimism about the
ability of states to minimize the problems that potentially inhere
in electronic coverage of trials, even the Florida Supreme Court
conceded the data were "limited,"
In re Petition of
Post-Newsweek Stations, Florida, Inc., 370 So. 2d
764, 781 (1979), and "non-scientific,"
id. at 768.
Still, it is noteworthy that the data now available do not support
the proposition that, in every case and in all circumstances,
electronic coverage creates a significant adverse effect upon the
participants in trials -- at least not one uniquely associated with
electronic coverage, as opposed to more traditional forms of
coverage. Further research may change the picture. At the moment,
however, there is no unimpeachable empirical support for the thesis
that the presence of the electronic media,
ipso facto,
interferes with trial proceedings.
[
Footnote 12]
Other courts that have been asked to examine the impact of
television coverage on the participants in particular trials have
concluded that such coverage did not have an adverse impact on the
trial participants sufficient to constitute a denial of due
process.
See, e.g., Bradley v. Texas, 470 F.2d 785 (CA5
1972);
Bell v. Patterson, 279 F.
Supp. 760 (Colo.),
aff'd, 402 F.2d 394 (CA10 1968),
cert. denied, 403 U.S. 955 (1971);
Gonzales v.
People, 165 Colo. 322,
438 P.2d 686
(1968). On the other hand, even the
amici supporting
Florida's position concede that further experimentation is
necessary to evaluate the potential psychological prejudice
associated with broadcast coverage of trials. Further developments
and more data are required before this issue can be finally
resolved.
JUSTICE STEWART concurring in the result.
Although concurring in the judgment, I cannot join the opinion
of the Court, because I do not think the convictions in this case
can be affirmed without overruling
Estes v. Texas,
381 U. S. 532.
I believe now, as I believed in dissent then, that
Estes announced a
per se rule that the Fourteenth
Amendment "prohibits all television cameras from a state courtroom
whenever a criminal trial is in progress."
Id. at
381 U. S. 614;
see also id. at
381 U. S. 615
(WHITE, J., dissenting). Accordingly, rather than join what seems
to me a wholly unsuccessful effort to distinguish that decision, I
would now flatly overrule it.
While much was made in the various opinions in
Estes of
the technological improvements that might some day render
television coverage of criminal trials less obtrusive, the
restrictions on television in the
Estes trial were not
significantly different from those in the trial of these
appellants. The opinion of the Court in
Estes set out the
limitations placed on cameras during that trial:
"A booth had been constructed at the back of the courtroom which
was painted to blend with the permanent structure of the room. It
had an aperture to allow the lens of the cameras an unrestricted
view of the courtroom. All television cameras and newsreel
photographers were restricted to the area of the booth when
shooting film or telecasting."
"[L]ive telecasting was prohibited during a great portion of the
actual trial. Only the opening and closing arguments of the State,
the return of the jury's verdict
Page 449 U. S. 584
and its receipt by the trial judge were carried live with sound.
Although the order allowed videotapes of the entire proceeding
without sound, the cameras operated only intermittently, recording
various portions of the trial for broadcast on regularly scheduled
newscasts later in the day and evening. At the request of the
petitioner, the trial judge prohibited coverage of any kind, still
or television, of the defense counsel during their summations to
the jury."
Id. at
381 U. S. 537
(footnote omitted).
In his concurring opinion, Justice Harlan also remarked upon the
physical setting:
"Some preliminary observations are in order: all would agree, I
am sure, that, at its worst, television is capable of distorting
the trial process so as to deprive it of fundamental fairness.
Cables, kleig lights, interviews with the principal participants,
commentary on their performances, 'commercials' at frequent
intervals, special wearing apparel and makeup for the trial
participants -- certainly such things would not conduce to the
sound administration of justice by any acceptable standard.
But
that is not the case before us. We must judge television as we find
it in this trial -- relatively unobtrusive, with the cameras
contained in a booth at the back of the courtroom."
Id. at
381 U. S. 588
(emphasis added).
The constitutional violation perceived by the
Estes
Court did not, therefore, stem from physical disruption that might
one day disappear with technological advances in television
equipment. The violation inhered, rather, in the hypothesis that
the mere presence of cameras and recording devices might have an
effect on the trial participants prejudicial to the accused.
[
Footnote 2/1]
See id. at
381 U. S.
542-550 (opinion of the Court).
Page 449 U. S. 585
And Justice Harlan sounded a note in his concurring opinion that
is the central theme of the appellants here:
"Courtroom television introduces into the conduct of a criminal
trial the element of professional 'showmanship,' an extraneous
influence whose subtle capacities for serious mischief in a case of
this sort will not be underestimated by any lawyer experienced in
the elusive imponderables of the trial arena."
Id. at
381 U. S.
591.
It can accurately be asserted that television technology has
advanced in the past 15 years, and that Americans are now much more
familiar with that medium of communication. It does not follow,
however, that the "subtle capacities for serious mischief" are
today diminished, or that the "imponderables of the trial arena"
are now less elusive.
The Court necessarily [
Footnote
2/2] relies on the concurring opinion of Justice Harlan in its
attempt to distinguish this case from
Estes. It begins by
noting that Justice Harlan limited his opinion "
to a notorious
criminal trial such as [the one in Estes]. . . ."
Ante at
449 U. S. 571
(emphasis of the Court). But the Court disregards Justice Harlan's
concession that such a limitation may not be meaningful. [
Footnote 2/3] Justice Harlan admitted
Page 449 U. S. 586
that
"it nay appear that no workable distinction can be drawn based
on the type of case involved, or that the possibilities for
prejudice [in a 'run of the mill' case], though less severe, are
nonetheless of constitutional proportions."
381 U.S. at
381 U. S. 590.
Finally, Justice Harlan stated unambiguously that he was "by no
means prepared to say that the constitutional issue should
ultimately turn upon the nature of the particular case involved."
Ibid. [
Footnote 2/4]
The Court in
Estes found the admittedly unobtrusive
presence of television cameras in a criminal trial to be inherently
prejudicial, and thus violative of due process of law. Today, the
Court reaches precisely the opposite conclusion. I have no great
trouble in agreeing with the Court today, but I would acknowledge
our square departure from precedent.
[
Footnote 2/1]
Certain aspects of the
Estes trial made that case an
even easier one than this one in which to find no substantial
threat to a fair trial. For example, the jurors in
Estes
were sequestered day and night, from the first day of the trial
until it ended. The jurors in the present case were not sequestered
at all. Aside from a court-monitored opportunity for the jurors to
watch election returns, the
Estes jurors were not
permitted to watch television at any time during the trial. In
contrast, the jurors in the present case were left free to watch
the evening news programs -- and to look for a glimpse of
themselves while watching replays of the prosecution's most
critical evidence.
[
Footnote 2/2]
The Court today concedes that Justice Clark's opinion for the
Court in
Estes announced a
per se rule; that the
concurring opinion of Chief Justice Warren, joined by Justices
Douglas and Goldberg, pointed to "the inherent prejudice of
televised criminal trials"; and that the dissenting Justices
objected to the announcement of a
per se rule,
ante at
449 U. S. 570,
449 U. S.
572.
[
Footnote 2/3]
The Court also seems to disregard its own description of the
trial of the appellants, a description that suggests that the trial
was a "notorious" one, at least in the local community. The Court's
description notes that
"several aspects of the case distinguish it from a routine
burglary . . . [and,] [n]ot surprisingly, these novel factors
attracted the attention of the media."
Ante at
449 U. S. 567.
Indeed, the Court's account confirms the wisdom of Justice Harlan's
concession that a
per se rule limited only to cases with
high public interest may not be workable.
[
Footnote 2/4]
The fact is, of course, that a "run of the mill" trial -- of a
civil suit to quiet title, or upon a "routine burglary" charge for
example -- would hardly attract the cameras of public television.
By the same token, the very televising of a trial serves to make
that trial a "notorious" or "heavily publicized" one.
JUSTICE WHITE, concurring in the judgment.
The Florida rule, which permits the televising of criminal
trials under controlled conditions, is challenged here on its face
and as applied. Appellants contend that the rule is facially
invalid because the televising of any criminal trial over the
objection of the defendant inherently results in a constitutionally
unfair trial; they contend that the rule is unconstitutional as
applied to them because their case attracted substantial publicity
and, therefore, falls within the rule established in
Estes v.
Texas, 381 U. S. 532
(1965).
* The Florida
court rejected both of these claims.
Page 449 U. S. 587
For the reasons stated by JUSTICE STEWART in his concurrence
today, I think
Estes is fairly read as establishing a
per se constitutional rule against televising any criminal
trial if the defendant objects. So understood,
Estes must
be overruled to affirm the judgment below.
It is arguable, however, that
Estes should be read more
narrowly, in light of Justice Harlan's concurring opinion, as
forbidding the televising of only widely publicized and sensational
criminal trials. Justice Harlan, the fifth vote in
Estes,
characterized
Estes as such a case and concurred in the
opinion of the Court only to the extent that it applied to a
"criminal trial of great notoriety."
Id. at
381 U. S. 587.
He recognized that there had been no showing of specific prejudice
to the defense,
id. at
381 U. S. 591,
but argued that no such showing was required "in cases like this
one."
Whether the decision in
Estes is read broadly or
narrowly, I agree with JUSTICE STEWART that it should be overruled.
I was in dissent in that case, and I remain unwilling to assume or
conclude, without more proof than has been marshaled to date, that
televising criminal trials is inherently prejudicial even when
carried out under properly controlled conditions. A defendant
should, of course, have ample opportunity to convince a judge that
televising his trial would be unfair to him, and the judge should
have the authority to exclude cameras from all or part of the
criminal trial. But absent some showing of prejudice to the
defense, I remain convinced that a conviction obtained in a state
court should not be overturned simply because a trial judge refused
to exclude television cameras and all or part of the trial was
Page 449 U. S. 588
televised to the public. The experience of those States which
have, since
Estes, permitted televised trials supports
this position, and I believe that the accumulated experience of
those States has further undermined the assumptions on which the
majority rested its judgment in
Estes.
Although the Court's opinion today contends that it is
consistent with
Estes, I believe that it effectively
eviscerates
Estes. The Florida rule has no exception for
the sensational or widely publicized case. Absent a showing of
specific prejudice, any kind of case may be televised, as long as
the rule is otherwise complied with.
In re Petition of
Post-Newsweek Stations, Florida, Inc., 370 So. 2d
764, 774 (Fla.1979). Thus, even if the present case is
precisely the kind of case referred to in Justice Harlan's
concurrence in
Estes, the Florida rule overrides the
defendant's objections. The majority opinion does not find it
necessary to deal with appellants' contention that, because their
case attracted substantial publicity, specific prejudice need not
be shown. By affirming the judgment below, which sustained the
rule, the majority indicates that not even the narrower reading of
Estes will any longer be authoritative.
Moreover, the Court now reads
Estes as merely
announcing that, on the facts of that case, there had been an
unfair trial --
i.e., it established no
per se
rule at all. Justice Clark's plurality opinion, however, expressly
recognized that no "isolatable" or "actual" prejudice had been or
need be shown, 381 U.S. at
381 U. S. 542-543, and Justice Harlan expressly rejected
the necessity of showing "specific" prejudice in cases "like this
one."
Id. at
381 U. S. 593.
It is thus with telling effect that the Court now rules that,
"[a]bsent a showing of prejudice of constitutional dimensions to
these defendants," there is no reason to overturn the Florida rule,
to reverse the judgment of the Florida Supreme Court, or to set
aside the conviction of the appellants.
Ante at
449 U. S.
582.
By reducing
Estes to an admonition to proceed with some
caution, the majority does not underestimate or minimize the
Page 449 U. S. 589
risks of televising criminal trials over a defendant's
objections. I agree that those risks are real, and should not be
permitted to develop into the reality of an unfair trial. Nor does
the decision today, as I understand it, suggest that any State is
any less free than it was to avoid this hazard by not permitting a
trial to be televised over the objection of the defendant or by
forbidding cameras in its courtrooms in any criminal case.
Accordingly, I concur in the judgment.
* In their motion in the Florida Circuit Court to declare
Florida's rule unconstitutional, appellants claimed that their case
had "received a substantial amount of publicity" and then argued
that,
"[a]s . . . in
Estes v. Texas, 381 U. S.
532 (1965), the presence of television cameras . . .
will substantially harm and impair the Defendant's right to a fair
and impartial trial. . . ."
App. 4. In their brief on the merits, appellants described their
case as "not
notorious,' [but] at least `more than routine,'"
and asked the Court to extend the Estes rule to it. Brief
for Appellants 10.