Let digital nation ’see and hear’ Tenenbaum v RIAA
p2pnet news view Freedom | P2P:- Harvard professor Charles Nesson and his team of Harvard Law students have filed a petition to re-hear Joel Tenenbaum vs the RIAA en banc, and request for stay of next week’s trial hearing on his challenge to the constitutionality of the million dollar complaint brought against him.
En banc is a French term used to refer to the hearing of a legal case where all judges of a court will hear the case, rather than a panel of them, explains the Wikipedia.
“Restricting our ability to make this judicial process accessible to the digital nation of which Joel is representative irreparably harms our case by encasing it a building that is a fortress and a recording only in text which cannot be immediately accessed and which my client and his digital generation cannot afford,” says Nesson in an email to chief judge Mark Wolf.
The documents were to be filed first thing this morning, but, “all relevant parties have been notified,” says Debbie Rosenbaum, the team’s student spokeswoman.
“Back in January, Federal Judge Nancy Gertner approved a motion to permit the hearing to be streamed live over the internet,” she says, going on »»»
The music companies appealed , and the decision was overturned by the First Circuit earlier this month.
As per Circuit Judge Lipez’s concurring opinion, we reached out to the Federal judges this week requesting that the district court judges expedite a consideration to amend local rule 83.3 to permit a district court judge the ability to exercise his/her discretion.
“Under our understanding of FRCP 83 and 28 USC 2071(e), we believe that the district court bench is empowered to make its own rule and to defer them required period of notice and comment in cases of immediate need,” wrote Nesson.
The expedited request was denied on Friday.
“I have circulated your request to my colleagues and received their responses,” wrote Wolf in an email to Nesson.
“The District Court has decided not to take any action on the expedited basis that you request.”
It’s unclear if the judges will consider making its own rule in the future, says Rosenbaum, quoting Nesson as saying, “In the meantime, we are respectfully requesting a stay of this hearing. “t 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.”
Below is Nesson’s petition »»»
From: Charles Nesson to the Honorable Mark Wolf, Chief Judge:
Pursuant to our phone conversation just completed (and not recorded), I send you email urgently requesting that you circulate to the judges of the district court my request on behalf of Joel Tenenbaum and the digital nation of people who want access through internet to the proceedings of his trial that local rule 83.3 be amended to permit a judge of the district court to exercise the discretion shown by Judge Gertner in our case. We request this urgently on our understanding of FRCP 83 and 28 USC 2071(e) that the district court bench is empowered to make its own rule and to defer the required period of notice and comment in cases of immediate need. The immediate need in this case is the hearing scheduled for April 30, 2009 before Judge Gertner on motions challenging the constitutionality of the recording industry’s litigation campaign against noncommercial copiers and asserting that the prosecutions are abusive. Restricting our ability to make this judicial process accessible to the digital nation of which Joel is representative irreparably harms our case by encasing it a building that is a fortress and a recording only in text which cannot be immediately accessed and which my client and his digital generation cannot afford. I invite you to visit these links as demonstration of the potential that will be lost if the judges of your court fail to act, and as suggestion of what can be gained by acting.
http://joelfightsback.com/2009/04/first-circuit-hearing-slideshow-with-comments_part-one/
http://joelfightsback.com/2009/04/first-circuit-hearing-part-2/
http://joelfightsback.com/2009/04/first-circuit-slideshow-part-3/
I read the opinion of first circuit panel as an invitation to you to act. I include below Judge Lipez concurring. Please note along side in re providence journal the supreme court opinion in Kleindeinst v. Mandel, 408 U.S. 753 (1972), which recognizes the people’s first amendment right to see and hear.
LIPEZ, Circuit Judge, concurring. For the reasons set forth so clearly in Judge Selya’s opinion, I agree with my colleagues that the district court palpably erred in its application of Local Rule 83.3 of the District of Massachusetts to the request of respondent Tenenbaum that Courtroom View Network be permitted to webcast the non-evidentiary motions hearing that was scheduled for January 22, 2009. Given the language of the rule, and the unmistakable grounding of that language in a policy adopted by the Judicial Conference of the United States, that request should have been denied.
However, this inescapable legal conclusion does not discredit the policy concerns that animated, at least in part, the district court’s decision. Indeed, in my view, there are no sound policy reasons to prohibit the webcasting authorized by the district court. Therefore, this case calls into question the continued relevance and vitality of a rule that requires such a disagreeable outcome.
When the motions hearing at issue occurs, only those physically present in the courtroom will hear the parties debate the merits of the motions before the district court. Ironically, however, almost immediately after the oral argument in this First Circuit mandamus proceeding ended, anyone with an internet connection could access a recording of that argument from our website. There is no meaningful difference between the type of oral argument that we make available to the public as a matter of course and the type of argument that would have been broadly accessible under the district court’s Order. See Capitol Records, Inc. v. Alaujan, 593 F. Supp. 2d 319, 322 (D. Mass. 2009) (limiting the applicability of the Order in this case permitting narrowcasting to a motion hearing that would have “involve[d] only legal argument”). There are significant losses in this discrepancy.
“Courts have long recognized ‘that public monitoring of the judicial system fosters the important values of quality, honesty and respect for our legal system.’” In re Providence Journal Co., 293 F.3d 7, 9 (1st Cir. 2002) (quoting Siedle v. Putnam Inv., 147 F.3d 7, 10 (1st Cir. 1998)). In our democratic society, “the knowledgeable tend to be more robustly engaged in public issues,” and “[i]nformation received by direct observation is often more useful than that strained through the media. Actually seeing and hearing court proceedings, combined with commentary of informed members of the press and academia, provides a powerful device for monitoring the courts.” Hamilton v. Accu-Tek, 942 F. Supp. 136, 138 (E.D.N.Y. 1996).
Moreover, webcasting the legal arguments of counsel in a civil motions hearing does not implicate the concerns raised by televised trials. Footnote Many judges worry that the presence of cameras in the courtroom and the enhanced publicity that cameras bring changes the nature of the trial process itself. Those fears do not realistically apply to a civil motions
hearing where the judge considers and responds to the arguments of counsel.
Also, there is no reason to fear the impact of webcasting on any future jury trial in this case. Trial judges can assure the seating of a fair and impartial jury with the application of familiar jury selection practices.
The Local Rule at the center of this controversy was adopted in 1990. 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.
Definitely stay tuned.
April, 2009
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April 27th, 2009 at 1:40 pm
RIAA buys Judges, Judges deny broadcasts. Joel has his day in court, RIAA buys Judges, Judges throw book at him, RIAA buys Board of Lawyers, RIAA gets Prof. Nesson disbarred. Dan ‘The Joker’ Glickman becomes IP Copyright Czar, and THEN it gets worse…
April 27th, 2009 at 1:55 pm
at surfer,
lol do you honestly think the justice system is so polluted that this would happe… er wait. Isn’t this happening in Sweden also….
April 27th, 2009 at 2:56 pm
come to think of it….
stw
April 27th, 2009 at 10:02 pm
IF the RIAA manage to prevent the debat to be public bring to the court one of these digital recorder (such as olympus. Not Sony because they are crap and because we azre boycotting this corporation of parasites!)
site in the front record every thing and release the recodring on the net each day. At least it will expose to the world what type of criminals piece of garbage these entairtainement layers are.
Once the RIAA decide to sue this mean that the managed to corrupt the judges laywers and juries if any otherwise they don’t stand a chance.
These RIAA pigs are very dangerous and believe me it is urgent to stop them and to stop them NOW! by any mean.
April 27th, 2009 at 10:06 pm
No justice no peace!
These are the RIAA fool comming to their extinction!
After teaching the kids to kill and burn with all their crappy lyric of DR crap and so on now they are pissing them off!
What do you thing is going to hapen?
April 27th, 2009 at 10:23 pm
Any way we know their BS arguments.
They have been buging the planet with it since over five years now and we are sick and tired of it.
But we know what we have to do now:
ERADICATE, EXTERMINATE, THE CORPORATE PARASITES!
No CD, no DVD, no movie theater no game, Nothing until they die!
Companies to boycott: MPAA/RIAA: Warner Bros (Barry M. Meyer CEO), MGM, Columbia Pictures, 20th Century Fox Films, Sony BMG, Universal, EMI.
April 28th, 2009 at 1:16 pm
And in other news… EU copyright extended by 20 years, just in time to save the Beatles recordings which would be ‘lost’ (ie. entering into the public domain) in 2012.
Sure, there’s no corruption in the EU or various EU countries legal systems (like Sweden)…
move along now, nothing to see here…
nothing to see…
and nothing to hear either, unless you’re willing to pay whatever the labels ask of you…….forever (minus a day of course).