Abstract
With the rise of social media use and true-crime consumption postpandemic, this Note argues that current court practices regarding cameras in the courtroom are insufficient to protect a defendant’s right to a fair trial. This Note focuses on the impact of live streaming violent-crime trials on social media and its consequences—specifically, the “content tornado” that it creates. The content tornado, a concept this Note introduces, refers to the whirlwind of fact, fiction, and opinion that emerges when violent-crime trials are live streamed on social media. This concept describes how live streamed trials generate emotional and moralized content that gets amplified by social media algorithms. The emotional nature of violent-crime trials—fueled by anger, grief, and public passion—draws viewers in, and as they engage with the content, they become more likely to produce their own secondary content on the subject. This user-generated secondary content—in the form of videos, comments, and posts—amplifies the tornado and mixes accurate information with misinformation, exaggerations, and public biases.
As the content tornado gains momentum, it creates an atmosphere like a “Roman circus” or “Yankee Stadium,” where the public spectacle overshadows the trial’s goals of delivering justice and maintaining the presumption of innocence. This phenomenon undermines the fairness of the trial by turning it into sensationalized entertainment, potentially biasing the jury and the public against the defendant, thus violating their right to a fair trial. By analyzing landmark cases and the effects of modern media, this Note proposes a multifaceted solution, advocating for delayed trial coverage to preserve a defendant’s constitutional rights while maintaining public access to courtroom proceedings. This balance aims to mitigate the adverse effects of real-time media amplification and ensure fair judicial outcomes.
Citation
Katie Grace Frisbee,
Caught in the Content Tornado: How to Protect Violent-Crime Trials From the Prejudicial Effects of Live Streaming,
74 Duke Law Journal
1053-1093
(2025)
Available at: https://scholarship.law.duke.edu/dlj/vol74/iss4/3