By Christopher B. Daly
Here’s another reason to put TV cameras in federal courtrooms: There are people who need convincing that the Boston Marathon bombing actually happened. Some folks apparently think the whole thing was a hoax, or a secret mission by U.S. Special Ops, or maybe it was a joint Pope/IMF/Mossad operation? In any case, a televised trial will demonstrate that there is, in fact, plenty of evidence to convict the surviving Tsarnaev brother and that in the U.S., even rotten bastards who don’t deserve it get a fair trial. According to today’s Boston Globe, there are a sizable number of people around the world who think that Dzhokhar Tsarnaev is either innocent or cute, or both.
Without video, any trial will involve sketch artists trying to capture the likeness of Tsarnaev in chalk. Now, what is the argument for that?
Filed under: broadcasting, Journalism, journalism history, Photography Tagged: Marathon bombing, Tsarnaev, TV, TV cameras in court