Minorities Interests

Knowledge, Culture, Social

Meet And Share
CRIMES, COURTS AND THE MEDIA
Michael Ewetuga

The legal profession started as a profession that brings relief to the people, it started as a profession
that edifies the rule of law, it is a profession that is supposed to lend voice to the voiceless, defend the
defenseless and contrary to what we have today, where money rather than justice is what matters, the
profession started on a charitable note. Perhaps the guilt is why various bar associations in America
make it compulsory for lawyers to undertake pro bono hours, an idea that I do not agree with. You don’
t force people to do good, they must desire it, and they must really feel like it and put their all into it.

The legal profession being a profession that defends the helpless therefore enjoins lawyers to take
cases even if they feel like their clients are wrong. This is in consonant with the principle that an
accused person is innocent until his guilt is proven. Proving his guilt is the job of the government, via
its prosecutors, deciding his fate vis-à-vis the alleged crime is that of the judge, not anyone else’s
especially not that of the lawyers.

The state is a very big institution and have readily available at its disposal instruments that it could
use for the good of the society or for the oppression of the downtrodden. It is the job of the society at
large to see to it that people who wield state powers are held accountable to the society that gave
them the powers which it (society) gave for one purpose and one purpose only, for the good of all.

The saying that it is better for 10 guilty men to go free than for one innocent man to be incarcerated is
just to make sure that no one is wrongly judged and jailed. Society owes it to itself that the proper
procedures of determining a man’s guilt are followed.

In some countries, the media is referred to as the 4th estate of the realm in the sense that there’s the
executive, the legislature and of course the judiciary, those are the 3 arms of government, the media,
which is not part of the official governmental structures in anyway is thus viewed to be objective and
credible. Society depends on the media to keep the governments on their toes, which is why the
media is referred to as the watchdog.

The media developed in some countries as a matter of necessity especially in the colonial period in
some parts of the former British Commonwealth. The media was the official opposition parties to the
colonialists, keeping them on their toes and informing the general population of unfair governments’
policies. Those of us from Africa take the media so very serious and where any member of the media
misinforms, for whatever reasons, we see that as a direct stab in the back.

Due to its development, especially in those countries where there was need to counter governments’
propaganda, the media has a lot of influence on the people and since most of the things reported are
things that we cannot find out ourselves nor verify, we trust and rely on the media to keep us honestly
informed. In the guise of reporting, the media started shaping opinions which was necessary in most
cases in some countries. It is only a fool that will not recognize how influential the media is in the
opinion court.

This article is written to examine the role of the media in dispensing justice.

Legal issues, like every other issue, are reported in the media. The media sometimes get
overzealous in reporting legal issues, constituting itself into the judge and jury. Whenever there’s a
high profile case, in other words cases involving celebrities, newspapers and TV stations go to work
trying to outdo themselves in dissecting the cases by inviting the so called experts to analyze and give
their opinions about the cases.

A lawyer, in response to a question on this issue, puts it succinctly when he said

“The lawyers who are put on television to explain the cases, who nobody would ever hire to be a real
lawyer, these are only pretty faces and gentle voices, but they don't know anything about the law. And a
lot of the cable television shows are distorting the legal system terribly by not having standards for
who they allow to describe the law and analyze the law.”

In the case of Nigeria, and some other countries that do not allow lawyers to advertise, the lawyers
uses these sort of television analysis as a form of advert to the disadvantage of other lawyers who do
not have friends in the media. Watch the TV in Nigeria on issues bordering on legal matters and you
can count the number of lawyers that will be on television “enlightening the general public” on your
fingers.

This kind of attitude, to my mind deprives the accused of the benefit of innocence before his guilt is
proven, especially in a system that makes use of jury such as we have here in the USA. How do you
want a jury to vote when people who are close to him/her have been informed by the media that the
defendant is guilty?

Apart from  the fact that some of these reports could be prejudicial to the accused persons and could
lead to miscarriage of justice, it could also mess up the case for the prosecution in the sense that
juries might acquit defendants even in the face of overwhelming evidence against him just to assert
their independence.

There are more to proving someone’s innocence or guilt than whatever information the media have
sometimes and the fact that all the facts might not be available should be enough to put the media on
notice that the guilt or innocence of a man should be determined by those whose duty it is to make
that decision.

It is the duty of the prosecutor to not only bring the charges but prove the elements of whatever crime
an accused person is being accused of, “beyond reasonable doubt”. It is the duty of the Jury, in the
case of America, the judge in the case of Nigeria and other jurisdiction that do not utilize the jury
system, to find that the facts proved are sufficient to sustain the charges as defined. It is the duty of the
court to sentence after conviction. The duty of the press is to report the incident.

Preempting the court is a practice that is seriously frowned at in some jurisdictions. Cases may be
reported but the guilt or innocence of the accused depends on whether or not the case against him
was made out satisfactorily. When a charge is preferred against an accused person such issue is
supposed to be sub judiced, the media may report the case they may not constitute themselves into a
separate judiciary trying the case. Where someone does that, such an individual or organization is in
contempt of the presiding court.

When the media goes after the accused person, everyone in the defense team becomes the devil's
advocate, they are taunted by the public and forsaken by their friends and their families are made to
carry a bag of guilt for their “misbehavior” simply because they did what is required of them as
professionals. A soldier for example does not question the rationale behind a war he fights in; a
lawyer defending a party in a case is more or less in the same situation.

I believe the various bar associations as well as ABA need to embark on an educational campaign so
that people will appreciate the role of lawyers in dispensation of justice, if someone like
Cully
Stimson, a lawyer and deputy assistant secretary of defense for detainee affairs, does not understand
it then ordinary man on the street deserves some form of education in that regard.


In conclusion, I believe the way the media report high profile cases could make citizens to lose
confidence in the judiciary in the sense that if an accused has been tried and found guilty by the
media, acquittal in the court may give the impression that the court is not to be trusted and the stain
resulting from such adverse opinion might not be easy to wash off. The court is therefore perceived,
sometimes, as either intellectually deficient or materially corrupt.

I think it is the job of all and sundry to raise people’s hope in the judiciary, an institution that is
regarded traditionally as the last hope of the common man. The judiciary needs to be given the
chance to play its role in a democratic society. The system is set up in such a way that any party to a
matter who feels aggrieved by a court’s decision in a case can appeal such a decision. This is the
system, it has been working, we should allow it to work and if we feel like it is deficient there are
proper means of channeling our reservation, if we feel like there are ways to better the system we can
always make the suggestion.

If we gang up against the judicial institution and it fails the common man will be the one to suffer for it.