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Live-Streaming Of Supreme Court Cases: A Big Step For Transparency

Attorney General KK Venugopal said live-streaming should be tested out in cases heard by the Constitution Bench, and CJI’s court.

(Source: Supreme Court of India website)
(Source: Supreme Court of India website)

The petition for the live streaming of cases was listed for hearing on Aug. 24, 2018, in the case of Indira Jaising v. Secretary General & Ors. The Attorney General of India, KK Venugopal made his arguments on the same in the Chief Justice’s court. Venugopal presented his recommended guidelines on the matter, saying that live-streaming should be tested out as a pilot project in cases heard by the Constitution Bench, and those in the Chief Justice’s court.

Arguments By The Petitioner-In-Person

The petitioner, Senior Advocate Indira Jaising, had filed a writ petition on Jan. 18, 2018 to permit the live streaming of Supreme Court case proceedings of constitutional and national importance, having an impact to the public at large. The primary grounds for the request was based on the mandates under Article 19 and Article 21 of the Constitution of India, which upon a conjoint reading correspond to the right to receive information, and the access to justice through open courts.

The relevance of this matter was stressed due to the pressing difficulties faced by litigants or general stakeholders in the issues being heard, who found it hard to witness court proceedings and obtain first-hand information on matters of national importance heard in court. The barriers between courtrooms and the public at large are primarily constraints of a socio-economic nature, i.e. the mere difficulties faced in traveling, but also the intangible hierarchies and intimidation of the mere space of the courtroom.

Further, Jaising argued that the nature of justice is such that it should be delivered to the public at large in the most unadulterated manner as possible. Interactions between the judges and the counsels would be beneficial for realising that matters of pressing importance have several missed nuances that the press does not cover. The mere knowledge of the holding of a judgment creates a gap and misinformation in comprehending the reasoning of the same by the public.

For the development of a vibrant democracy, it was further been argued that live streaming assists the archiving of seminal cases that may be utilised later for students, young lawyers and reference points for several others in the future. The example of several jurisdictions such as the UK, Australia, and South Africa has been cited to realise that permitting live streaming strengthens the persuasiveness of the argument vouching for the accountability of the judiciary.

The caveat for the argument is that live streaming need not take place in the cases concerning criminal matters that require witness protection, or other confidential matters that necessitate privacy of the case.

Jaising argued that several lapsed cases like the Right to Privacy delivered in the case of Justice KS Puttaswamy, as well as pending cases like the challenge to Section 377, all have great investment of public curiosity, and they have a right to involve themselves in the same.

Progression In Supreme Court

A three-judge bench comprising of Chief Justice Dipak Misra, Justice AM Khanwilkar, and Justice DY Chandrachud, along with the current Attorney General of India, KK Venugopal — seemed to be largely in favour of live-streaming court proceedings in constitution bench cases.

Justice Chandrachud stated that live streaming is a mere extension of the principle of open courts and access to justice.

Venugopal argued that after successful implementation of the same in some important matters, the provision could be expanded further for other cases of different types.

In another day of positive arguments on the matter, the AG Venugopal initiated a further step in the process, i.e. the building of appropriate infrastructure to facilitate the audio/ video recording of court proceedings.

  • He argued that the same should begin as a pilot project in Court Number 1 pertaining to constitutional bench references, to test whether the same is possible to be extended in other courtrooms.
  • To accommodate interested members, i.e. lawyers, interns, litigators, and visitors, a separate media room should be constructed to decongest courts.
  • To ensure complete accessibility, the room should be made in a manner such that disabled persons too may be accommodated.
  • An additional activity is to upload the audiovisual content and transcriptions online.

Venugopal further suggested some safeguards needed to be in place to ease out the process.

  1. The Court must enjoy the power to limit or suspend the broadcasting upon its discretion if it felt that the same was hindering the process of administering justice through a fair trial.
  2. In order to determine what cases comprise “constitutional and national importance” identify a few well thought out criteria.
  3. There are certain cases in which broadcasting would be impermissible, i.e. matters that are matrimonial, national, concerning juveniles, confidential, or provocative in nature.
  4. The use of this footage needed to be supervised, i.e. its circulation could not be extended for commercial or entertainment ends. Additionally, any material could not be reproduced, transmitted, uploaded, posted, modified or published in the public domain without authorisation. Any transgressions to the same could be punishable under the Indian Copyright Act, 1957 and the Information Technology Act, 2000, with corresponding fines and penalties.
  5. There was a request for a more detailed understanding of the actual administration of the same in court. This includes the manner of filming, number of equipment, focusing cameras on judges rather than the papers of lawyers, and the provision of judges to mute proceedings inappropriate for public consumption.
  6. Finally, the provision of live streaming was considered as being simultaneous to the speedy disposal of cases, through the previous submission of written submissions by the lawyers.
Opinion
Supreme Court Reserves Verdict On Pleas For Live Streaming Of Cases

Attorney General KK Venugopal’s Guidelines On Live Streaming

AG-KK-Venugopals-guidelines-on-Live-Streaming.pdf

Indira Jaising’s Suggested Changes To Live-Streaming Guidelines Submitted By Attorney General

New-Doc-2018-08-24-1.pdf

Jaising Pleads For A ‘Supreme Court Channel’

The AG’s suggestions were simultaneously intervened by Jaising. She argued that there should be a video channel of the Supreme Court that conducts the process of streaming so as to ensure authenticity. In relation to the point raised on the space for conducting such screenings, Jaising responded that the same could be done at multiple screens, at multiple places. She requested for there to be a timeline on the pilot project. Last, she reiterated the points that were made on access, i.e. the availability of transcripts in the registry’s archive.

Indira Jaising’s Writ Petition In The Live-Streaming Case

watermarked_WP-Live-Streaming-2-3.pdf

This article was originally published in The Leaflet.