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Trials on TV or the lost image of justice
journalism
May 3, 2021
Reading time: 15 min
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By Hervé Brusini, President of the Albert Londres Prize, former editor-in-chief of France Télévisions
The sentence sounds like a confession: " I want the French to understand their justice. To grasp it in all its complexity... "
The remarks of Éric Dupond-Moretti, the gambling data asia current Minister of Justice, made on BFM on April 14, are unequivocal. They note a serious failure in civic culture in a democracy, the collective ignorance of justice and how it works. To remedy this deficit, which is quite astonishing, the image is called to the rescue.
Trials must be filmed , including for the most diverse jurisdictions, in order to " restore confidence ", the minister insists. The lack of awareness caused by the absence of images would inevitably result in distrust . Noted. But why such recourse? Why is seeing justice so crucial? Testimonies for history, a means of providing education, obviously. The arguments are well-known. Of course, trials have been filmed. But the debate is as if these images had disappeared, as if they needed to be regenerated? As if justice were the victim of a loss of image in every sense of the word. Where does this failure, or even this bankruptcy, come from? Bring me the culprit, one would be tempted to demand...
No one really responsible for the loss of image of justice
Targeting a specific person in particular seems quite trivial. As proof, another Minister of Justice, clearly committed to the left, also pleaded at the time that trials be filmed. Also a lawyer, Robert Badinter had a founding law on the subject passed in 1985 .
" I dreamed of audiovisual archives of justice... Imagine if we could see the Zola, Dreyfus or Caillaux trials, the great criminals Petiot, Landru... I said to myself that it's a moment in history that we don't understand. But for history it's priceless, the same for the training of magistrates or lawyers . "
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