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Technology takes the stand

05 June 2008 / Lorraine Medcraft
Issue: 7324 / Categories: Features , Media , Legal services , Commercial
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How has new technology improved the running of our courtrooms? Lorraine Medcraft reports

Perhaps the most established of the current crop of applications in the courtroom is real-time reporting, which enables a transcription of court proceedings to be available within seconds. Stenographers, working at high levels of accuracy, transcribe proceedings and their output is fed direct to the judge, counsel, solicitors, juries and clients. The feed can be made available beyond the confines of the courtroom. At the Diana and Dodi inquests, transcripts and evidence were immediately available to journalists and reporters attending court and those in the annex at the Royal Courts of Justice. There was also a live broadcast feed to the BSkyB newsroom for the first three days of the hearing.

Savings in time accrue at the end of each day because there is no longer a need to compare notes and decide what was said. Key points are already highlighted and tagged ready for review and discussion. While the court is in session, practitioners outside the courtroom can keep

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NEWS
The government’s plan to introduce a Single Professional Services Supervisor could erode vital legal-sector expertise, warns Mark Evans, president of the Law Society of England and Wales, in NLJ this week
Writing in NLJ this week, Jonathan Fisher KC of Red Lion Chambers argues that the ‘failure to prevent’ model of corporate criminal responsibility—covering bribery, tax evasion, and fraud—should be embraced, not resisted
Professor Graham Zellick KC argues in NLJ this week that, despite Buckingham Palace’s statement stripping Andrew Mountbatten Windsor of his styles, titles and honours, he remains legally a duke
Writing in NLJ this week, Sophie Ashcroft and Miranda Joseph of Stevens & Bolton dissect the Privy Council’s landmark ruling in Jardine Strategic Ltd v Oasis Investments II Master Fund Ltd (No 2), which abolishes the long-standing 'shareholder rule'
In NLJ this week, Sailesh Mehta and Theo Burges of Red Lion Chambers examine the government’s first-ever 'Afghan leak' super-injunction—used to block reporting of data exposing Afghans who aided UK forces and over 100 British officials. Unlike celebrity privacy cases, this injunction centred on national security. Its use, the authors argue, signals the rise of a vast new body of national security law spanning civil, criminal, and media domains
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