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Cameras Banned at Valassis v. News America Trial; Whistleblower Emmel Also Ruled Out

By Jim Edwards | May 26, 2009

The Valassis v. News America Marketing trial, set to open Wednesday in Michigan, will receive almost no coverage in the media thanks to a decision by Wayne County circuit court judge Michael Sapala. A request by the Courtroom View Network to have cameras stream live testimony on the web was denied by the judge.

The ruling means that it is almost certain no reporters will be at the trial. (Ad Age’s Detroit bureau will probably be covering the General Motors bankruptcy, as will the business desk of The Detroit Free Press. Ditto Adweek and Brandweek. DM News does not have a reporter available to attend the trial. BNET is based in New York and thus won’t be there.)

The de facto coverage blackout is probably good for News America, the defendant, in that the trial will consist of a lengthy list of uncomfortable allegations and anecdotes about that company and its clients.

The camera ban came without a ruling, even though Michigan court rules presume in favor of camera access to courts and require a finding “on the record” by a judge in the event camera coverage is denied. The rule says in relevant part:

Film or electronic media coverage shall be allowed upon request in all court proceedings … A judge may terminate, suspend, limit, or exclude film or electronic media coverage at any time upon a finding, made and articulated on the record …

The judge’s clerk confirmed to BNET that CVN’s coverage request was denied and that no ruling was made explaining the denial. A message left with the judge requesting an explanation was not returned by the time of writing.

Both parties requested the camera ban, according to CVN. Irony alert: News America is owned by News Corp., which normally has a commercial interest in favor of courtroom coverage.

“We were very surprised by the denial,” Shelly Albaum, chief operating officer for CVN, told BNET.  “Michigan recognizes a public policy in favor of court access, so we expect to get in.  Cameras can be precluded only if the court makes a finding on the record that cameras would interfere with the administration of justice.  CVN has captured hundreds of trials, and we never interfere with anything.  We haven’t seen a finding, and can’t guess what the court’s issue might be.”

Separately, the trial is set to start without News America whistleblower Robert Emmel as a witness, a source tells BNET. In Atlanta federal court, News America won a ruling on March 13 preventing Emmel from revealing to “any third party” information about what he did while employed at News America. That will be a blow to Valassis, as BNET readers will remember that it was Emmel who revealed that News America charged its clients for ads that never appeared and maintained “do not pay” lists for stores where ads had not run but clients had paid.

Lawyers for both Valassis and News America declined comment or did not return a call at the time of writing.

Image by Flickr user J Deamer, CC

Jim Edwards, a former managing editor of Adweek, has covered drug marketing at Brandweek for four years, and is a former Knight-Bagehot fellow at Columbia University's business and journalism schools. Follow him on Twitter or send him an email.

BNET User Analysis

Web Buzz:
  • CVN Protests Camera Ban at Valassis v. News America Trial

    BNET Advertising - 170 days 17 hours 58 minutes ago

    The Courtroom View Network, a company that streams video of court cases on the web, has written to Judge Michael Sapala of Wayne County Circuit Court in Detroit protesting his decision to ban cameras in the Valassis v. News America Marketing trial. Sapala’s camera ban has meant that there are no journalists covering the case, as local...

  • One Eve of Valassis v. News America Trial in State Court, a Federal Judge Looks On ...

    BNET Advertising - 186 days 20 hours 18 minutes ago

    On May 27, Valassis will face off against News America Marketing in Michigan’s Wayne County circuit court. As that trial progresses, the federal court case which covers substantially the same issues is on hold, according to page 21 of this SEC filing. This is probably to the advantage of News America, because the state court is not online and...

  • Valassis v. News America: Whistleblower Emmel's Prior Testimony Allowed In

    BNET Advertising - 175 days 15 hours 10 minutes ago

    The Michigan state judge presiding in the trial between Valassis and News America Marketing will allow testimony from Robert Emmel, a whistleblower formerly employed by News America. Although Emmel himself has been banned from the stand by order of a federal judge in Atlanta, his pre-existing deposition testimony from a separate case* will be...

  • Judge allows streaming of video from courtroom in music piracy case

    Computer World - 311 days 8 hours 45 minutes ago

    January 15, 2009 Internet users will have the unusual opportunity of viewing a live Internet stream of courtroom proceedings in a music piracy case bought against an individual by the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA), thanks to a ruling yesterday by a U.S. District Court Judge in Boston. The ruling, by Judge Nancy Gertner,...

  • News America Exec Testifies Unilever, Conagra and Kraft Got Higher Prices for Not Taking Bundled Ad Deals

    BNET Advertising - 158 days 22 hours 39 minutes ago

    News America Marketing vp/business operations Tom Leprine testified that companies who did not accept its bundled deals on in-store supermarket ads and newspaper coupons got higher prices. The testimony came in a Michigan state court trial in which newspaper coupon agency Valassis accuses News America of using its supermarket ad monopoly to...

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