Introducing: Multicam Coverage of Jury Room A

Jury Room A

Above: one of the fixed cameras in Jury Room A.

Today marks the first full jury trial to be livestreamed out of Jury Room A at the Quincy District Courthouse. To our knowledge, this is the first criminal trial to ever be livestreamed in Massachusetts. Last week saw some false starts and this morning was marked by a last-second plea agreement in a trial that was expected to begin at the beginning of today’s business (9 a.m.). We’ve since streamed opening statements in a different case involving the alleged operation of a vehicle while under the influence of alcohol.

Our hardware setup includes four cameras affixed to the walls in the Jury Room A courtroom, each toggling to the active view depending on who is currently speaking. It’s a system designed by JAVS, the same company contracted by the state to record the official public record in the form of digital audio files.

It’s been a long road getting here but here we are. We’re currently livestreaming the remainder of the jury trial involving an alleged drunk driving incident. Tune in.

4 Responses to “Introducing: Multicam Coverage of Jury Room A”

  1. Don Barnes says:

    Use of the term “drunk driving” is not accurate as addressed by the charging statute…One may be convicted and no where near “drunk”…

  2. Joe Spurr says:

    Don, noted. Please also view our tweets yesterday and today regarding that case: http://twitter.com/opencourtus

  3. kurtmaddox says:

    Nice work and we are very proud to support this important project! It’s good to see you back there in the courtroom when the video switches to the law tables.

  4. Jon Nicosia says:

    Have you given up on First Session? Showing First session surly beats reading you live blog a trial that you have been banned from covering by the Judge