Assignment 2- Understanding the Media Law
This report will explain the areas of media law. These areas are defamation, contempt of court and reporting restrictions
Defamation is an important area of media law because it can affect anyone and anyone can sue. There are two versions of defamation. Libel is the written version of defamation and Slander is the spoken version. Radio is always classed as Libel. Defamation is when a persons reputation is damaged in the eyes of others by a false statement. The victim can and will sue and claim damages. There are some grey areas in defamation. Fair comments and opinions that are not intended to be malicious cannot be classed as libel or sander. For example by saying 'I hate Justin Biebers music' - you cannot be sued. Defamation cases have halved in the last five years. Any one can claim after defamation. An example of this is T. Boone Pickens, 85, accuses his own son Michael Pickens, 58, of defamation, invasion of privacy, libel, harmful access by computer and extortion. T. Boone Pickens is a dallas oil billionaire.
Contempt of court is an important area of media law because it exists to protect the running of the court. It contains something called 'strict liability rule' which prevents any publication from affecting the decisions of the court. There are two types of law in this country; common law is law set by precedent- decisions on previous cases and statute law is a written law which is decided by legislation. Severity is dependant on a number of factors. The longer between the time of the story being published and the jury retiring to reach its verdict, the less chance there is of the story being in contempt.
Reporting restrictions is an important area in media law because it is set out to protect identity. Reporting restrictions is when the people involved are protected under the law and cannot be named in reports. Protection is legal to children, victims of sexual offences and prelim hearings in magistrates court. Revealing these peoples identities could be dangerous to the victims. Children's identities are protected automatically in youth courts but not so in adult courts. The media are not allowed to report without being limited by these restrictions, legally.
