Legal Question in Constitutional Law in Kentucky

Change of venue

When did the practice of "change of venue" become standard practice in high visibility cases?


Asked on 7/26/00, 11:39 pm

2 Answers from Attorneys

David Beauvais David J. Beauvais

Re: Change of venue

The change of venue procedure has been around a long time but it has become more important with the advent of mass media. The problem is that saturation reporting of a case may compromise the right of a party to a fair trial. In a crimnal case, for instance, passions may run quite high if the victim in well-regarded or vulnerable. In such cases, the trial is moved to a place where coverage has been non-existent or limited, or passions less aroused, so that jurors with preconceived ideas about the case are not likely to be judging it. However, a case may be so notorious that moving it would not help. This is what happened in the Manson case. His crimes were committed in LA and he was tried there.

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Answered on 9/12/00, 8:11 pm
Charles Aspinwall Charles S. Aspinwall, J.D., LLC

Re: Change of venue

Change of venue has existed as a legal concept for a long time. Overwhelming publicity has caused the concept to be used often in high profile cases.

The landmark case is Sheppard vs. Maxwell, the Sam Sheppard case, ["The Fugitive"] in which Lee Bailey got a reversal on the basis of prejudicial pretrial publicity by Louie Selzer and the Cleveland Press.

The accused is entitled to a trial in the courtroom, not in the newspaper.

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Answered on 9/18/00, 12:03 pm


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