Helpful information from the librarians of the Barco Law Library, University of Pittsburgh School of Law.
Wednesday, 15 April 2009
And speaking of audio...
The Federal Courts have announced that their pilot project to make digital audio recordings of courtroom proceedings publicly available online has been expanded from 5 federal courts to 9 through the end of 2009. The U.S. Court of Federal Claims and three bankruptcy courts — in the Middle District of Florida, Eastern District of New York, and Rhode Island — have been added to the project. Rhode Island already is offering the recordings online, and the other three courts are moving toward implementation. They join the 5 original pilot courts — U.S. District Courts in Nebraska and the Eastern District of Pennsylvania and the U.S. Bankruptcy Courts in the Eastern District of North Carolina, Northern District of Alabama, and Maine. The audio files are accessible through the Public Access to Court Electronic Records (PACER) system. Digital audio recording has been an authorized method of making an official record of court proceedings since 1999, when it was approved by the policy-making Judicial Conference of the United States. Digital audio recording is used in most bankruptcy and district courts (where magistrate judges account for most of the usage). In courts with digital audio recording, CDs of hearings have been available for the authorized fee of $26, but prospective purchasers have had to make the trip to the clerk of court’s office. During the pilot project, Internet access to the same content at the nine pilot courts will cost a minimum of 16 cents — eight cents for accessing the docket sheet and another eight cents for selecting the audio file on PACER.
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