The clash between Brett Kavanaugh and accuser Christine Blasey Ford topped the 10 stories with the highest number of minutes on last year’s ABC, CBS and NBC nightly newscasts, says analyst Andrew Tyndall. Criminal justice figured in six of those top stories.
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Mass shootings, the special counsel’s Russia investigation, immigration, and sexual assault charges against powerful men in the worlds of entertainment, media and business dominated the news media coverage of criminal justice in 2018. But the most significant development, as it was in 2017, was the continued drop in coverage of local justice issues.
After a year of concentration on national politics, much coverage of crime and justice in 2017 in the U.S. news media shifted to a discussion of the presidential election’s aftermath and of a topic given new prominence by Donald Trump’s presidency: immigration.
Urban violence, police shootings, the opioid epidemic, and a tense political campaign dominated criminal justice coverage during 2016. How did the coverage measure up? In our annual press review, Washington Bureau chief Ted Gest assesses the year in coverage with a panel of media experts and observers.
The volume and depth of news coverage about criminal justice in the United States increased in 2015. But there’s less hard-hitting coverage in many cities on basic topics than there used to be.
It didn’t take long for the names “Ferguson,” “Michael Brown,” and “Darren Wilson” to be entwined in the biggest criminal…
The sputtering economy affected both criminal justice and news coverage of it in 2010. Many agencies from police departments to prisons were forced to cut back.
Fifteen years after reported crime in the United States reached a modern day peak, many news reporters, along with their sources, are groping to understand the decline. With a few notable exceptions, media coverage of the trends in 2009 primarily was a story of crime dropping in many big cities.
A crime reporting case study of the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, May-November 2012.
Police-media relations may have bottomed out following a series a controversial police-involved deaths beginning last August, when Michael Brown was killed by Officer Darren Wilson in Ferguson, Mo. Journalists covering the resulting unrest were harassed, bullied and arrested by police.