An entertainment firm fights to Webcast McVeigh’s execution
Published:
11 April 2001 y., Wednesday
Should the execution of Oklahoma City bomber Timothy McVeigh be Webcast for the world to see? That is the question before the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Indiana, which is holding an emergency hearing on the matter April 17, two days before the bombing’s anniversary.
“The execution of Mr. McVeigh is a matter of great public importance and significance,” reads the request submitted by lawyers for the Entertainment Network. ” The public has a constitutional right to be present at the execution, and the only method of delivering that right to the citizens is via audiovisual transmission.”
One of the co-founders of Entertainment Network, David Marshlack, maintains the Web’s superiority for this type of transmission. Unlike a television broadcast, he says, a Webcast could be restricted to adults. He plans to do that by working with Internet filtering companies so they could block out the execution, and by charging a small fee, $1.95, to help ensure that those who would log on are credit-card-carrying adults. All nice ideas, but not likely to guarantee that kids can’t access the feed.
Marshlack is also quick to point out that his company would make no profit from the venture, that all proceeds would go to charities for victims of the bombing.
Šaltinis:
MSNBC
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.
The most popular articles
A famous New York church is feeling Wall Street's pain.
more »
Japan may be in recession, but Tokyo remains the world's best dining city.
more »
The Netherlands may be famous for its liberal drugs laws but in the Dutch town of Bergen Op Zoom they've had enough.
more »
A European Commission report published today shows that mobile workers from the countries that joined the EU in 2004 and 2007 have had a positive impact on Member States' economies and have not led to serious disturbances on their labour markets.
more »
South Korean stores must by law charge shoppers for plastic bags. Any infrigement would be reported to the authorities.
more »
Shi Sanba is one of China's most celebrated plastic surgeon's and also dubbed the country's "Michael Jackson".
more »
The job of elected Members of any Parliament is to make laws that all of us are obliged to obey.
more »
In Spain thousands have been queuing for days in the hope of gaining that crucial first step onto the property ladder.
more »
Scores of sheep have been shepherded through Paris as part of a demonstration to improve the lives of European farmers.
more »
Animal rights groups say animals are suffering from abuse and sometimes live in dire conditions.
more »