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Poynter on the Record

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Candace Clarke
Poynter faculty quoted in print, broadcast, or online and stories about The Poynter Institute



Media Coverage Intense in Case that Captured the Nation
By Anthony Violanti
Star-Banner
Published: 2/12/2007

Excerpt:

John Couey's murder trial has gone from the rural Central Florida backdrop of Lake County to the bright lights and big city in Miami.

Goodbye boiled peanuts. Hello Shaquille O'Neal.

"Putting this trial in Miami is like tossing a bloody hunk of meat into a shark tank. The media down there are going to be all over each other trying to eat this stuff up," said Ocala lawyer Charles R. Holloman, who used to live and work in Miami. "It's going to be some show."

At least 40 news organizations will be covering the trial, and 100 media members have received press credentials, said Eunice Sigler, a spokeswoman for the Miami-Dade County 11th Circuit Court. The courtroom holds 95 seats, she said, and 40 of them have been reserved for media each day. Parking has been reserved for up to 30 television satellite trucks.

Couey has been a national media figure for the past two years. He's being tried for the 2005 kidnapping and murder of Jessica Lunsford, 9, who investigators say was buried alive. Media saturation in the case reached a peak last summer during an attempt to pick a jury in Tavares. ...

... Al Tompkins, broadcast/online group leader at The Poynter Institute school for journalists in St. Petersburg, said that, despite the presence of so many big-league national news figures, the Couey trial provides smaller news organizations a chance to shine.

"This is still a local story, and you've got to keep the focus on local coverage," Tompkins said. "No one covers local news better than a local news organization. The reporters from Central Florida have the background on the case and know the lawyers and people involved."
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Posted by Candace Clarke 2:35 PM Feb 20, 2007
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