U.S. flag

An official website of the United States government, Department of Justice.

NCJRS Virtual Library

The Virtual Library houses over 235,000 criminal justice resources, including all known OJP works.
Click here to search the NCJRS Virtual Library

STUDY OF COURT REPORTING SYSTEMS - V 1 - DECISION FACTORS

NCJ Number
2094
Author(s)
E H SHORT; M RUTHBERG
Date Published
1971
Length
158 pages
Annotation
SURVEY OF THE SYSTEMS CURRENTLY USED TO PRODUCE COURT RECORDS, NEW TECHNIQUES AVAILABLE, AND A PROCEDURE FOR COMPUTING COMPARATIVE COSTS OF VARIOUS SYSTEMS.
Abstract
ALL COURTS OF RECORD USE SOME METHOD OF RECORDING TESTIMONY AND PRODUCING THE OFFICIAL RECORD, BUT THERE IS A SUBSTANTIAL INTEREST IN MODIFYING OR REPLACING THEIR CURRENT TECHNIQUES. THIS PROJECT WAS DESIGNED TO TEST THE FEASIBILITY OF USING AN EXISTING COMPUTERIZED TRANSLATION SYSTEM FOR THE PRODUCTION OF TRANSCRIPTS IN A COURTROOM ENVIRONMENT, TO DEVELOP STATISTICS ON THE TIME AND COST OF TRANSCRIPT PREPARATION FOR METHODS NOW IN USE OR AVAILABLE, AND TO SURVEY LAWS APPLICABLE TO THE RECORDING OF COURT PROCEEDINGS. THIS VOLUME OF THE STUDY REPORT SUMMARIZES PROJECT ACTIVITIES, SURVEYS THE AVAILABLE SYSTEMS, AND OFFERS A DECISION TECHNIQUE TO ASSIST COURT ADMINISTRATORS IN SELECTING REPORTING PROCEDURES. ALL RECORDING METHODS ARE DESCRIBED IN TERMS OF THEIR OPERATIONAL CHARACTERISTICS, EQUIPMENT AND PERSONNEL NEEDS, COST COMPONENTS AND THE PRINCIPAL ADVANTAGES. THIS IS THE FIRST PART OF A FOUR VOLUME STUDY. FOR ACCESS TO THE EXPERIMENTAL PHASE, A SUMMARY OF STATE LAWS, AND AN ANNOTATED LIST OF REFERENCES FOR THIS STUDY, SEE NCJ 002095, 002096, AND 002097 RESPECTIVELY.