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Recent
Activities - Pastor Daniel Arthur Hayes
Submission of Opinion Editorial
January 18, 2007
Contact Information Concerning this Op-Ed:
Robert S. “Bob” Bennett
bbennett@bennettlawfirm.com
schauveaux@bennettlawfirm.com
(713) 225-6000
(832) 566-1490
(713) 225-6001 fax
When Cameron County prosecutors convened local press to
announce the arrest and indictment of Pastor Arthur Daniel
Hayes, they knew exactly what they were doing. They knew the
salacious nature of the charges leveled—phony doctors and
sexual assaults—would lead to sure headlines and sound bites
for the DA’s office. And it did, hundreds of headlines from
local to national markets that all, without technically
violating journalistic rules of accuracy, characterize
Pastor Hayes as a criminal. When the evidence on its face,
suggests he is not. When it appeared Pastor Hayes and his
lawyers were prepared to answer the allegations waged
through the media, the DA suddenly became concerned about
pre-trial press coverage. So concerned, he refused to honor
his own open-file policy and asked the county judge to gag
all parties in the matter, blaming Pastor Hayes’ lawyers for
trying the case in the media.
“Trying the case in the media—” it’s a chorus that the DA’s
have written and learned to sing, and it’s been going on for
decades in Texas and across the nation. It’s becoming far
too easy to claim; to the degree at least recently in Texas
courts. In the interest of our clients, defense attorneys
understand the ways in which media outlets may be
manipulated during the course of a criminal proceeding and
the courts’ responsibility to guard against jury tampering.
But there have to be some standards/criteria. A cursory
search on the internet will yield hundreds of recently
issued gag orders and not only in high profile cases.
For far too long, reporters who cover the courts have
accepted gag orders as a fact of life, without considering
how our civil rights are impacted. They need to demand that
courts consider the constitutionality of their actions. In
Texas, the Davenport case requires “imminent and irreparable
harm” to the judicial process before a gag order is
appropriate.
Unless this standard is met, the media should be involved in
the sacred trust of protecting the First Amendment. So far
in Cameron County, based on the Hayes case, their dedication
has to be questioned.
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