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Monday, 13 January 2014

The media's influence on criminal trials: Part One (Jodi Arias Vs Travis Alexander)

Recently I've become increasingly more interested in trials. I would say my niche is definitely criminal psychology; trying to decipher what appears to happen inside a criminal’s mind, along with their situations and experiences, resulting in an estimated profile of who they are. Understandably, I tend to focus my research on the psychological side of criminology, but recently I have been beginning to learn more about the law side of crime, along with topics that I know will be included in my university course such as terrorism and the media.

The last two weeks I have been doing extensive research into the media and their contribution to the sensationalism of American criminal trials. I’ve decided to write a ‘series’ of blog posts focusing on individual trials and what impact the media has had on them. This first addition will focus on the Jodi Arias vs Travis Alexander and the state of Arizona trial, which is technically still on-going due to her sentencing being determined this year.


Travis Alexander was a salesman and motivational speaker, with a fantastic career and social life. He was also a Mormon, and took his religion very seriously, as it helped him through a difficult childhood in California, in which his drug-addicted parents neglected him and his seven siblings. His Mormon grandparents chose to raise him after his father’s death, and introduced him to a more positive life, in addition to a new found faith that he would hold close to his heart until the day he died. Jodi Arias was a beautiful, young woman, also born in California and met Travis at one of his motivational speeches during a conference in Las Vegas in September 2006. They were both instantly attracted to each other, however due to Travis’s religious ties they were unable to fulfil their lustful wishes. Jodi was later baptised as a Mormon by Travis and they were able to start their relationship officially in February 2007.

Unfortunately, their relationship did not go as swimmingly as one would hope. Jodi became increasingly jealous and paranoid as Travis mingled with female friends. Jodi felt as though Travis was embarrassed to acknowledge his relationship with her to his Mormon friends, despite their physical relationship growing more intimate and seedy behind closed doors.  Regarding their sex life, Jodi said in court, “I felt like a piece of toilet paper. I kind of felt like a prostitute. It seemed like Travis kind of had a Bill Clinton version of sex; where oral and anal are also sex to me, but not for him.”




Travis ended his relationship with Jodi in June 2007 yet still continued to have sex with her. He was due to fly to Mexico on June 10th 2008 and originally requested that he could take Jodi with him. In the lead up to the date, he asked if he could take another female friend instead.

Travis was discovered dead by his friends in the shower of his home on June 9th 2008. He had been shot in the head, stabbed 29 times and had his throat cut so deep it had nearly decapitated him. In the 911 call made by his deeply disturbed friends upon finding his body, they mentioned Jodi and how Travis had said she had been stalking him and intruding on his personal life via Facebook and email accounts.

During the crime scene investigation, a digital camera was found in a washing machine with an attempt to wipe the images taken on it. A specialist was able to retrieve some of the images and found unimaginable evidence linking Jodi to the crime. At approximately 1.40pm, a series of sexual images of the pair were taken, in which they were clearly having sexual relations and enjoying each other’s company. At around 5pm, more images were taken of Travis showering. The last image of Travis taken alive was at 5.29pm. 


Following on from this image, a blurred picture of someone (believed to be Travis) bleeding extensively on the shower floor was taken. A bloody handprint was found in the hallway (in addition to an extremely large amount of bloodstains on the floor) and it contained both Travis’s and Jodi’s DNA. A large collection of the crime scene photos were leaked and are available for anyone to view online.

Jodi was arrested six weeks later on July 15th. She originally pleaded not guilty and fabricated a story that involved two masked gunmen breaking into the home and attacking both her and Travis, with her escaping out the door after they had shot Travis. Her original police interview is available to watch on YouTube, here is an excerpt;


She also took part in a media interview and continued to dishonestly tell this story which is available to watch here; 

Upon the start of her trial, Jodi changed her story and admitted dishonesty. She then claimed she killed Travis in self-defence, after a long abusive relationship with him. She claimed Travis was an abusive and violent man who indicated to her that he was a paedophile. This shocking blow of false information caused public outcry, as the majority of the nation determined she was slandering Travis’s image for her own manipulative gain. In addition, she was crushing Travis’s reputation in a way to project herself as the victim despite Travis’s brutal and gory murder.

America’s criminal trials are televised if they are exceptionally popular. Jodi Arias’s trial ran for 55 days and was streamed live to the nation. Every aspect of it was made available for the public to see; the cross-examinations, the verdict, the crime scene photographs, texts and emails exchanged and all background history of the accused and victim. Jodi has been interviewed by the press multiple times which have all been televised and are easily accessible to view, as well as creating a Twitter account which she updates very regularly (via television conversations with her followers) and selling her artwork on Ebay. The result of this, like all other trials which are made public, is that the trials become somewhat of a drama story, in which the people involved are catapulted into the media’s limelight and become infamous.

“Stories with child homicide victims and/or perpetrators are particularly likely to be featured so prominently that they become long-running stories with a familiar cast of characters, regularly invoked as symbols of wider issues or the state of the nation, illustrated by the Moors murders, and the Jamie Bulger and Soham cases.” – (Robert Reiner, 2007, The Oxford Handbook Of Criminology)

Although Robert Reiner’s quote is in regard to UK criminal cases, the quote is relevant to all popular, extreme trials that capture the public’s interest. Frequently throughout my research into Jodi’s case, I had to remind myself that this was actual reality, in which real people are going through an extremely distressing trial and a poor, young man was murdered.

In the UK, all cameras are banned from entering the courtroom. An artist is allowed in and will usually sketch main perpetrators of the case. A criminal’s mug shot is also released to the public. There is absolutely no chance of a video recorder being allowed in the courtroom to capture any footage of the ongoing trials for media gain. As a result of this, the UK public rely only on journalist reports to find out information throughout a trial. However, recent changes have been made, in which criminologist or media reporters can now update their Twitter accounts with step-by-step tweets on how the trial is panning out, as seen by Rupert Evelyn’s tweets during Ian Watkin’s trial and sentencing.

The reporting style of America’s media to this case has been shocking for me to watch. There has been no decorum, nor any privatisation of any details of the case. Everything has been on a platform for anybody to watch, whether it be live on television or found on YouTube. Jodi has been interviewed time and time again despite being in custody, and as a result of this has found herself becoming an international celebrity with a cult following. ‘Justice 4 Jodi’ t-shirts and wristbands are being donned by thousands of people, with ‘Justice 4 Travis’ merchandise also being sold. The public have been captivated by every minute of this story and trial, with hundreds of people camping outside Arizona’s state county court in the desperate hope of winning a spare seat in the courtroom as if the trial is as entertaining as a football game. Copious amounts of arguments and debates have flooded social media sites and chat shows in regard to Jodi’s guilt or innocence, with people able to input incredibly detailed arguments and opinions as if they have a personal relationship with the people involved in the case.

As a result of this incredible showdown of a murder trial, Jodi and all involved have become celebrities. Personally, something about that fact sends chills down my spine. The case was about Travis, and finding out the truth of his murder and gaining justice for him. Instead, his whole life, murder and intimate, personal details have been broadcast to the whole world and have been used as a source of entertainment. The sensationalism of the trial has over-shadowed the fact that this young, inspiring man with his whole future ahead of him was brutally killed, and that his family must now live on with the knowledge that the whole world knows the smallest, minute details of the most upsetting and distressing times of their lives.

Jodi was found guilty of first degree murder on May 8th 2013 in the first phase of her trial. Due to a hung verdict on her sentencing, she is due to start her second phase of the trial in March 2014, in which the jury with decide whether she will face the death penalty or life imprisonment. Already, an interest is sparking back up again in the media and this will inevitably be the second part of what I can only describe as an intrusive, crazy and unbelievable media input to Jodi Arias’s trial.

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