Skip navigation.


Higbee Trial Draws National Media Spotlight

Accidents | Mon, 05/04/2009 - 3:42 pm | Updated 3 years 1 week ago | Read 8102 | Commented 3 | Emailed 17
Tags: Christina Becker, court house, Fatal Crash, In Session, Jacqueline Becker, Robert Higbee

By Lauren Suit

COURT HOUSE — The trial of State Trooper Robert Higbee, who is charged with two counts of vehicular homicide in the deaths of two Upper Township sisters, will have a national audience’s attention.

TruTV, a national cable network, plans to broadcast the trial starting with opening arguments during their In Session programming.

In Session, the successor to Court TV News, provides live coverage of trials, legal news, and details of highly-publicized crimes during their news programming hours from 9:00 a.m. to 3:00 p.m. Their coverage takes viewers into the courtrooms and shares analysis from anchors and guests to help viewers understand legal proceedings.

Tim Sullivan, senior vice president of In Session, told the Herald that the trial has all the makings for a really good news story that garners viewers’ interests.

On Sept. 27, 2006, just after 10 p.m., Higbee’s patrol car crashed into a minivan, the two sisters, Christina, 19, and Jacqueline, 17, Becker were driving in. They were pronounced dead at the scene. Now, over two years later, a jury must decide whether Higbee acted recklessly when he ran a stop sign at the intersection of Stagecoach and Tuckahoe roads.

“The girls were running an errand. They were innocent bystanders. And it is not every day that you see a law enforcement officer charged with vehicular homicide and looking at possibility of 20 years if he is found guilty,” Sullivan said.

“The stakes are high for everyone involved,” he added.

Sullivan said that this trial is significant because of the public interest in law enforcement policy.
Higbee has told investigators he was pursuing a speeder that night and was attempting to close the gap between himself and that other driver when the collision took place.

“It makes for a good debate,” Sullivan noted. “What precautions should take place during when officers engage in a chase? Should a chase be initiated? The public is very interested to see what, if any, policy changes come out of this case,” he added.

Of the 12 to 15 court trials that In Session covers, Sullivan said that two might have a law enforcement official involved.
Sullivan said that coverage of the trial is routine, even if the case is unique.

In Session plans to start filming during opening arguments, which could start in the morning of Wednesday, May 6.

“We’ll be there gavel to gavel,” said Sullivan.

He noted that because the network is also covering other legal stories around the country, live coverage could be interrupted, but the crew will be filming every day of the case.

A truck that looks like it came off a Star Wars set, wires snaking throughout the court house, cameras in the court room, and a make-shift “base of operations” in the law library is all part of the television process.

Sullivan said that two cameras will be in the court room, one with a view as if you were in the audience and the other positioned to see the faces of the attorneys, defendant and judge.

The faces of the jury can’t be shown, he said.

One camera operator will run both cameras and an audio technician will be present to make sure the sound recorded is fit for television.

In addition to giving viewers a live look at what goes on in the court room, three shows are featured: Open Court with Lisa Bloom, Best Defense with Jami Floyd and Courtside with Ashleigh Banfield and Jack Ford.

Outside the courtroom a reporter is stationed to cover the entire goings on of the trial that is missed by the cameras. The crew also needs a field producer and staff to run the live feed in the satellite truck.

It may sound like quite an entourage, but Sullivan said that is the “minimum needed to cover a trial well.”

“We’ve done 800 trials in the past 18 years, by now we’ve got it down to an exact science,” he said.

To view TruTV’s In Session programming, check local cable provider for listing details. To view In Session’s coverage of the trial on your computer, go to www.cnn.com/CRIME.

The case also has altered operations at the courthouse.
The public can only enter from the western side of the building, adjacent to the parking lot, while only employees can enter through the eastern side of the building facing Route 9.

Inside the courtroom, white sheets of paper mark which seats have been reserved for the defense, the prosecution and the media. The reserved seating will take effect when the jurors are selected.

Login or register to post comments

Comments (3)

We welcome your thoughts, stories and information related to this article. Read our "Policies and Standards for Comments". Please report comments which do not comply with Policies and Standards. When you are logged-in, you will see a "Flag as offensive" button next to each comment.

Fri, 05/08/2009 - 11:01am - Posted by: Vader

Indianprincessa72, you are assuming you know where and what the cop was doing. First of all, when a cop passes you and shuts his lights of after he goes by you, he probably got a call on the radio from another cop who arrived at the scene of the incident that he is going to. Very often the first cop on scene surveys the situatuation and may call to tell the other cops responding, that they can disregard the call or come in at reduced speed. How do you know the cop was chasing someone? Maybe it was a medical call. Besides, lights and sirens means move. He shouldn't have had to weave. People are so clueless! Last, I am so sick and tired of people saying, " if it were anyone else"! No you would not be under the jail as you called it! Nobody goes to jail for a traffic violation! Not even for a DWI ticket! The Trooper caused an ACCIDENT! Give him his tickets and call it a day! That's what anyone else would get but because he was a cop, they are trying to prove something! There was a quote in the press last week about accidents in NJ. In the past five years, there have been something like 170 fatal accidents (can't remember exact #'s) where alcohol was not involved. Of the 170 ACCIDENTS, in 169 of them, the careless driver who caused the ACCIDENT, got some tickets and that's it! Care to guess what the other one got? Shafted! That's right! Higbee is the only one who's case is being tried in criminal court. So you are saying that this Trooper is a criminal. He lost his job and much of his sanity knowing what he caused. That's enough!

Thu, 05/07/2009 - 12:12pm - Posted by: Caped Crusader

LOWER SCHOOL-BUS DRIVER PLEADS NOT GUILTY IN FATAL CRASH
Author: RICHARD DEGENER Staff Writer, (609) 463-6711
The Prosecutor's Office will not press more serious charges in the accident in which Shirley Lewis is accused of having run a red light and caused the death of Raymond Paget, 80, of Lower Township.

Thu, 05/07/2009 - 8:43am - Posted by: indianprincessa72

It's a shame that a police chase caused two young people to lose their lives ,which was caused unfortunately by an officer of the law I see officers speeding to get to the local WaWa,or just to get through the intersection and after they do their light goes off.
The other day I was on my way to work when I witnessed an officer in LT.(Bayshore rd.) speed by me , and almost caused a head on collision, when he went to pass a car in front of me,he went into the oncoming traffic lane,which traffic was traveling,and didn't hit his brake, the oncoming car went into the grass,and the officer scooted through weaving between traffic that was in the way.So,as it may have been important for the officer to get the person that he was chasing,the parents of the young ladys no longer have their daughters,if it were anyone else, we would be under the jail,let alone be charged with the same crime or worse.
My prayers go out to all concerned and forgiveness be in your hearts.




Calendar search

Date Range Search
Format: 05-16-2012.
Format: 05-16-2012.

more topicsMOST RECENT SPOUT OFFS

more homes TOP HOMES


more classifieds TOP CLASSIFIEDS

Property Transfer Chart