IE 11 is not supported. For an optimal experience visit our site on another browser.

Poll: Americans believe celebrities will get fair trials

Blacks more likely to doubt Jackson, Bryant will receive equitable treatment in court
/ Source: The Associated Press

Most Americans believe Michael Jackson, Kobe Bryant and Martha Stewart will get fair trials, though blacks are less confident than whites that Jackson and Bryant will be treated impartially, an Associated Press poll found.

Nearly half the people surveyed said they think Stewart will be convicted, while far fewer believe Jackson and Bryant will be found guilty, according to the poll conducted for the AP by Ipsos-Public Affairs.

Jackson was to be arraigned Friday in a California court on charges of molesting a child. Lawyers in Bryant’s sexual assault case in Colorado are in the middle of pretrial hearings. Jury selection is just beginning in New York in the case of Stewart, who is charged with lying about the sale of stock.

Some 60 percent of people polled said celebrities get treated better by the judicial system because they have a lot of money, while 12 percent think they are singled out for prosecution because they are high-profile. Only one-quarter of the public thought celebrities are treated like ordinary citizens.

“They definitely get special treatment,” said Jake Minsinger, a 37-year-old welder from Hanover, Pa. “Usually, they’re all out on bail. When they show up in court they’re well dressed. And instead of a public defender, they have a team of the most expensive lawyers in the country.”

Some said they think celebrities have it tougher in the courts.

“I think they get special punishment because they have money and people are jealous of them,” said Ruth Gearin, a retiree from Milwaukee. “When they’re up, people want to bring them down.”

Most in the AP-Ipsos poll were aware of the three high-profile cases. But only one-fifth said they were closely following each of the trials.

Justice is black and white
Blacks were twice as likely as whites to be paying close attention to the cases against Jackson and Bryant, both of whom are black.

By a 2-to-1 margin, people said they thought the pop star would get a fair trial, and by a 3-to-1 margin they thought the Los Angeles Lakers basketball star and Stewart would get fair trials. Blacks were significantly more likely than whites to think Jackson and Bryant would not get fair trials.

Whites thought Jackson would get a fair trial by a 60-30 margin; blacks, by a 49-38 margin, thought he would not. Whites thought Bryant would get a fair trial by a 76-18 margin. Blacks were more divided; 54 percent said he would get a fair trial and 43 percent said he would not.

The difference in racial attitudes recall the O.J. Simpson murder trial. The football Hall of Famer was tried and acquitted of the 1994 slayings of ex-wife Nicole Brown Simpson and a friend, Ronald Goldman. A civil jury later held him liable and ordered him to pay the victims’ survivors $33.5 million.

The AP-Ipsos poll found 77 percent believe Simpson was guilty. When broken down along racial lines, 82 percent of whites thought he was the killer while only 35 percent of blacks felt that he was the killer.

While most in the poll were familiar with the three current cases, many were not that familiar with their details. But they still had opinions about the outcome.

By a 2-to-1 margin, people thought Jackson would be acquitted and by a slightly larger margin, they thought Bryant would be acquitted. By 48 percent to 35 percent, people thought Stewart would be convicted.

“I don’t think she’s very well liked, people probably go harder on her,” said Kim Beach, a 39-year-old mother from Roseville, Calif. “She does these things no women can do, and then she says ’Oh, it’s just so simple,’ and you say, ’No way.”’

Even if the three celebrities are convicted, the vast majority of Americans say they will continue watching them and buying their products, the survey found.

The AP-Ipsos poll of 1,000 adults was taken Jan. 9-11 and has a margin of sampling error of plus or minus 3 percentage points.