Abstract
This paper examines the growing phenomenon of media trials in India and its constitutional implications. It argues that the rise of 24-hour news cycles, digital platforms, and competitive media environments has transformed the role of the press from reporting facts to shaping public opinion, often leading to premature judgments about guilt or innocence. Media trials function as a parallel system of adjudication, where narratives are constructed and disseminated without the procedural safeguards followed in courts of law. The study focuses on the tension between the right to freedom of speech under Article 19(1)(a) and the rights to privacy, dignity, and fair trial under Article 21 of the Indian Constitution. It highlights how the recognition of privacy as a fundamental right in the Puttaswamy judgment has reshaped the constitutional landscape, making reputational harm and informational exposure more significant concerns. Media trials not only challenge the presumption of innocence but also cause long-term social, psychological, and reputational damage, even in cases of acquittal. The paper further analyses judicial and institutional responses, such as contempt law, postponement orders, and self-regulatory mechanisms, and finds them inadequate to address the structural nature of the problem. It concludes that media trials reflect a constitutional imbalance, where strong speech protections are not sufficiently balanced with dignity and fair trial rights. The study calls for a more refined constitutional approach that preserves media freedom while safeguarding individual rights in the digital age.

DIP: 18.02.015/20261102
DOI: 10.25215/2455/1102015