

Attendees will be able to see and/or hear the court proceeding, in the same manner as the participants, and will have a similar experience to sitting in the courtroom gallery. Access information for attendees will be available on the Judge’s Procedures and Schedules web page or by contacting the presiding judge’s Courtroom Deputy. The public, press, and other non-participating observers (“attendees”) of a Zoom proceeding with the court should follow this guidance. For security and enforcement of court standards, the court may disable some Zoom interactions (such as chat, screen share, whiteboard, Q&A, etc.) to maintain a safe and secure environment. Adequate preparation and testing of your system is required to ensure a good experience for everyone involved. H.323: 161.199.138.10 (US West) or 161.199.136.10 (US East)Īttorneys, witnesses, case parties, etc., (“panelists”) in a Zoom proceeding with the court must follow the guidance below. H.323/SIP room system (Polycom/Cisco/etc.): If you must appear by telephone, you will need to contact the Courtroom Deputy (CRD) at least one business day before the hearing to provide the phone number you will be calling from.


NOTE: If you are a case participant (attorney, party, witness, or other person who will actively participate in the hearing), it is strongly recommended that you join Zoom using the Zoom application rather than by a telephone connection. Join the webinar by phone or other connection You will then be admitted into the court proceeding by court staff. If you are a case participant, you will first join as an attendee. Please click the appropriate Zoom webinar link for the presiding judge from the Judge’s Procedures and Schedules web page. A violation of this prohibition may result in sanctions, including suspension of your license to practice before this court, referral to the state bar, denial of the right to appear by video or telephonically at future proceedings, criminal prosecution, contempt, denial of admission to future hearings, and any other sanctions deemed necessary by the Court. Recording, copying, photographing and rebroadcasting of court proceedings is prohibited by federal law.
