06/01/2026
We join the Forsyth County Bar Association in requesting that the Chief Resident Superior Court Judge and the Chief District Court Judge reconsider their decision to ban non-lawyers and non-court personnel from bringing electronic devices, including cell phones, into the Forsyth County Courthouse. As a lawyer, I see serious denial of due process of law and the N.C. constitutional right to access to the courts with an absolute ban on bringing electronic devices into the courthouse. Judges have the duty to maintain order in their courtrooms when court is in session, and limitations on non-court-related cell phone use in courtrooms themselves are absolutely necessary and appropriate. It is inherently inequitable to require visitors to the courthouse to use a pay-by-cell-phone-for-parking app to pay for parking but then to prohibit visitors from bringing their cell phones into the courthouse to manage their parking time. The burden on courthouse visitors who walk or take public transportation to the courthouse, and particularly those who do not frequent the courthouse & are unaware of the ban, is much more profound since they currently are denied secure storage facilities for their cell phones upon arriving at the courthouse. Not even banks of pay-per-use lockers are available for members of the public to use to secure their electronic devices while transacting business in the courthouse.
A total ban on bringing electronic devices into the courthouse is a blunt instrument that addresses frustrations of the judiciary with cell phones ringing, people talking on cell phones while in court, and noisy game playing & doomscrolling during court, but it does so at a disproportionate deprivation of the rights of courthouse visitors to the right of due process of law and access to the courts in today's world in which cell phone and electronic devices, even those without access to the cell phone network, are ubiquitous and relied upon members of the general public for storage and access to data as well as necessary communications.