Thanks - and yes, you're right that Ohio is not a state that places the right to a fair trial above the right to freedom of speech. As a general (but not strict) rule, many of the more "liberally-enlightened" states in the USA (that classification is bound to start WW3 in here!) DO impose sub-judice laws regarding evidence, opinions of guilt, character defamation etc. California is one such state. Here's the CA Attorney General's web page concerning sub-judice rules:
http://www.attorneygeneral.jus.gov.on.ca/english/legis/subjudicerule.asp
As you can see, it's fairly self-explanatory. And it also supports my original argument (which itself was, in any case, prefaced by the word "moderately" as it applied to the USA). I took issue at a strongly-worded and somewhat condescending reply from another poster (i.e. not you!) who essentially said I was talking rubbish - either through ignorance or through a willful attempt to spread lies. And I didn't like being called either ignorant or a liar, when I would like to think that I am neither.
Just as a final point, here's the general wikipedia* page on sub judice and the rules surrounding it. It specifically names those countries where stringent rules are in place, and mentions the difficulty of classifying the USA.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sub_judice
I hope this clears up any confusion. And who knows, maybe the other poster in question will retract the earlier statements. Or maybe not.
*Yes, not the World's most unflinchingly reliable source, I know. But perfectly OK in this instance.
EDIT: The first link is not from California, but from Ontario! My massive error - sorry. I'll try and find a US state to illustrate my point.....