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Cameras didn't cause big problems in Sheley trial

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CHICAGO – A judge's effort to put cameras inside Cook County courtrooms got a big push from a small western Illinois county.

Observers reported few problems in the just-completed murder trial of Nicholas Sheley in Whiteside County – just the kind of thing the state Supreme Court wanted to hear before it would consider allowing television and still cameras inside courtrooms of the state's largest county and one of the nation's largest media markets.

"From all indications, the Sheley trial went well," said Joseph Tybor, a spokesman for the state Supreme Court.

Sheley, who was convicted of first-degree murder last week in the slaying of 93-year-old Russell Reed, grabbed headlines throughout the Midwest in 2008, when he allegedly went on a shooting spree in Illinois and Missouri, leaving 8 people dead.

His trial was a significant chapter in Illinois' cameras-in-the-courtroom debate, as it was easily the highest-profile one to take place after January, when the high court embarked on a pilot project in several counties. Tybor said things also went smoothly in a Kankakee murder trial, which was streamed live on the Internet and, at times, broadcast live on a local television station.

Together, the two trials may add up to good news for Cook County's chief judge, Timothy Evans. He submitted a cameras-in-court application soon after the high court announced the pilot program. It was deferred, though, as the court wanted to see how the program played out in the test counties.

But it's unclear how or when things would unfold in Cook County. Evans could not be reached for comment Monday. It is, however, a safe bet that with more than 400 judges, seven courthouses and hundreds of courtrooms, the process would be far more complicated than anywhere else in Illinois.

With Whiteside County's precedent set, it could mean the public will get an inside look at one of the biggest criminal cases in the Chicago area: The Naperville woman who is charged in DuPage County in the stabbing deaths of her 8-year-old son and a 5-year-old girl she was babysitting.

The county was recently allowed to take part in the pilot program.

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