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New rules govern media in local courts

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“You’re probably never going to get to cover a 12-year-old who says something bad happened to her,” McCann said.

But he expects the Illinois Supreme Court’s pilot program ultimately will become a permanent fixture in county courthouses.

“I think what you’ll see is see this thing tweaked,” McCann said. “You see it modified a little bit, but I think it’s going to be a long-term program for us.”

Media coverage of Nicholas Sheley’s murder trial in Whiteside County Courthouse in northwest Illinois attracted some media attention itself in October and November. Sheley, 33, was accused of beating a 93-year-old Sterling man to death in 2008; he was one of eight people Sheley was accused of killing over a matter of days in Illinois and Missouri.

During that trial, and those throughout Illinois since the program started, there weren’t any notable problems with having cameras in the courtrooms, Illinois Supreme Court spokesman Joe Tybor said. He attributed any complaints to minor issues surrounding journalists who were confused or uninformed about specific rules.

“There has been nothing to indicate that this isn’t going work,” Tybor said. “The measure of success – and the reason why it is a pilot project – is really to determine whether cameras and all that go along with it can coexist in Illinois courtrooms [without sacrificing justice and fairness.]”

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