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Illinois trial of suspect in killing spree gets camera coverage

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Space on Monday was tight.

“You might get really snuggly with my backside,” Kershaw told the other photographers.

Authorities blocked the three from taking images of the jury and of an undercover Illinois State Police investigator who testified. During her testimony, Kershaw trained his camera on Sheley and on evidence photographs.

Stationed in the courthouse law library, Ortiz handled the feed through a device about the size of a dormitory refrigerator that allowed other outlets to pull images.

Ortiz also sent feeds to stations without representatives at the courthouse, and that proved to be a challenge. Internet access was slow, he said.

Journalists from six media outlets were covering the case. Among them were Chris Minor, who has covered courts for 27 years as a reporter for WQAD, the ABC affiliate, and Kate Pabich, a photojournalist with WHBF-TV, a CBS affiliate in Rock Island.

Pabich said she was “terrified because we’re a trial county so we could mess it up for the rest of Illinois.”

But she also said cameras in the courtroom allowed viewers to see behind what previously had been doors closed to the public.

Cameras are long overdue in Illinois courts, Minor said. “It’s like Christmas for journalists,” she said. “It’s a gift.”

Stations used to hire courtroom sketch artists, which became expensive.

“It was almost like we were having to use stick figures in the TV business to cover courts,” Minor said.

Although Sheley’s trial is the first prominent Illinois proceeding for courtroom cameras, photographers and videographers have been working in the 14th Circuit since February. A Kankakee County murder trial that began Oct. 23 is believed to be the first case in the state where cameras provided live coverage of a trial.

Whiteside County State’s Attorney Gary Spencer noted in opening statements that DNA lifted from a cigarette in Reed’s farmhouse belonged to Sheley, as did DNA from a water bottle found in Reed’s car.

Spencer also quoted from a letter Sheley wrote to the attorney of his brother; his brother was charged and acquitted with concealing Reed’s death.

“I fully intend on pleading guilty to my charges because I know exactly what has taken place,” Spencer said Nicholas Sheley wrote, “and because of the fact that I do indeed know what I have done.”

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