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Same great shows, all new name. More real life on truTV from 1/1/08. In Loss for Court TV, N.Y. Judges Continue Ban on Cameras in Courts Media and public found to possess same right of accessJudges and lawyers on a Minnesota advisory panel had many questions Friday for a colleague from Iowa, where television cameras have been allowed to record courtroom trials for ... ... Albany, N.Y., was that case, Fred Graham, chief anchor and managing editor of Court TV, said during a discussion Tuesday at Newseum/NY of placing still and TV cameras in courtrooms ... Although many state courts allow trials to be broadcast, federal rules explicitly prohibit TV cameras in courtrooms. Lawyers for Court TV say that prohibition is unconstitutional.
Except for South Dakota, Indiana and Mississippi, all states allow TV cameras in courtrooms. Video cameras were placed in courts to offer the American public the opportunity to ... ... appearance in a Grand Forks courtroom was televised by several Minnesota TV ... Kirtley also points out that cameras in courtrooms are a lot less distracting than they used to be.court tv chairman praises senators grassley and schumer on the introduction of a bipartisan bill to allow federal judges to permit cameras in courtrooms
Senior judges have agreed to a pilot scheme which could see TV cameras being brought into courtrooms. Lord Donaldson, the former master of the rolls, said he had an open mind on ... Court TV's bread and butter is in having its cameras in court, televising cases as they unfold. That practice was well on its way to becoming routine until the televised 1995 O.J.
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