The People vs. Sheley: Pictures of justice

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Extended media coverage remains a pilot project of the Illinois Supreme Court. We believe it has proved its value and should become a permanent fixture in Illinois courtrooms.

Others in the criminal justice system see the importance of cameras in the courtroom.

Lee County Circuit Judge Ron Jacobson said he believes extended media coverage “is a good thing,” and commented that the Sheley trial reinforced that belief.

Whiteside County State’s Attorney Gary Spencer filed a resistance to having cameras in the courtroom for the Sheley trial, but he may have changed his mind.

“I ultimately believe that they were done very well, they were very unobtrusive, and I can’t say that I still feel the same way I did initially. You folks all did a great job,” Spencer said after the trial.

The pictures of justice from the Sheley trial bring home the meticulous and professional nature of the judicial system, boost public confidence in that system, and in a way, help to mitigate the long delay between crime and conviction.

And they plainly illustrated how the evidence stacked up to an inevitable verdict against a cold, calculating killer.

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