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Cameras in court pass first test, but county to wait and see

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He said extended media coverage is creeping closer to Cook County. Kane, Kendall and DeKalb counties all plan to apply to the pilot program soon; DuPage is already on board.

Not quite so for McHenry County.

Court Administrator Dan Wallis said that after the first of the year, officials would have meetings with members of the bar association and media.

“This is a tremendous shift in culture,” Wallis said. “This is something very new, and to be quite honest, it’s something that many of the judges thought wouldn’t happen in their lifetimes.”

Local attorneys, however, already are getting a taste of courtroom cameras in other counties.

Last month, a camera filmed Woodstock-based attorney Dan Hofmann when he and co-counsel Matthew Haiduk went to trial in Winnebago County on a case where a teacher was accused of battering a student. Aaron Oetting was acquitted after the bench trial, meaning it was held in front of a judge rather than a jury.

Hofmann said he barely noticed the cameras, although he insists the camera adds 60 pounds, not 30.

Hofmann typically doesn’t stand in one place, instead pacing around the courtroom.

“It may have been a problem for the cameraman because I walk around a lot, and I think they might have gotten dizzy following me,” he said. “I’ve watched other trials that are televised, and it does seem like the attorneys are anchored to a podium.”

But there were no restrictions placed on Hofmann’s movement, and he didn’t feel like the cameras were obtrusive. He said he is OK with filming future cases.

“I don’t feel like I played to the cameras or the prosecutor played to the camera,” he said.

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