If you have a camera in the courtroom, there's no filtering. What you see is what's there.
The problem with not having a camera is that one must trust the analysis of a reporter who's telling you what occurred in the courtroom. You have to take into consideration the filtering effect of that person's own biases.
If you take the cameras out of the courtroom, then you hide a certain measure of truth from the public.
I have not fully had the opportunity to evaluate the impact of cameras in the courtroom.
And if you take the cameras out of the courtroom, then you hide, I think, a certain measure of truth from the public, and I think that's very important for the American public to know.