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Cameras stay for Beason trial

Don BeasonThere was an interesting role reversal in today's Don Beason trial.

Prosecutors asked Judge Joy Hamilton to bar cameras from WRAL's news team from the courtroom, reports Ryan Teague Beckwith. Defense attorneys wanted them to stay.

It's usually the other way around.

An assistant Wake district attorney said two witnesses did not want to appear on TV news, though they did not mind being in the newspaper.

Beason's attorney, former state Rep. Bob Hensley, made an impassioned speech defending freedom of the press. He cited the state constitution and said there was no good reason to close the court in the misdemeanor assault case.

"This is not a juvenile case, this is not a sexual abuse case, and this certainly is not a national security case," he argued.

Beason, a former top lobbyist, is facing a misdemeanor assault charge for allegedly pointing a gun at a Raleigh couple at a gas station near Cameron Village in July.

Judge Hamilton said the cameras could stay, saying Hensley's speech might win fans in the press corps.

"They might be reporting on what you said rather than this case after all that," she said.

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