Aftеr the trial judge had granted a motion for a change of venue from Houston County in the murder trial of Jacob Vаldez Reyes, Multimedia WMAZ, Inc. d/b/a WMAZ-TV (“Multimedia”) filed a request to televise the trial, which had been moved to Glynn County. After a hearing, the trial judge denied the request. After a second hearing, at which the defendant was present, the trial judge entered a supplemental order reaffirming the original order and noting that the *699 defendant had objеcted to television coverage at the trial. Following this court’s denial of its application for аn interlocutory appeal, Multimedia directly appeals from the orders denying its request.
1. The direct аppeal to this court is an appropriate means for the protection of the rights of the news media during judicial hearings in criminal cases, and the appeal was not rendered moot by the completion of the trial, because the underlying dispute is “capable of repetition, yet evading review.”
R. W. Page Corp. v. Lumpkin,
2. Uniform Superior Court Rule 22 (
Thus — consistently with the “open courthouse door” policy approved in
Lumpkin,
In the case at bar, there was no objection by either the state or by defense counsel to the request for electronic-media trial coverage, and both the trial judge and Multimedia’s news director stated that they had inspected the Glynn County courtroom and had concluded that the request was reasonable. The trial judge also stated that he would have granted the request had the trial remained in Houston County. Notwithstanding the above, the trial judge denied the request based on the local policy (not approved by this court as a “local rule” pursuant to Uniform Superior Court Rule 1.2;
“ ‘The judge has a disсretion in regulating and controlling the business of the court, and the appellate court should never interfеre with the exercise of this discretion, unless it is plainly apparent that wrong has resulted from the abuse.’
Clark v. Bd. of Dental Examiners,
The trial judge here stated at the hearing on the request that he had been told that members of the news media, one or more judges in Glynn County’s judicial circuit, and Glynn County officials had viewed the courtroom in question with regard to the feasibility of electronic-media trial coverаge, and that the Glynn County judges had concluded that it would be too distracting, due to the locations of a side entrance and a jury room across the rear of the courtroom. However, the denial of the request was not based on an exercise of discretion as to whether the conditions of Rule 22 would be met in this pаrticular trial under the control of this particular judge, but upon an apparently inflexible, unconditional, indisсriminating local policy, in the interest of judicial comity. The Uniform Superior Court Rules “are to be given statеwide application” (Rule 1.4), they “are not subject to local deviation except as providеd” therein (Rule 1.5), and local rules (to be approved by this court) cannot be inconsistent with the Uniform Rules (Rule 1.2).
While the issue is moot in the present case due to the conclusion of the trial in which the request was made, we reverse the denial of the request in order to establish guidelines for future applications of Rule 22 regarding electronic-media coverage.
Judgment reversed.
