Question calls for an opinion. Mine is, NO, they should not. It disrupts the court process and the sanctity and solemnity of the judicial process, and can be used as a tool to intimidate witnesses and jurors.
Judge Judy has them.
Only with the permission of the court. Tape recorders and cameras (still, motion, and cellphone) are not allowed in court.
Cameras are prohibited in the courtroom, but may be used elsewhere in the building. The Supreme Court police require visitors to place certain personal belongings, such as cameras and cell phones, into secure lockers before hearing oral arguments.
Cameras were allowed in courtrooms starting in the year 1946. They are still restricted for some court cases because the judge makes the final determination.
The US District Court for the District of New Mexico is in the Tenth Circuit. Appeals should be filed electronically with the US Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit in Denver, Colorado.
Federal trial courts are the United States District Courts.
No federal courts permit cameras in court rooms,
The person who administers justice in a district court is the district court judge
district court
New Jersey has a single federal district court: the US District Court for the District of New Jersey.
"District court" is capitalized when it is used in the name of a specific court. "The Alberman case was decided by the United States District Court for the Southern District of Ohio." or "Judge Samuels was appointed to the Dayton District Court in 2005" If the term does not refer to a specific district court, it would not be capitalized. "A civil action is commenced by filing a complaint in the district court."
The lowest general level in the Federal System is the Federal District Court, which sits in a defined federal district. An example would be the "Federal district Court for the Western District of Oklahoma" This district court answers to the Circuit Court ( e.g. 10th Circuit etc.) and then to the US Supreme Court by Certiori