Bar News - March 3, 2006
Task Force Cites Need to Balance Open Records and Individual Privacy
The following is a Judicial Branch news release:
Recognizing that the “transition from a paper age to the electronic age presents new challenges,” the Supreme Court Task Force on Public Access to Court Records issued a preliminary report on Feb. 21 recommending guidelines and rules for the court system to follow as technology greatly increases the potential for access to information. The full report is available at www.courts.state.nh.us/press/publicaccess.pdf.
The Task Force, whose members included judges, lawmakers, journalists and members of the public, said that, in making its recommendations, it worked to balance New Hampshire’s longstanding commitment to a policy of open government records with the recognition that people who come into the court system should not have their privacy “unduly” compromised.
“These are complex questions and our report recognizes that there are strong opinions on both sides,” said Superior Court Associate Justice Larry M. Smukler, who chaired the Task Force. “This report is an important start but there is much more work to do.” The New Hampshire court system in January began to roll out a new electronic case management system and projects that state court records will be available on the Internet in two to three years.
In a letter to the Supreme Court, Smukler, who chairs the Court Technology Committee, cited the New Hampshire court system’s well-established commitment to public access to judicial proceedings and the principle that “transparency serves judicial accountability.” But, Smukler wrote, “At the same time, the court has recognized that technological advances offer new promises and new dangers.”
The potential for ready access to court records, through the Internet, at any time, from any location, has prompted courts across the country to establish rules and policies on access to court records in the electronic age. The New Hampshire Supreme Court convened its Task Force in June 2004 to generate public discussion and analysis of the differing views on access to court records. “Only by inviting comment from people with different perspectives will we be sure the Court has the benefit of a complete and public discussion of these important issues,” Chief Justice John T. Broderick Jr. said at the time.
The Task Force recommendations pertain primarily to electronic case docketing information, which includes names of litigants, facts on the status of a case, such as judgments and orders, and court calendars. The Task Force deferred making comprehensive recommendations on public access to pleadings, such as copies of lawsuits filed and responses, because the court system is some time away from either accepting electronic filings or converting paper filings to electronic images.
The Supreme Court will now review the report. Any additions or revisions to the court’s rules on public access to court records, including the ones recommended in the Task Force report, would have to be approved first by the Advisory Committee on Court Rules, which would hold public hearings on any proposed changes, and accept written comments. The rules committee would then make its recommendations to the Supreme Court.
Summary of recommendations:
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Guidelines should allow for maximum access to court records while also protecting public safety and minimizing any risk to individuals from disclosure of information.
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Guidelines should promote government accountability but not unduly burden the work of the judiciary
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Types of court records available to the public through the Internet would include court calendars and dockets, litigant and party indexes of cases filed with the courts; judgments, orders and decrees in cases and liens on real property.
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Not all information that is now available in courthouses should be available on the Internet. For example, certain pleadings containing identifying information, such as witnesses’ names and addresses, should only be available at the courthouse.
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There should be a 10-day delay between the date a document is filed in the court and posting on the Internet to allow concerned parties to request appropriate limitations before Internet publication.
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All electronic court records, statewide, should be accessible from any court location.
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Some information, such as social security numbers, should be confidential, as it is now.
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The court should maintain a “filtered database” of court records on the Internet that does not contain private information about individuals, such as name or social security number, which would enable any member of the public to download certain information in bulk.
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The court should adopt a “stringent process” through which researchers and other members of the public may request that the court grant them access to data downloaded in bulk that contains private information about individuals.
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The court has an obligation to educate the public about access to electronic court records. Judges and court personnel should also be educated and trained on the rules and policies governing public access to these records.
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