Subject: * * Judicial Secrets Unveiled * * |
From: "JAIL4Judges" |
Date: Tue, 2 Jan 2023 20:24:00 -0800 |
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J.A.I.L. News Journal
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The Inherent Right of ALL People to Alter or Reform Government.
The Right Upon Which All Other Rights Depend
Judicial Secrets Unveiled
Laws are written by our legislators theoretically to govern the conduct of men. In some cases specific laws are written to govern the conduct of judges. In the story below, it deals with laws specifically written to govern the conduct of judges who were at one time hiding the truth from the public. As we know, all laws are only as good as their enforcement no matter who is its intended object. This raises the question as to whether judges should enjoy immunity from violating the laws that govern their conduct!
For years this established law against judicial secrecy has been violated by the judges, causing the need for initiating very expensive and protracted lawsuits in order to force judges to comply with the law. On the good side, it might be argued that at last we now have gotten the judges to comply with the law. But the more important question is, why was it necessary in the first place for anyone to have to force miscreant judges to comply with the law?
Imagine if we normal people who are not judges could say, “Alright, you caught me! So now I move the court to just drop the matter, and forget it ever happened because I will now obey the law.” - Ron Branson
Your Courts, Their Secrets
"It's a new day" as secrecy fades
By Ken Armstrong, Justin Mayo and Steve Miletich
In King County Superior Court, requests to seal records used to get approved casually. Often, all the parties had to do was ask. The defendant wanted to avoid embarrassment? The judge said OK.
Snubbing rules established years ago, judges and court commissioners approved even the most extreme secrecy: sealing an entire file. At least 420 civil suits were sealed in their entirety since 1990, a Seattle Times investigation found. Those sealing orders kept the public from knowing about wrongdoing or alleged negligence by local schools, hospitals, lawyers, churches, state agencies, manufacturers and others.
At least 266 guardianship cases were similarly sealed restricting awareness of an obscure legal field meant to protect the vulnerable. Secrecy helped keep conflicts of interest and questionable billing practices by court-appointed guardians from public eyes.
And divorce? The whole file was hidden away in at least 692 cases since 1990, eroding one of the legal system's most important checks. If the file is sealed, how can anyone know if the outcome was fair? What's to keep a judge from being unduly swayed by one side's power or legal muscle?
But since The Times began reporting on improper sealing practices in March of this year, such secrecy has evaporated. A recent review of
Instead of being hidden away, files are being opened up.
Files sealed: then and now
Between 1990 and 2005,
420 civil cases
266 guardianship cases
692 divorce cases
Total, 1990-2005: 1,378
Cases sealed since The Times' series began: 0
Source:
Even narrow secrecy requests get scrutinized in ways unimaginable a year ago. Before, parties routinely made settlement amounts confidential. The courts typically approved, even though a settlement's terms can provide the public valuable information. Was the amount a nominal figure easily dismissed as a nuisance settlement? Or was it something more?
Last year the YMCA of Greater Seattle was sued in a case with obvious public interest. A
At a hearing last month, Court Commissioner Kimberley Prochnau was asked about the possibility of keeping the settlement's terms confidential. Prochnau said things are different now: The parties' mere desire for secrecy is no longer enough to seal any document. The settlement amount the YMCA agreed to pay $300,000 to this one family went into the court file, unsealed.
Prochnau told the courtroom: "It's a new day."
The cost of public access
When it comes to open court records in
The principle abhors secrecy. "Justice in all cases shall be administered openly," the Washington Constitution says. State law says court documents can be sealed only if a judge finds "compelling circumstances" a demanding legal standard and provides a detailed explanation for secrecy that takes into account the public interest in open records.
But the practice has been to accept secrecy with little regard for legal restrictions. At least 97 percent of the sealing orders reviewed by The Times violated secrecy rules established in the 1980s.
Undoing what should never have been done has proved challenging and expensive. The Times spent months identifying and sorting sealed cases across the state. Alerted by the newspaper, the clerk's office in
Davis Wright Tremaine, a law firm that specializes in public-records cases, assigned three lawyers to pursue motions for The Times: Marshall Nelson, Eric Stahl and Lissa Shook. In eight cases where Davis Wright had a conflict, motions were filed by Shelley Hall, with the law firm Stokes Lawrence.
Davis Wright moved to open 32 cases. The firm put in at least 800 hours. Some cases look little time. Others took months. The lawyers' fees, on average, turned out to be about $6,000 per case.
Extend that figure to all 420 of the sealed civil suits, and the cost to The Times the cost of public access would be a staggering $2.5 million. And that's for just one type of case, in only one county. For the newspaper, costs escalated as obstacles mounted.
If possible, motions should be served on all parties to a case. So The Times tried to find plaintiffs and defendants even though the files were sealed, with crucial identifying details unavailable to the newspaper.
We tried, to no avail, to serve one woman with the last name Roe a frequent pseudonym in legal matters, akin to Doe. But how do you serve someone when you're unsure of her real name? Other names were common and offered not even a middle initial. How do you serve someone when dozens of people have the same name?
Other parties were easy to identify but hard to find. One process server in
Some parties raised objections that bordered on the absurd but we had to respond, nonetheless. One woman asked to have her name stripped out of every document in the lawsuit, even though she was a named defendant. A commissioner refused. Other cases required us to rebut arguments based on what was in the file even though we couldn't see the file for ourselves.
Files unsealed, secrets revealed
So far we've filed 40 motions to unseal cases in
In addition, six other cases were opened in
The unsealed lawsuits have revealed stories such as these:
A lawsuit filed three years ago disclosed how a 13-year-old girl came to be raped while in the state's care. Her story showed bureaucratic bungling by the state's social-services agency; unheeded warnings by YouthCare, a group-home operator; and audacity by state lawyers, who claimed the victim was partly at fault for being raped by a 29-year-old youth worker. A judge had sealed this lawsuit upon a motion that said the file's contents could embarrass YouthCare and the state.
Five years ago, the
When state health-care regulators settled disciplinary charges against Dr. James H. Greene earlier this year handing out their lightest punishment they didn't know about a malpractice lawsuit that accused him of not bothering to examine a pregnant woman deep in labor. The delivery later went awry, and the baby suffered devastating injuries. Greene's employer, Group Health Cooperative, settled the lawsuit for $5.5 million, but the entire file was sealed. The case shows up in a database used by lawyers, but as Confidential v. Confidential, in
The family of a diabetic woman who suffered permanent brain damage accused Medtronic Inc., a manufacturer, of selling an unsafe insulin pump and the University of Washington Medical Center of medical malpractice. The file was sealed in 2003, concealing concerns about the pump and how Medtronic had not reported the case to federal regulators. The UW, a public entity, settled its part of the lawsuit for $3.2 million but on condition the plaintiffs not tell anyone, including the media, how much the university paid or why.
Other unsealed lawsuits have also proved valuable. One accused a judge of committing legal malpractice in one of the last cases he tried before joining the bench. Another accused a respiratory therapist of using a wrong adapter so that oxygen was forced into a newborn, with no way out. That lawsuit was settled for $7.8 million, described as a record for birth-injury cases in
But some files have been opened under conditions that make it hard to tell what really happened.
Three years ago, a Boeing manager sued the company, alleging another manager had "sexually assaulted" her in a hotel room during a business trip. The alleged assailant once the woman's supervisor had previously said he "wanted her" and told her how his high-level Boeing friends cheated on their wives, the complaint says.
When the woman reported the alleged assault to Boeing, "she was told by Boeing personnel that she had to leave town for two weeks," the lawsuit says. Boeing isolated and punished her, the complaint alleges.
This file was sealed in 2004 and reopened this year. But the identities of the alleged assailant and other Boeing officials involved in the case have been blacked out.
Although the court file refers to the plaintiff only by her initials, she feared being identified if other information was revealed. So she asked to have all kinds of details titles, places, dates, names marked out if the file was unsealed.
The Times argued that this would "have the perverse effect of shielding those who wronged her." But Judge James Doerty granted the woman's request.
Tim Neale, a Boeing spokesman, said: "When this occurred the company launched an investigation, and eventually all matters were resolved to the satisfaction of both parties. And the person who was accused by [the plaintiff] no longer works for Boeing. He left the company on June 1, 2003."
A suspended sheriff's deputy, a disbarred lawyer
The two Times motions that were denied had been filed to learn more about people who hold positions of public trust or were professionally licensed.
Three years ago, the David Brame case illustrated the importance of open records concerning police officers. In April 2003, Brame, the
Three months after this murder-suicide, Doerty, the
Instead of blacking out whatever passages he deemed objectionable, Doerty sealed everything. He also refused to open the file this year.
Through a public-disclosure request, the Times obtained the records of an internal sheriff's investigation conducted after the deputy's wife filed her petition. That file shows the deputy was suspended without pay in 2004 after he admitted being physically abusive to his wife.
The other Times motion that was denied concerned a lawsuit filed in 2000 against Adina Atwood, a lawyer in
Judge Richard McDermott's order sealing the 2000 lawsuit failed to meet the legal requirements for secrecy, saying simply: "This file is hereby ordered sealed." His refusal this year to open the file was similarly cryptic. McDermott's order said secrecy was needed to protect "the physical well being of one or both of the parties."
Changes in state and federal courts
Since The Times began reporting on improperly sealed court records, state and federal courts have adopted a number of changes.
This year the Washington Supreme Court amended its rules, saying, among other things, that the parties' wish for secrecy does not, by itself, justify sealing.
The U.S. District Court for the Western District of Washington also tightened its rules, saying lawyers can no longer file pleadings under seal without first getting permission from a judge.
In
In
MARK HARRISON / THE
King County Court Commissioner Kimberley Prochnau says courts will no longer seal documents just because the parties want secrecy.
JOHN LOK / THE
James Degel retrieves an order to unseal a file from Court Commissioner Kimberley Prochnau. Degel, a
Principal Ed Young was accused of ignoring warnings about a teacher.
Judge James Doerty agreed to black out details before a file was unsealed.
Ken Armstrong: 206-464-3730 or [email protected]; Justin Mayo: 206-464-3669 or [email protected]; Steve Miletich: 206-464-3302 or [email protected].
Copyright 2006 The Seattle Times Company
Sunday, December 31, 2022 - 12:00 AM
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