CrR 4.7 and CrRLJ 4.7 - Discovery

Comments for CrR 4.7 and CrRLJ 4.7 must be received no later than April 30, 2024.


 

GR9 COVER SHEET

 

A.    Name of Proponent: The King County Department of Public Defense, the Washington State Office of Public Defense and the Washington Defender Association

 

B.    Spokesperson: Anita Khandelwal, Larry Jefferson, and Christie Hedman

 

C.    Purpose: Allow accused individuals to receive timely redacted discovery by amending CrR 4.7/CrRLJ 4.7

 

D.    A public hearing is not recommended.

 

E.    Expedited Consideration is not requested.

 

 

Introduction

 

The King County Department of Public Defense, the Washington State Office of Public Defense and the Washington Defender Association propose changes to CrR 4.7/CrRLJ 4.7 to allow redacted discovery to be provided to an accused individual according to redaction guidelines that are published by each Court.

Timely access to redacted discovery is essential for those accused of crimes. By granting access to pertinent evidence and information, those accused of crimes can gain a comprehensive understanding of the allegations against them. This access empowers accused people to work with their attorney and engage in meaningful discussions about necessary investigation, negotiations, and trial preparation.

 

While CrR/CrRLJ 4.7 allows a pathway for the accused to receive redacted discovery, this pathway is frequently blocked by prosecutorial threats to significantly limit negotiations if an accused asks for redacted discovery. For example, the King County Prosecuting Attorney’s website states that:

 

Discovery: The KCPAO will make its best effort to provide all discovery for the defense that is available at the time of filing or that becomes available thereafter. If the defendant requests a copy of redacted discovery, the early plea negotiator will discontinue negotiations and will have the case assigned to a trial deputy. We are unable to provide redacted discovery with our limited early plea staff. See https://kingcounty.gov/depts/prosecutor/criminal- overview/early-plea.aspx.

 

If a case is move out of the “Early Plea Unit”, the accused is clearly disadvantaged —


The Early Plea Unit (EPU) stage is where the King County Prosecuting Attorney’s Office (KCPAO) negotiates its cases. This is the “pre-trial track” where the KCPAO will consider reductions, alternative programs (such as Drug Diversion Court and Regional Mental Health Court), mitigation information, equitable considerations, etc. Once a case moves past the “pre-trial track”, a decision by a Deputy Prosecuting Attorney (DPA) to reduce or dismiss charges will generally be limited to the sufficiency of the evidence to prove the charge(s), and such reductions must also be approved by a supervisor. See https://kingcounty.gov/depts/prosecutor/criminal-overview/early-plea.aspx.

 

Without changes to CrR 4.7/CrRLJ 4.7, coercive plea-bargaining practices that condition negotiations or a plea deal on not obtaining redacted discovery for the accused will continue. Such practices can lead people to accept unfair or uninformed plea deals and the Court should act to discourage such practices. See Alkon, C., Hard Bargaining in Plea Bargaining: When

Do Prosecutors Cross the Line?, Nev. L.J., Vol. 17, No. 2, (2017) (“prosecutors should also not be allowed to continue the practice of taking offers off the table if or when the defense files certain motions, such as search and seizure motions”).

Ensuring that the accused can access redacted discovery is particularly important where discovery is voluminous. In those cases, it is extremely time-consuming for a member of the defense team to review each page of discovery with the accused. The impact is particularly severe for public defenders and other attorneys with high caseloads and can create a double standard where some clients are able to pay attorneys with low caseloads to immediately meet with them to review each page of discovery - especially if that person is incarcerated. The accused should have quick access to redacted discovery without legal repercussions – a policy that punishes access to discovery, as allowed under CrR 4.7, undermines fairness in the criminal legal system.

 

In 2018, the Washington Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers proposed amendments to CrR 4.7/CrRLJ 4.7 which were not adopted. This rule change proposes that, instead of amending the court rule to detail the appropriate items for redaction1 (including year of birth, initials for names of minor children, redacting social security information, passport/driver’s license number, the last 4 numbers of financial accounting information, the city/state of home address and phone numbers), that each individual Court be required to develop redaction protocols through a local rule2 and then allow defense to redact discovery consistent with these protocols.

 

Conclusion:

The current practices around redacted discovery allow the accused to be punished for wanting to fully understand the allegations against them. The Court should act to allow accused individuals to receive discovery consistent with Court published redaction protocols; doing so will advance fairness and due process within the legal system.

 


 

1  The change in these proposed amendments addresses some of the previous objections to the rule change. For example, regarding the previous rule change attempt, Dan Satterberg had noted that the ‘proposed list of redactions is profoundly inadequate and noted a number of items that should be redacted”. In fact, the King County Prosecuting Attorney’s Office, has a number of disseminated “redaction guidelines”. See https://www.courts.wa.gov/court_Rules/proposed/2018Jul/Proposed%20Changes%20to%20CrR%204.7%20-

%20Discovery/Dan%20Satterberg%20-%20CrR%203.7%20et%20al.pdf

2  At present, some prosecutor’s offices, like KCPAO, have already disseminated “redaction guidelines” regarding replacing names with initials, redacting victim address/contact information, dates of birth, social security, financial, identification card numbers, vehicle identification umbers, firearm serial numbers and descriptions of sexual contact. In addition, a number of items may not be provided to defendants (absent a court order), most electronic discovery, autopsy reports, medical, mental health, counseling, CPS records, photographs/video recordings with images of  aperson or animal. The guidelines also provide that – “In cases where there are extensive APS and/or financial records, defense counsel should contact the assigned DPA to discuss necessary redactions prior to submitting proposed redactions for review Additional redaction may be required by the individual Deputy Prosecuting Attorney as relevant to any specific case.”


 

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