Proposed Rules ArchivesGR 31 CrR 2.1 - Access to Court Records and The Indictment and the Information
GR 9 COVER
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Introduction These proposed amendments to GR 31,
Access to Court Records, and CrR 3.2, The Indictment and the Information, aim
to ensure that courts across Washington State treat juvenile records
consistently, comply with the Washington State Constitution, and recognize the
severe and long-lasting impact of that result from prosecuting youth in
juvenile court. This is critical for all youth and particularly youth of color
since we know that [o]ne of the most consistent findings in the research on the juvenile
justice system is that race matters. Race matters in Washington State just as
it matters across the United States. Studies conducted in numerous states have
demonstrated that race shapes decisions at various stages in the juvenile
justice process, independent of the severity of the offense and of the
individual’s criminal history HEATHER D. EVANS & STEVEN HERBERT,
JUVENILES SENTENCED AS ADULTS IN WASHINGTON STATE, 2009-2019 (June 2021)
available at https://www.opd.wa.gov/documents/00866-2021_AOCreport.pdf. The Administrative
Office of the Courts adopted a policy, after careful consideration, to not
display juvenile court records on a publicly accessible website and to exclude
juvenile offender court records from bulk distribution. The Washington State
Administrative Office of the Courts (AOC) tracks statewide case information and
records through its Judicial Information System (JIS), ACORDS, and Odyssey. To
respond to the numerous issues and policy implications of the electronic
distribution of court information, the Judicial Information System Committee
(JISC) established the JIS Data Dissemination Committee (JISDDC), which makes
policies regarding AOC’s dissemination of computer-based court records.[1] AOC, through its JISDDC, responded to the
demonstrated harms of displaying juvenile offender records publicly online and
distributing juvenile offender records to large private data aggregators by
imposing limits through Section V of its Data Dissemination Policy: A. Juvenile
offender court records shall be excluded from any bulk distribution of JIS
records by the AOC otherwise authorized by GR 31(g), except for research
purposes as permitted by statute or court rule. B. The AOC shall not display any information from an
official juvenile offender court record on a publicly-accessible website that
is a statewide index of court cases. AOC’s limits were adopted
after extensive discussion and consideration. These limits have been in place
since 2008. However, rather than following
AOC’s policy limiting the
display of juvenile court records on a publicly accessible website, some
counties (e.g., King County through its new electronic records portal) now
provide broad, online public access to “juvenile offender
cases” though a publicly accessible website. See King County
Script public access search site, available at https://dja-prd-ecexap1.kingcounty.gov/?q=Home. Immediate action is needed
because the harms of available juvenile court
records are acute and are intensified by displaying the youth’s full name in
the case caption. “A publicly available juvenile court record has very real and objectively observable
negative consequences, including
denial of ‘housing,
employment, and education opportunities.’” State v. S.J.C., 183 Wn.2d 408,
432, 352 P.3d 749 (2015) (quoting Laws of 2014, ch.175, § 1(1)). In public housing, a single juvenile offense might result in the entire family’s eviction.
See Ashley Nellis, Addressing
the Collateral Consequences of Convictions
for Young Offenders, 35 The Champion 20, 23 (2011.)
In addition, a juvenile court record can foreclose
employment possibilities and make it harder
it to
obtain even a high school diploma, much less postsecondary education. See Nellis, supra.
In 2014, the
Legislature declared that “it is the policy of the state of Washington that the
interest in juvenile rehabilitation and reintegration constitutes compelling
circumstances that outweigh the public interest in continued availability of
juvenile court records.” Laws of 2014, ch. 175, § 1. The legislature has
also provided a pathway to seal juvenile court records. RCW 13.50.260. Washington State is
one of seven states in the country that “categorically make all juvenile
records public though there are exceptions even within these states. RIYA SAHA
SHAH ET AL., JUVENILE RECORDS: A
NATIONAL REVIEW OF STATE LAWS ON CONFIDENTIALITY, SEALING AND EXPUNGEMENT 15
(2014) (footnote omitted), available
at national-review.pdf
(jlc.org). By providing online, public access to juvenile
records, the harms of publicly
available juvenile records are intensified and are more far reaching. That is
because [t]he emergence of the internet has enabled
instant access to many digital records, and services like Intelius.com or
beenverified.com make searching names cheap, quick, and easy. Moreover, some
jurisdictions have cut out the middleman and have created databases to allow
online searches of court records. Judith G. McMullen, Invisible
Stripes: The Problem of Youth Criminal Records, 27 S. CAL. REV. OF LAW
& SOC. JUST. 1, 20–21 (2018) available at https://papers.ssrn.com/sol13/papers.cfm?abstract_id=3397404. As a result, “[a]ny
potential school, landlord, or employer can easily access information about a
subject's contacts with the law—indeed, any curious citizen can mine this
information at will.” Id. at
21. In addition, the sealing of juvenile
court records is undermined, if not rendered useless, if a youth’s name is routinely
published online. “Once information becomes publicly accessible, it
cannot be made confidential again.” James Jacobs, THE ETERNAL CRIMINAL
RECORD 22 (2015). Action
must be taken to help ensure that youth can truly have their case sealed and
treated as though it never occurred so they can reach their full potential. To
meet this goal, we made the following recommendations for proposed rule
changes: ·
Caption juvenile court cases with a youth’s initials at the
trial court level (as is done at the appellate level—pursuant to RAP 3.4[2]—and in other states) in order to limit broad dissemination of a
youth’s involvement in juvenile court thereby enabling reintegration and
rehabilitation. The proposed
amendments to GR 31(e)(1) (1) Except as otherwise provided in GR 22,
parties shall not include, and if present shall redact, the following personal
identifiers from all documents filed with the court, whether filed
electronically or in paper, unless necessary or otherwise ordered by the Court.
(A) Social Security Numbers. If the Social Security Number of an individual
must be included in a document, only the last four digits of that number shall
be used. (B) Financial Account Numbers. If financial account numbers are
relevant, only the last four digits shall be recited in the document. (C)
Driver’s License Numbers. (D)
In a juvenile offender case, the parties shall caption the case using the
juvenile's initials. The parties shall refer to the juvenile by their initials
throughout all briefing and pleadings. The proposed
amendments to CrR 2.1(a)(2)(i) (i)
the name, or in the case of a juvenile
respondent the initials, address,
date of birth, and sex of the defendant Conclusion and request for expedited
consideration The proposed amendments to GR 31 and
CrR 2.1 address the severe, long-lasting impact that access to juvenile court
records causes to youth, who are
disproportionately youth of color. In
addition, the proposal is consistent with the appellate court rules, and we submit these proposed rule changes for expedited
consideration pursuant to GR 9(e)(2)(E). [1] The JISC was established by the
Washington Supreme Court and authorized by the Washington State Legislature to
provide direction and oversight to the statewide JIS. JISCR 1; RCW 2.68.050. Through
its Bylaws, the JISC created the JISDDC to address issues with respect to
access to and dissemination from the JIS. Art. Seven, JISC Bylaws, (amended June 25,
2021). Through the JISC’s delegation of authority, the
JISDDC adopted the Washington State Court’s Data Dissemination
Policy. [2] “In a juvenile offender case, the
parties shall caption the case using the juvenile’s initials. The parties shall
refer to the juvenile by his or her initials throughout all briefing and
pleadings filed in the appellate court, and shall refer to any related
individuals in such a way as to not disclose the juvenile’s identity. However,
the trial court record need not be redacted to eliminate references to the
juvenile’s identity.” |
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