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- Title
AN OPEN COURTS CHECKLIST: CLARIFYING WASHINGTON'S PUBLIC TRIAL AND PUBLIC ACCESS JURISPRUDENCE.
- Authors
Lutzenhiser, Jeanine Blackett
- Abstract
Fundamental to the American system of justice is the right to a public trial and a general presumption of openness in judicial proceedings. These values are reflected in the First and Sixth Amendments of the United States Constitution and in many state constitutions. Washington is one of a number of states whose constitution (unlike the U.S. Constitution) also explicitly guarantees the open administration of justice. Constitutional dilemmas arise when a party requests the closure of a courtroom or the sealing of documents. These requests force courts to harmonize values of open justice with other compelling interests. U.S. Supreme Court decisions such as Richmond Newspapers, Inc. v. Virginia and Waller v. Georgia have provided guidance to states developing their own public trial jurisprudence. The Washington State Supreme Court used U.S. Supreme Court decisions to develop its own rive-factor test for determining the constitutionality of closed proceedings in the criminal context in State v. Bone-Club. Since Bone-Club, however, many trial courts have failed to apply the factors articulated by the Court. This has resulted in many costly, high-profile reversals of convictions because of public trial violations. What could make the Bone-Club factors clearer and more practical for trial courts? This Comment argues that the Bone-Club test should become an "open courts checklist" that begins with a threshold question: Is the proposed action in fact a closure? If the answer is no, the rights to public access and public trial are not implicated. If the answer is yes, there remain six questions a trial court must ask on the record to evaluate the constitutionality of a proposed closure. Checklists have been employed in the fields of aviation and medicine for decades to ensure safety and procedural integrity. In a judicial context, an open courts checklist can provide clear, workable standards that will assist trial courts and leave a clear record for review. The goal is both improved judicial economy and the safeguarding of these essential constitutional rights and values.
- Subjects
WASHINGTON (State); UNITED States; TRIALS (Law); JUSTICE administration; UNITED States. Constitution. 1st Amendment; FAIR trial; CONSTITUTIONAL law; RICHMOND Newspapers Inc. v. Virginia (Supreme Court case)
- Publication
Washington Law Review, 2012, Vol 87, Issue 4, p1203
- ISSN
0043-0617
- Publication type
Article