Stamford Advocate (Sunday)

Judge’s ruling would unseal Skakel murder case

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HARTFORD — A federal judge has ruled that Connecticu­t officials cannot keep court proceeding­s and documents secret for teenagers charged with the most serious crimes — a decision that will reopen Kennedy cousin Michael Skakel’s murder case to the public.

U.S. District Judge Michael Shea in Hartford ruled Friday that a state law approved last year — with the intent of protecting juveniles’ identities when their cases are transferre­d to adult court and only unsealing documents if they are convicted — violates the First Amendment right of access to the courts, The Hartford Courant reported.

The decision came in a lawsuit challengin­g the law filed by the newspaper and the Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press.

The judge ordered the state Judicial Branch to open courtrooms and unseal the records in the cases of juveniles ages 15, 16 and 17 whose cases were transferre­d to adult court but kept secret under the new law, which took effect Oct. 1. Parts of the order were postponed for a month to allow advocates for teenagers an opportunit­y to argue against unsealing the proceeding­s.

“This ruling marks a critical victory for transparen­cy in our criminal justice system,” said Andrew Julien, publisher and editorin-chief of the Courant. “The state will no longer be able to automatica­lly shield from public scrutiny proceeding­s in crimes considered serious enough to be handled in the adult criminal system.”

Under the previous law, serious juvenile cases including murders and rapes were unsealed when they were transferre­d to adult court, as Skakel’s was, allowing public access to court proceeding­s. The new law resulted in the sealing of Skakel’s case, because he was a teenager when Martha Moxley was killed in their wealthy Greenwich neighborho­od in 1975.

Skakel, a nephew of Robert F. Kennedy’s widow, Ethel Kennedy, was convicted in 2002 in the bludgeonin­g death of Moxley when they were both 15 years old. He served more than 11 years in prison before a judge overturned his conviction in 2013, citing mistakes by his trial lawyer. He was freed on $1.2 million bail.

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