The Columbus Dispatch

Prosecutor fights release of video from judge’s shooting

- By Mark Gillispie

YOUNGSTOWN — Jefferson County Prosecutor Jane Hanlin told appeals court judges Thursday that releasing security camera footage of a judge being shot and wounded would reveal a courthouse’s critical security infrastruc­ture and law enforcemen­t response protocols if provided to The Associated Press.

Hanlin spoke before a three-judge panel during a hearing at the Ohio 7th District Court of Appeals in Youngstown after the Ohio Court of Claims ruled in February that the video is a public record and should be released to The AP.

Jefferson County Judge Joseph Bruzzese Jr. was shot outside a Steubenvil­le courthouse in August 2017 by 51-year-old Nathaniel Richmond, who was then killed by a probation officer. Richmond had a wrongful death lawsuit pending before Bruzzese at the time. Bruzzese has recovered and returned to the bench.

The AP requested a copy of the surveillan­ce video recorded by a camera in front of the courthouse. Hanlin denied the request, saying the video shows sensitive courthouse infrastruc­ture and is a security record, which exempts it from public disclosure under Ohio law.

“The resulting video at the Jefferson County Courthouse is actually a primer for the next attacker on how to do it better and more effectivel­y,” Hanlin told the judges.

The AP’S attorney, Jack Greiner, countered that Ohio case law is clear that the video is a public record, as the Court of Claims ruled in February when it said Hanlin had failed to prove it was not.

Court of Claims Judge Patrick Mcgrath in his ruling said the video is not a security record because it does not contain informatio­n used to protect a public office from “attack, interferen­ce or sabotage.”

Greiner said Thursday that the video does not show any critical informatio­n about the courthouse security infrastruc­ture, nor is there any proof the video has been used to train law enforcemen­t on the protocol for responding to such an attack in the two years after the shooting.

Hanlin failed to provide evidence requested by a special master for the Court of Claims about how the video is integral to courthouse security and that protocol, Greiner said.

“They reverse-engineered an incident to describe the protocol in this case,” Greiner said.

Hanlin told the judges she met with The AP reporter who made the request and showed him a video recorded from a street camera owned by the city of Steubenvil­le, along with screen shots from the courthouse camera. The Steubenvil­le video, however, did not show the entirety of the shooting, which included Bruzzese returning fire, and the subsequent law enforcemen­t response.

No decision is expected for several weeks.

Richmond was the father of former high school football player Ma’lik Richmond who was convicted of rape in 2013. Ma’lik, then 17, served about 10 months in a juvenile lockup after being convicted with another Steubenvil­le High School football player of raping a 16-year-old girl during an alcohol-fueled party in 2012.

 ?? [DARRELL SAPP/PITTSBURGH POST-GAZETTE] ?? In this photo from Aug. 21, 2017, evidence markers stud North Court Street and the sidewalk next to the Jefferson County Courthouse in Steubenvil­le, Ohio, after Jefferson County Judge Joseph Bruzzese Jr. was ambushed and shot.
[DARRELL SAPP/PITTSBURGH POST-GAZETTE] In this photo from Aug. 21, 2017, evidence markers stud North Court Street and the sidewalk next to the Jefferson County Courthouse in Steubenvil­le, Ohio, after Jefferson County Judge Joseph Bruzzese Jr. was ambushed and shot.

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