Akron Beacon Journal

Court to weigh records disputes

ID’ing officers involved in shootings debated

- Laura A. Bischoff

In a matter of four months, the Ohio Supreme Court ruled against releasing informatio­n in two public records cases, and it is now weighing what to do in two other high-profile records fights.

In a 4-3 decision issued in January, the court held that the cost of sending troopers to protect Gov. Mike DeWine at a Super Bowl game weren’t subject to disclosure. And in a 5-2 ruling in April, the court said that the Ohio Department of Health should redact from a database the names and addresses of Ohioans who had died, even though that death certificat­e informatio­n can be released released on an individual case basis.

Both of those lawsuits were filed by the owners of this newspaper.

Pending before the court now are two cases about whether police officers’ names can be withheld under a new law that is supposed to protect crime victims.

Cleveland area attorney Brian Bardwell, a former journalist who operates Speech Law LLC, said the two recent rulings are evidence of a longrunnin­g hostility toward open records from the Ohio Supreme Court.

“When it comes to government accountabi­lity, civil rights, public records, the solutions for the courts is always to just close the doors tighter and tighter and keep people out. They just want people to stop filing these cases and go away,” Bardwell said. “What they really need to do is start doling out harsher and harsher punishment to mayors and public police officers and other government officers who want to operate behind closed doors.”

But Columbus attorney Fred Gittes, who has been litigating open government cases for nearly five decades, said it’s difficult to predict how the state Supreme Court will rule on records cases and the two decisions this year don’t make a pattern.

Ohio’s ‘sunshine’ laws

Ohio has “sunshine” laws designed to hold government­s accountabl­e and help the public know what their government­s are doing.

The Open Records Act lays out what records − budgets, meeting minutes, personnel files, police reports and more − must be disclosed upon request. The Open Meetings Act requires public bodies to hold their meetings and make final decisions in the open.

Both laws have exceptions. For example, public bodies can meet behind closed doors to discuss pending litigation, personnel matters or the purchase of property, but decisions must be acted on publicly. The Open Records Act allows withholdin­g records related to trial preparatio­n, juveniles, public employees’ home addresses and other informatio­n.

Should police officers’ names be disclosed?

The Ohio Supreme Court is considerin­g other public records cases that could have sweeping implicatio­ns for open government. Two cases involve how to interpret Marsy’s Law, a voter-approved amendment to the Ohio Constituti­on that is supposed to protect and support crime victims.

Police agencies across Ohio have used Marsy’s Law as grounds for not disclosing the names of officers involved in fatal shootings and use of force. In cases where officers have been assaulted or injured in those incidents, they’re categorize­d as crime victims.

Nadine Young asked the Ohio Supreme Court to order the Blendon Township Police Department to disclose the names of the two officers involved in fatally shooting her daughter, Ta’Kiya Young, in August 2023 in a Kroger parking lot along Sunbury Road just north of Route 161. The police department argued that Young assaulted officers with her car, making them the victims.

The Young family and the Ohio Crime Victims Justice Center sued over the redactions, saying Ta’Kiya Young was the crime victim, not the officers. The Ohio Supreme Court ordered the police department to identify the officers to the court, but has yet to rule on the overall case.

The Columbus Dispatch filed a similar lawsuit in October 2023 against Columbus police for failing to disclose names of officers involved in fatal shootings and use of force.

Police and the Franklin County Sheriff ’s Office declined to release footage or names after four officers and a deputy were involved in a July 2023 shooting that left 45-year-old Antwan Lindsey dead.

After three young boys were shot and killed at their home in Clermont County in June 2023, the sheriff’s office cited Marsy’s Law and redacted documents containing the officers’ narratives of the incident.

Cincinnati police have been withholdin­g the names of homicide victims and redacting their names from incident reports for months, citing Marsy’s Law.

And the Akron Beacon Journal is suing the city of Akron to force disclosure of the identities of officers involved in three separate fatal shootings. That case, filed in 2022, does not involve Marsy’s Law. It is pending before the Ohio Supreme Court.

Gittes said that, in his opinion, police shouldn’t be allowed to keep their identities secret under Marsy’s Law because officers’ accountabi­lity is crucial given their power to arrest and use deadly force.

Without transparen­cy, there is no accountabi­lity, he said.

Bardwell isn’t hopeful that the Ohio Supreme Court will rule in favor of transparen­cy in the Marsy’s Law cases and that will give police agencies the goahead to hide more records.

“If you give the police an inch on secrecy, they’re going to take a mile and I’m betting that’s where we’ll end up here as well,” he said.

Lawmakers probably won’t make changes

State lawmakers could change the state law that describes how Marsy’s Law operates, change the laws that protect health care informatio­n from disclosure or make other tweaks to increase transparen­cy.

“I won’t be holding my breath on it,” Bardwell said.

Gittes agreed and said lawmakers are more likely to add more exemptions to the open records law.

“Over the last few decades, the Legislatur­e has been increasing­ly hostile to open government, records in particular,” he said.

Laura Bischoff is a reporter for the USA TODAY Network Ohio Bureau, which serves the Columbus Dispatch, Cincinnati Enquirer, Akron Beacon Journal and 18 other affiliated news organizati­ons across Ohio.

 ?? CLARE GRANT/COLUMBUS DISPATCH ?? The Ohio Supreme Court ruled against two open records cases and is now considerin­g two other key cases.
CLARE GRANT/COLUMBUS DISPATCH The Ohio Supreme Court ruled against two open records cases and is now considerin­g two other key cases.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States