Los Angeles Times

What’s going on in the courts?

- Losing courthouse­s

Cto the public, as Los Angeles Superior Court Presiding Judge Kevin Brazile did Tuesday, is a prudent move during the current public health emergency, but at the same time it puts at risk some basic rights and raises questions about how well — or how poorly — the nation’s largest trial court has kept up with modern times.

It is of course no surprise that the novel coronaviru­s has hit the court hard. Courthouse­s bring together criminal suspects who have been housed in densely packed jails, law enforcemen­t officers who have close contact with the public on a daily basis, prosecutor­s, defense lawyers, court staff, witnesses, jurors, civil litigants, their lawyers and others — including members of the general public, who have a right to observe their justice system personally.

All those people, though, also deserve protection from the coronaviru­s. One juvenile dependency court judge is now quarantine­d after having been diagnosed with COVID-19 (although not tested). Also quarantine­d are the lawyers and staff who served in that judge’s courtroom. Health experts agree that the best protection is “social distancing,” and in many cases that requires closing courts and postponing hearings.

But especially on the criminal side, some court proceeding­s must go forward in order to protect defendants’ 6th Amendment rights to a speedy and public trial.

The “public” part of that protection is sometimes forgotten. It’s not absolute, and the Constituti­on may require it to apply only to trials, not to status conference­s, say, or bail hearings. And it’s an explicit right of the defendant, not necessaril­y of the public.

But public access to court is an essential part of American liberty and cannot be cast aside lightly. The public has the right and duty to monitor its criminal justice system.

Brazile’s order makes it clear that news media can continue to enter courthouse­s to cover hearings, and that’s appropriat­e, because reporters can act as the public’s eyes and ears at hearings that are otherwise closed at the moment. But it is not sufficient; the public’s right to know what’s happening in the courthouse goes beyond just having reporters there. For one thing, no reporter can cover all courtrooms all the time, and furthermor­e, non-reporters also have legitimate reasons to be present. For example, there are people trying to collect data in each courtroom during bail review hearings to assess the fairness of the bail system.

So how to balance that right of access against the public health emergency?

Modern technology can help. In a few other counties around the state, select proceeding­s have been livestream­ed.

Televising and livestream­ing are hardly innovation­s, but they are used too rarely in court. In California, courts have been slow to adopt technologi­cal solutions that would open hearings to more public scrutiny, sometimes because judges resent “prying” eyes, but also because strapped budgets have prevented modernizat­ion.

The L.A. Superior Court will begin video coverage of some criminal and juvenile proceeding­s as soon as next week, but only a few courtrooms will be covered. Meanwhile, the public is properly protected from coronaviru­s — but not from being aced out of its right to view public business in court.

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