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On July 11, 2017, the NJ Supreme Court issued a unanimous decision in North Jersey Media Group, Inc., v. Township of Lyndhurst, et al. This case attempts to provide clarification to the scope of the ‘criminal investigatory record’ and ‘records of investigations in progress’ exemptions to the Open Public Records Act (OPRA). In addition to providing clarification on these OPRA exemptions, this case also touched upon the common law right of access.
In its opinion, the Court ruled against Lyndhurst. Finding that, Lyndhurst must disclose unredacted Use of Force Reports (UFR) under OPRA and must disclose the footage of the deadly police shooting captured by the police cruiser’s dash camera under the common law even though the Court found that the dash camera footage did in fact fall under the investigatory record exemption in OPRA and would be subject to nondisclosure
The case involved two newspapers’ request for records pertaining to a deadly police involved shooting. Citing authority under OPRA and the common law right to access, North Jersey Media Group (NJMG), brought suit against Lyndhurst after the town refused to provide footage captured by a police cruiser’s dash camera and the unredacted Use of Force Reports (UFR), showing the names of the officers involved in the shooting. Lyndhurst maintained that both the disclosure of the fully unredacted UFRs and the dash cam footage were exempt under OPRA as these records were being used in an ongoing criminal investigation and record of an investigation in progress. Additionally, Lyndhurst argued that these records were also exempt from disclosure under the common law right to access as the State’s interest in preventing disclosure outweighed the public’s interest in the records.
In a response to this ruling, Glenn A. Grant, Acting Administrative Director of the Courts issued a Directive to all assignment judges. The Directive set forth best practices for handling common law right of access request for dash camera footage in fatal police shootings. The Directive instructed assignment judges to treat these types of requests as “expeditiously as the court would address a sensitive OPRA filing.”
A short explanation of the Court’s reasoning for its decision is provided below.
Use of Force Reports (UFR)
In its ruling the Court determined that UFRs must be disclosed under the authority of OPRA. The Court reasoned that the Attorney General’s Use of Force Policy, which requires all police forces in the state create UFRs, is in effect a government record as it is required by law to be made. The Court therefore found that Lyndhurst, or any other government entity for that matter, could not rely on the ‘criminal investigatory record’ exception to withhold the disclosure of UFRs because UFRs were a record “required by law to be made.”
Likewise, the Court ruled that Lyndhurst could not avail itself of the ‘ongoing investigation’ exception to OPRA. The court reasoned that while typically records are exempt from disclosure if they would be inimical to the public interest, in this case the UFRs contained relatively limited information. Furthermore, the Court found that the safety concerns proffered by Lyndhurst as its reasoning for redacting the officer’s names were merely general and under the circumstances do not raise to the level needed to allow for nondisclosure.
While the Court ruled that the names of the officers must be disclosed, it did sympathize with the argument made for withholding those names. The Court, however, reasoned that it is limited only to interpreting the current law which requires disclosure. The Court explained that the law allowing for nondisclosure would need to come from the legislature.
Dash Camera Footage
The Court ruled that dash camera footage must be released under the common law right to access, not OPRA. The Court determined that the public has a strong interest in a police shooting that involved a citizen and that the strong public interest outweighed the police’s interest in preventing disclosure. The Court reasoned that in the case of dash camera footage of deadly police shootings, when the footage does not place potential witnesses and informants at risk nor undermine the integrity of the investigation that the public interest in disclosure outweighs the police interest in withholding.
We believe it is unclear whether or not the same strong public interest which tilted the scales to disclosure would apply to dash camera footage in cases that do not involve deadly police shootings. This is perhaps something that will need to be determined on a case-by-case basis. It is also yet to be seen how this ruling will affect request for other police camera footage, such as body cameras and in different circumstances (i.e. road stop, routine patrol).
Although moot because disclosure to the footage was allowed under the common law, the Court also took the opportunity to examine whether dash camera footage is exempt from disclosure under the criminal investigatory record exemption to OPRA. Siding with Lyndhurst, the Court found that the dash camera footage did in fact fall under the investigatory record exemption and would be subject to nondisclosure. The Court reasoned that, while dash camera footage was a record created at the earliest stages of a criminal investigation, it was a record nonetheless and therefore entitled to the OPRA exemption.
The Court taking the opportunity to address the interplay of OPRA and dash camera footage provides a silver lining to this otherwise disappointing ruling. That silver lining being that because the access to dash camera footage is exempt from disclosure under OPRA and only available under the common law right to access, the fee shifting of the costs of suit does not apply. That is because generally, only under OPRA can a requester recover for the costs incurred when successful in a suit to compel disclosure. No such fee shifting is applicable in suits seeking disclosure under the common law.
We suggest that you review this ruling with your municipal attorney, police chief and records custodians to address the changing scope of the OPRA exemption and the common law right to access.
Contact: Frank Marshall, Esq., League Staff Attorney, fmarshall@njslom.org, 609-695-3481 x. 137.