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Judges OK New Rules On Privacy, Court Records Online.

Author/s: Brian Krebs

The policy-making body for the federal courts today announced that it has unanimously approved new rules dictating the level of public access to court documents online and the level of privacy that federal judges and court employees can expect while using e-mail or the Internet at work.

The 27-member Judicial Conference announced the approval of both policies today after collecting the votes via mail. U.S. Supreme Court Chief Justice William Rehnquist requested the mail-in vote after last Tuesday's biannual meeting was cut short by terrorist attacks.

The Judicial Conference approved a plan calling on each federal court to adopt at least a baseline "model use" policy that prohibits the downloading of music, pornography or "any personal use that could cause congestion, delay or disruption of service to any government system or equipment."

The plan also requires federal courts to block access to certain Internet protocols used by file-sharing and Web gaming sites.

The panel backed away from a controversial section of the proposal that would have required all federal court employee workstations to be equipped with a notice telling employees that they have "no reasonable expectation of privacy" while using federal court Internet systems.

That element was pulled after several judges complained it could violate the Constitution and be interpreted to expressly require the all federal courts to monitor the Internet and Web use of their judges and employees.

Instead, the Judicial Conference voted to leave the ultimate means of policing and enforcing those policies up to the individual courts.

"We may never reach the point where the committee tries to define what privacy rights are," said U.S. District Court Judge Edwin Nelson, chair of the Judicial Conference's Automation and Technology Committee, which crafted the proposal.

"What we would like to do is devolve that responsibility back to local courts so that judges on the scene can make decisions which are appropriate to their own employees," he said. "We're not congressmen, but we're still allowed to punt."

The panel also approved a plan to continue offering Web-based access to civil and bankruptcy filings, provided that certain personal identifiers such as Social Security numbers, birth dates and account numbers are redacted from the records. The Judicial Conference opted to remove such identifiers out of concern "for the safety of law enforcement officers and witnesses," involved in criminal proceedings.

However, the new policy prohibits electronic access to criminal files, with the understanding that the Judicial Conference will revisit the issue within the next two years.

To date, the many federal courts offer only limited electronic access to court records through the federal PACER (Public Access to Electronic Records) system. Once users are registered for PACER, they may gain access to court dockets and summaries pages for a small per-page fee.

But the federal judiciary is pursuing a much more ambitious plan to offer online access to all federal filings allowed by today's decision, including individual court documents and briefs filed by attorneys. That system is scheduled to be in place by 2007.

Reported by Newsbytes.com, http://www.newsbytes.com .

16:47 CST

(20010919/WIRES ONLINE, LEGAL, BUSINESS, TELECOM /PRIVACYPOL/PHOTO)

COPYRIGHT 2001 Newsbytes News Network
in association with The Gale Group and LookSmart. COPYRIGHT 2001 Gale Group




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