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DNE
(See PDF for image)     STATE OF WISCONSIN
    DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE
J.B. VAN HOLLEN
ATTORNEY GENERAL
Raymond P. Taffora
Deputy Attorney General
17 W. Main Street
P.O. Box 7857
Madison, WI 53707-7857
            December 22, 2010     OAG—07—10  
Mr. A. John Voelker
Director of State Courts

16 East, State Capitol

Madison, WI 53702
Dear Mr. Voelker:
¶ 1.
Your office has responsibility for the court information system. See SCR §§ 70.01 and 70.04. You have developed an electronic case management system called the Consolidated Court Automation Program (“CCAP”). You also have developed a web-based version of CCAP called the Wisconsin Circuit Court Access (“WCCA”). In cases involving a child in need of protective services (“CHIPS”) or involving the termination of parental rights (“TPR”), WCCA restricts access to related case information.
QUESTION PRESENTED AND BRIEF ANSWER
¶ 2.
You ask whether corporation counsel, representing the public interest in CHIPS cases and TPR cases, may have access to related case information in the restricted area of the WCCA website. In my opinion, corporation counsel may not have access to such information because WCCA, due to technical limitations, cannot prevent corporation counsel from accessing private case information.
BACKGROUND
¶ 3.
While WCCA generally makes case history and related documents accessible to the public in most civil and criminal cases, access is restricted for most records in juvenile cases. The restricted access is organized by county and by type of case. WCCA is programmed to permit limited access (with password authorization) to a particular restricted class of cases, e.g., juvenile cases. The problem, however, is that WCCA presently is not programmed to grant restricted access to a subset of cases within a class of cases. In other words, an individual who has access to CHIPS or TPR cases would have access to all of those cases, regardless of whether the individual was a party or an attorney involved in the cases.
¶ 4.
Wisconsin Stat. § 48.396(2)(a) provides in relevant part:
  Records of the court assigned to exercise jurisdiction under this chapter and ch. 938 [juvenile justice code] and of courts exercising jurisdiction under s. 48.16 shall be entered in books or deposited in files kept for that purpose only. They shall not be open to inspection or their contents disclosed except by order of the court assigned to exercise jurisdiction under this chapter and ch. 938 or as permitted under this section or s. 48.375(7)(e).
¶ 5.
The statute includes specific exceptions that allow disclosure of juvenile records, on a case-by-case basis, to certain individuals such as the parents or guardians of the subject child, federal or state benefit agencies, the Department of Corrections for purposes of preparing pre‑sentence investigations, or other courts, public officials, or private attorneys where needed. None of the statutory exceptions, however, permit continuing or regular access by anyone to all juvenile records or to all juvenile records of a particular nature.
¶ 6.
The courts have confirmed that access to juvenile records under the subsections should be granted only on an “as needed” basis with case-by-case consideration. The leading case on the matter is the Wisconsin Supreme Court decision in State ex rel. Herget v. Waukesha Co. Cir. Ct., 84 Wis. 2d 435, 267 N.W.2d 309 (1978). In that case, a minor sought to prevent the court from allowing access to his juvenile court record, for use in a civil action brought against him and his parents. The court held that maintaining confidentiality of juvenile records is the general rule and disclosure is the exception because the best interest of the child and of the administration of the juvenile justice system require protecting the confidentiality of juvenile records. Id. at 450-51. The court explained:
  Confidentiality is essential to the goal of rehabilitation, which is in turn the major purpose of the separate juvenile justice system. In theory, the role of the juvenile court is not to determine guilt or to assign fault, but to diagnose the cause of the child’s problems and help resolve those problems. The juvenile court operates on a “family” rather than a “due process” model. Confidentiality is promised to encourage the juvenile, parents, social workers and others to furnish information which they might not otherwise disclose in an admittedly adversary or open proceeding. Confidentiality also reduces the stigma to the youth resulting from the misdeed, an arrest record and a juvenile court adjudication.
  In view of the statutory expression of the strong public interest in promoting the best interests of the child and the administration of the juvenile justice system by protecting the confidentiality of the police, court, and social agency records relating to juveniles, we hold that the circuit court is justified in ordering the discovery of all or any part of sec. 48.26 records only when the court has reviewed the records in camera and has made a determination that the need for confidentiality is outweighed by the exigencies of the circumstances.
Herget, 84 Wis. 2d at 451-52 (citations and footnotes omitted).
¶ 7.
The procedure established by Herget requiring in camera review and a case-by-case balancing test is codified in Wis. Stat. §§ 48.396(5) and 938.396(1j). If a court determines that disclosure of the juvenile record is warranted, “it shall order the disclosure of only as much information as is necessary to meet the petitioner’s need for the information.” Wis. Stat. §§ 48.396(5)(d) and 938.396(1j)(d).
¶ 8.   Shortly after the implementation of the WCCA, attorneys representing the interest of the public in juvenile courts cases sought access to WCCA restricted juvenile cases, in order to monitor their own cases or related cases. They argued that such access would create efficiencies and would make their work more effective. In late 2000, in response to a request from your predecessor, Assistant Attorney General (“AAG”) Alan Lee concluded that only a statutory change would allow attorneys representing the interests of the public to have general access to WCCA juvenile records. In July 2002, AAG Mary Woolsey Schlaefer reached the same conclusion with respect to juvenile justice agencies. In May 2005, AAG Lee reached the opposite conclusion with respect to juvenile dispositional, intake or protective service workers, but only because those workers were part of the juvenile court system and had general authorization to access juvenile records.
¶ 9.   In late 2005, following an inquiry from Dane County, you asked my predecessor whether juvenile records could be electronically shared with attorneys in the office of the Dane County Corporation Counsel who were handling juvenile cases. You cited a 2004 study by a CCAP Steering Committee that concluded that corporation counsel must be denied general access to CHIPS, TPR, and other juvenile cases because there was no method by which the WCCA could permit corporation counsel access only to their cases and not to cases that were privately filed and involved private attorneys. In March 2006, AAG Lee concurred in the conclusion of the steering committee.
ANALYSIS
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