1 / 7

Sharing Criminal Justice Information with the Public Robert R. Belair Oldaker, Biden & Belair

2006 Symposium on Justice and Public Safety Information Sharing Plenary Session: Privacy: Understanding the Needs, Policy and Approach March 14, 2006. Sharing Criminal Justice Information with the Public Robert R. Belair Oldaker, Biden & Belair rrb@obblaw.com.

jun
Download Presentation

Sharing Criminal Justice Information with the Public Robert R. Belair Oldaker, Biden & Belair

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. 2006 Symposium on Justice and Public Safety Information SharingPlenary Session: Privacy: Understanding the Needs, Policy and Approach March 14, 2006 Sharing Criminal Justice Information with the Public Robert R. Belair Oldaker, Biden & Belair rrb@obblaw.com

  2. Sharing CJI with the Public • The law addressing public access has not changed very much, but the technology and the business models have changed dramatically • Court records and arrest blotters were always publicly available – but now are automated • Traditionally, conviction information was publicly available but now easier, faster, cheaper for the public to obtain rap sheet type data

  3. Sharing CJI with the Public • Traditionally, the press publicized at least some arrests and criminal proceedings, but now memorialized and accessible through Internet search engines • And, some legal changes do promote public availability • Sex offender registries • Background check requirements

  4. Sharing CJI with the Public • What societal values are in play? • Interest in confidentiality • Public safety • Disparate impact on minorities • Promoting the meritocracy • Using information availability to punish offenders • Due process and presumption of innocence • Criminal justice efficacy • Criminal justice oversight • Rehabilitation and reentry

  5. Sharing CJI with the Public • What privacy rights can or should be protected? • Fair information practice rights • Relevancy? • Timeliness? • Transparency? • Consent? • Data quality? • Access and correction? • Accountability?

  6. Sharing CJI with the Public • Confidentiality • Make everything public? • Public status depends on type of record? • Public status depends on age of record? • Public status depends on intended use?

  7. Sharing CJI with the Public • When powerful values collide in a democracy, the result is likely to be compromise • Neither complete public availability nor complete confidentiality • Expect a dynamic and persistent debate • Expect technology to push law and policy in the direction of openness

More Related