Supreme court may decide whether newspaper can get conditional release
records
A newspaper wants the conditional release plan concerning a man who
killed three people, but was institutionalized for 20 years after a
court found he was not guilty by reason of mental disease.
By Joe Forward, Legal Writer,
State Bar of Wisconsin
Oct. 21,
2011 – A Wisconsin appeals court has asked the Wisconsin Supreme
Court to decide whether a conditional release plan concerning an
institutionalized person is confidential and thereby exempt from
Wisconsin’s open records law.
The La Crosse Tribune tried to obtain the conditional release records
regarding Bryan Stanley, who was institutionalized for killing three
people in an Onalaska church in 1985, but found appropriate for
conditional release in 2005. He was found not guilty by reason of mental
disease or defect.
The circuit court sealed Stanley’s conditional release plan as a
confidential treatment record under Wis. Stat. section 51.30(1)(b) and
(4), which provides that all “treatment records” must remain
confidential without a person’s consent. It defines treatment
records to include records created while providing mental health
services.
A circuit court clerk denied the La Crosse Tribunes’ initial
request that Stanley’s conditional release plan be unsealed and
released. After a hearing in circuit court, the judge also denied the
request, concluding that a conditional release plan is a
“treatment record” protected by section 51.30.
The newspaper appealed, arguing the conditional release plans are not
protected treatment records, and seeks costs, fees, and damages for the
circuit court judge’s alleged violation of the open records law
under section 19.37(2), which requires an “authority” to
timely respond to a request for records.
The state argues that a request to unseal records is not an open
records action.
The District IV Wisconsin Court of Appeals has now certified
the case – La Crosse Tribune v. Circuit Court for La Crosse
County, 2010AP3120 (Oct. 20, 2011) – to the supreme
court.
“The outcome of the disputes in this case will affect defendants
subject to institutional care following a finding of not guilty by
reason of mental disease or defect, members of the media and the public
seeking documents under the Open Records Law, and circuit courts faced
with these issues,” the court wrote.
The supreme court is asked to clarify the proper mechanism for an open
records requestor when seeking documents under seal by a circuit court,
and whether conditional release plans are exempt from the open records
law as confidential treatment records. “In sum, the issues in this
case require a balancing of the public’s interests of ensuring the
openness and transparency of government and maintaining the
confidentiality of mental health records,” the appeals court
wrote.