PENNSYLVANIA STATE POLICE, Petitioner v. OFFICE OF OPEN RECORDS, Respondent.
Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania.
Argued June 23, 2010. Decided Sept. 16, 2010.
5 A.3d 473
BEFORE: LEADBETTER, President Judge, and McGINLEY, Judge, and PELLEGRINI, Judge, and COHN JUBELIRER, Judge, and LEAVITT, Judge, and McCULLOUGH, Judge, and BUTLER, Judge.
OPINION BY Judge COHN JUBELIRER.
The Pennsylvania State Police (PSP) petitions this Court for review of the Final Determination by the Office of Open Records (OOR) to grant the appeal of Donald R. Gilliland (Requester) from the PSP‘s denial of his request for an incident report (Incident Report) under the Right-to-Know Law (RTKL).1 PSP argues that the OOR erred in granting the appeal because the Incident Report is a criminal investigation record exempted from disclosure under the RTKL.
On February 2, 2009, Requester, the managing editor of the Potter Leader-Enterprise newspaper, submitted a Right-To-Know Law Request (Request) seeking:
a complete incident report-listing names of victims AND names of people being charged-for incident # F02-1003340 occurring on 28 Dec. 08. I‘d list a name for reference if I could, but obviously I can‘t-which is a problem when trying to follow-up [sic] at the local magistrate judge‘s office as well. Copy of incomplete incident report is attached.
(Request, R.R. at 1a (emphasis and ellipsis in original).) Attached to the Request was a PSP Public Information Release Report (PIRR) for Incident Number F02-1003340, which listed the location of the incident as, “[p]rivate residence along North Hollow Road, Sweden Twp., Potter County,” listed the date and time of the incident as “12/28/08 / Approx. 1730 hours,” and described the incident as follows:
On said date and time Victim # 1 and Victim # 2 were engaged in a verbal argument in the driveway area of a private residence. Actor # 1 proceeded to push Victim # 1. Actor # 2 proceeded to get into the vehicle of Victim # 2 as he was trying to leave. Actor # 2 proceeded to strike Victim # 2 with a fist as he was inside the vehicle. Actor # 1 proceeded to spin “doughnuts” in the drive way [sic] as Actor # 2 threw recently purchased meat products out the vehicle into the driveway and yard area in a circular pattern.
(PIRR, December 30, 2008, R.R. at 2a.)2 On February 3, 2009, the PSP‘s Agency Open Records Officer (AORO) denied the Request on the basis that the requested Incident Report was a criminal investigative record exempt under Section 708(b)(16) of the RTKL,
On March 23, 2009, the OOR issued its Final Determination granting Requester‘s appeal and directing the PSP to release an unredacted copy of the Incident Report to Requester. The OOR reasoned that, while Section 708(b)(16) exempts criminal investigative records from the definition of public records, Section 708(b)(16) specifically provides that the exemption does not apply to police blotter information and that, pursuant to Commonwealth v. Mines, 680 A.2d 1227 (Pa.Cmwlth.1996), and Tapco, Inc. v. Township of Neville, 695 A.2d 460 (Pa.Cmwlth.1997), incident reports are equivalent to police blotters. The OOR concluded that the Incident Report was, therefore, a public record and subject to disclosure, but that investigative information contained within the Incident Report could be redacted pursuant to Section 708(b)(16). The OOR concluded, however, that because the PSP bore the burden of showing that the victims’ names were investigative information, or that release of the victims’ names would cause a risk of physical harm to or the impairment of the physical safety of the victims, and failed to produce any evidence on these points, the PSP must release an unredacted copy of the Incident Report. The PSP now petitions this Court for review.3
In reviewing a final determination of the OOR, this Court “independently reviews the OOR‘s orders and may substitute its own findings of fact for that of the agency.” Bowling v. Office of Open Records, 990 A.2d 813, 818 (Pa.Cmwlth.2010) (en banc). With regard to what evidence this Court may consider in reviewing a
Before this Court, PSP argues that the OOR erred in holding that the Incident Report was a public record because police incident reports are not equivalent to police blotters under the RTKL and the Criminal History Records Information Act (CHRIA).5 The PSP asserts that the Incident Report is wholly exempt from disclosure because it is a criminal investigative record, which contains investigative materials and victim information. We agree.
We begin by examining the statutory language of the RTKL. Section 301(a) of the RTKL directs that “[a] Commonwealth agency shall provide public records in accordance with this act.”
(16) A record of an agency relating to or resulting in a criminal investigation, including:
(i) Complaints of potential criminal conduct other than a private criminal complaint.
(ii) Investigative materials, notes, correspondence, videos and reports.
(iii) A record that includes the identity of a confidential source or the identity of a suspect who has not been charged with an offense to whom confidentiality has been promised.
(iv) A record that includes information made confidential by law or court order.
(v) Victim information, including any information that would jeopardize the safety of the victim.
(vi) A record that, if disclosed, would do any of the following:
(A) Reveal the institution, progress or result of a criminal investigation, except the filing of criminal charges.
(B) Deprive a person of the right to a fair trial or an impartial adjudication.
(C) Impair the ability to locate a defendant or codefendant.
(D) Hinder an agency‘s ability to secure an arrest, prosecution or conviction.
(E) Endanger the life or physical safety of an individual.
This paragraph shall not apply to information contained in a police blotter as defined in
18 Pa.C.S. § 9102 (relating to definitions) and utilized or maintained by the Pennsylvania State Police, local, campus, transit or port authority police department or other law enforcement agency or in a traffic report except as provided under75 Pa.C.S. § 3754(b) (relating to accident prevention investigations).
This Court recently interpreted Section 708(b)(16) in Mitchell v. Office of Open Records, 997 A.2d 1262 (Pa.Cmwlth.2010). In Mitchell, the requester (Mitchell), an inmate, filed a RTKL “request with the PSP seeking copies of any documents showing the time the officers arrived and departed from Mitchell‘s residence ... in serving a search warrant.” Id. at 1263. The PSP responded that it had found only one record relating to this request, and that this record was exempt from disclosure pursuant to Section 708(b)(16) of the RTKL and Section 9106(c)(4) of the CHRIA. Mitchell, 997 A.2d at 1263. Mitchell appealed to the OOR. In the course of the appeals process, the PSP described the document relevant to Mitchell‘s request as “a single-page Automated Incident Memo System (AIMS) query response,” and explained that: (1) the AIMS record “manifestly pertain[ed] to a criminal investigation” and was therefore exempt under Section 708(b)(16)(ii); (2) the content of the AIMS record would “obviously reveal the institution, progress or result of a criminal investigation” and was therefore exempt from disclosure under Section 708(b)(16)(vi)(A); and (3) that the AIMS record constituted investigative information exempt from disclosure under the CHRIA because it was assembled as a result of an inquiry into a criminal incident. Id. at 1263-64. The OOR determined that the AIMS record was exempt under Section 708(b)(16)(vi)(A) and denied Mitchell‘s appeal. Id. at 1264. Before this Court, Mitchell argued that the AIMS record was not exempt from disclosure under the RTKL or the CHRIA. This Court determined that the OOR properly relied on the affidavits submitted by the PSP in determining that the AIMS record was exempt from disclosure under Section 708(b)(16). Id. at 1265. Similar to this case, Mitchell also argued that the AIMS record was, in fact, an incident report equivalent to a police blotter and, therefore, a public record under the CHRIA. Id. at 1265. This Court noted that the “CHRIA concerns the collection, maintenance, dissemination and receipt of criminal history record information,” and that Section 9102 of the CHRIA excludes investigative information from the definition of criminal history record information. Id. (citing
After reviewing the Incident Report in camera, this Court is convinced that it constitutes a criminal investigative report and is, therefore, not a public record per Section 708(b)(16)(ii). The Incident Report, itself, contains notes of interviews with the alleged victims/perpetrators, as well as another witness. The form on which the Incident Report is written contains checkboxes regarding whether certain investigative tasks have been carried out or whether certain information was discovered.6 All of these boxes were checked in the Incident Report, either “yes” or “no.” The above information was assembled as a result of an investigation into a criminal incident or an allegation of criminal wrongdoing. Therefore, the Incident Report is a report of a criminal investigation and contains investigative information, per Mitchell and Section 9102. Because the Incident Report is a criminal investigative report, it falls within the exemption at Section 708(b)(16)(ii) and is not a public record; therefore, it is not subject to disclosure.
The PSP, along with the Pennsylvania Coalition Against Domestic Violence and the Office of Victim Advocate (OVA), also argues that the Incident Report is exempt from disclosure pursuant to Section 708(b)(16)(v) because it contains victim information. After reviewing the Incident Report in camera, this Court notes that the Incident Report contains the victims’ names and addresses. Section 708(b)(16)(v) exempts “[v]ictim information, including any information that would jeopardize the safety of the victim.”
does not mean that for any material to be considered victim information one must always show that the release of the information jeopardizes the safety of the victim.... Instead, it is referencing a type of information that while on its face may not appear to be victim information it could be deemed victim information if it jeopardizes the safety of the victim....
(OVA‘s Br. at 14.) A victim‘s name is “victim information,” i.e. information about the victim. Moreover, as the OVA points out, victims of crime do not choose to be victims of crime. (OVA‘s Br. at 15.) The unwanted disclosure of a victim‘s name may prove to be a second victimization,
The OOR argues that its decision was proper because the RTKL Liaison Verification submitted by the PSP contained only broad, conclusory language stating that the Incident Report was not a police blotter and contained investigative information. Therefore, the OOR contends that its decision should not be reversed. The RTKL Liaison Verification stated that:
1. The Pennsylvania State Police does not create, maintain, or disseminate a “police blotter,” [as defined by
18 Pa.C.S. § 9102 .]2. In accordance with Department regulations, the Pennsylvania State Police utilizes one of several forms to record and retain confidential criminal investigation information, one of which is the Pennsylvania State Police Incident Report.
a. A Pennsylvania Sate [sic] Police Incident Report is created by the investigating officer and is used “to report investigative actions resulting from alleged criminal offenses or other police matters.” Pennsylvania State Police Operations Manual, 7-2, Chapter 7 (emphasis added).
b. An Incident Report does not provide a chronological listing of arrests, and therefore, is not a “police blotter” under
18 Pa.C.S. § 9102 .
(RTKL Liaison Verification For PSP/RTKL Request No. 2009-0076, R.R. at 14a.) We need not determine whether the RTKL Liaison Verification alone would satisfy the PSP‘s burden of proof here as we have concluded that the Incident Report falls within the criminal investigative record exemption at Section 708(b)(16)(ii). As noted above, this Court enjoys the broadest scope of review when considering final determinations of the OOR and may substitute our findings of fact for those of the OOR. Bowling, 990 A.2d at 818, 820. In addition, we may supplement the record by “an in camera review of the documents at issue.” Id. at 820. Here, our determination that the Incident Report falls within the exemption at Section 708(b)(16)(ii) is based on our in camera review of the Incident Report. Therefore, we reject the OOR‘s argument on this point.
Requester argues that the OOR correctly held that the Incident Report was a police blotter, pursuant to Mines and Tapco, and is therefore not covered by the exemption at Section 708(b)(16), which explicitly excludes from the exemption police blotters as defined by Section 9102 of the CHRIA. In Mines, which considered an inmate‘s request for a broad array of police investigative information under the former Right-to-Know Law (Prior Law),7 this Court stated that “A ‘police blotter’ is simply a chronological compilation of original records of entry. In other words, they are the equivalent of incident reports.”
In Mines, this Court was not actually considering an incident report, but merely stating that we generally believed an incident report to be “a chronological compilation of original records of entry.” Mines, 680 A.2d at 1229. Moreover, Tapco did not disclose the nature of the municipal incident reports at issue in that case, nor did it disclose the kind of information contained in those incident reports. Therefore, we cannot say that those incident reports are the same as the PSP‘s Incident Report in this case. This Court cannot make determinations about whether a given document is a public record merely based on the name or title of the document; we must consider, instead, the content and nature of the document. To do otherwise would elevate form over substance. Section 9102 of the CHRIA defines a “police blotter” as “[a] chronological listing of arrests, usually documented contemporaneous with the incident, which may include, but is not limited to, the name and address of the individual charged and the alleged offenses.”
As part of Requester‘s argument that the OOR properly determined that the Incident Report constitutes a police blotter pursuant to Mines and Tapco, Requester argues that the OOR was correct that “if the incident report contained investigative information, that information may be redacted pursuant to 708(b)(16).” (Final Determination at 6 (quoted in Requester‘s Br. at 10).) First, we note that the Final Determination ordered the PSP to disclose the Incident Report “without redaction.” (Final Determination at 8 (emphasis in original).) Second, we note that, where a record falls within an exemption under Section 708(b), it is not a public record as defined by the RTKL and an agency is not required to redact the record. Department of Health v. Office of Open Records, 4 A.3d 803, 814-15 (Pa.Cmwlth.2010). Therefore, any argument that the PSP must redact the Incident Report to provide the information that would be contained in a police blotter fails.
Underlying the arguments in the briefs of the OOR, the Requester, and the Pennsylvania Newspaper Association is a concern that the kind of information contained in police blotters should be accessible to the public so that the public can hold law enforcement agencies accountable in the execution of such agencies’ core functions. This Court agrees that both the CHRIA and the RTKL convey a strong
Judge BROBSON did not participate in the decision in this case.
ORDER
NOW, September 16, 2010, the order of the Office of Open Records in the above-captioned matter is hereby REVERSED.
DISSENTING OPINION BY Judge PELLEGRINI.
The central issue in this appeal is whether a routine incident report completed by a trooper with the Pennsylvania State Police (PSP) qualifies under the criminal investigation records exemption found in Section 708(b)(16) of the Right-to-Know Law (RTKL).1 Because an incident report does not qualify as criminal investigative material, I respectfully dissent.
Pursuant to the RTKL, a record in the possession of a Commonwealth agency such as the PSP is presumed to be public and subject to disclosure unless the agency proves by a preponderance of the evidence that it is exempt under Section 708, exempt under other Federal or State law, or protected by privilege.
(b) Exceptions.-Except as provided in subsections (c) and (d), the following are exempt from access by a requester under this act:
...
(16) A record of an agency relating to or resulting in a criminal investigation, including:
...
(iii) Investigative materials, notes, correspondence, videos and reports.
...
This paragraph shall not apply to information contained in a police blotter as defined in
18 Pa.C.S. § 9102 ....
As the Commonwealth agency which received the right-to-know request, the burden was on the PSP to prove by a preponderance of the evidence why the requested record was exempt. In its initial denial letter, the PSP merely stated that the requested incident report qualified as a criminal investigative record and was, therefore, exempt under Section 708(b)(16) of the RTKL. The PSP provided no guidance as to why the report qualified as investigative material or what specific information included in the report was not subject to public access. The OOR‘s appeals officer sent a letter to the
As a preliminary matter, the burden was on the PSP, as the agency responding to the right-to-know request, to make a showing of why the report qualified as part of a criminal investigation rather than a police blotter, or why sensitive information in the report could not be redacted. Simply because a form is entitled “incident report” does not mean that it relates to an actual criminal investigation as required to meet the exemption. For example, if a police officer responds to the scene of a routine automobile accident which does not involve injuries or lead to an investigation into potential criminal wrong-doing, he or she will later complete a write-up outlining that an incident occurred. This report may very well be called an incident report by that officer and his or her department, but because it did not relate to or result in a criminal investigation, it would not fit the exemption found in Section 708(b)(16) of the RTKL. The PSP should have explained in its denial to requester and the resulting appeal to the OOR exactly how and why the incident report at issue in this case qualified as criminal investigative material rather than making the blanket assertion that every single incident report generated by its troopers fit the exemption, regardless of content.
The specific incident report at issue in this case contains very little information, and I disagree with the majority‘s conclusion that it falls in the category of investigative material. The terms “incident” and “investigation” are not, by any means, synonymous and connote varying levels of police involvement. The term “investigate” is defined as “to observe or study by close examination and systematic inquiry; to make a systematic examination; to conduct an official inquiry.” Merriam-Webster‘s Collegiate Dictionary 659 (11th ed.2004). By its definition, the term implies detailed observation and inquiry over a period of time, which would amount to a high level of police involvement or activity. On the contrary, the term “incident” implies a one-time encounter, as it is defined as “a discrete occurrence or happening.” Black‘s Law Dictionary (8th ed.2004). The incident report at issue does not document a criminal investigation. The report contains the names and addresses of the actors involved, a synopsis of what the trooper observed and was told, and statements of the victims and a witness. It is merely the initial form the trooper fills out to show the “who, what, where and when” that any observer of the scene could discern without investigation. In short, it merely recounts the particular incident that the trooper responded to on this occasion. It does not, as the majority argues, document the trooper‘s investigation of a criminal case or outline his official inquiry.
In addition, exemptions from disclosure under the RTKL must be narrowly construed. See Bowling v. Office of Open Records, 990 A.2d 813, 824 (Pa.Cmwlth.2010) (citations omitted). Reports which merely relay the happenings of a particular incident to which police respond are commonly made available upon request. It would be an absurd result if the new RTKL, which was “designed to promote
The PSP does not dispute that “police blotters,” which are expressly excluded from the investigative exception, no longer exist and incident reports have supplanted them. If investigative material seeps into the incident report or other matter contained in the report is protected, the PSP is not authorized to withhold the entire document but may redact those portions that are subject to the investigative or personal exception.
Given these reasons, I disagree with the majority‘s conclusion that the incident report qualified as criminal investigative material and was, therefore, exempt from public access, and I respectfully dissent.
PELLEGRINI, Judge
Notes
(4) Investigative and treatment information shall not be disseminated to any department, agency or individual unless the department, agency or individual requesting the information is a criminal justice agency which requests the information in connection with its duties, and the request is based upon a name, fingerprints, modus operandi, genetic typing, voice print or other identifying characteristic.
Section 9104 of the [CHRIA],Thus, we learn that only Subchapters B, D and F of the [CHRIA] apply to police blotters and that police blotters are deemed to be “public records” by the [CHRIA]. It is Subchapter C of the [CHRIA],18 Pa.C.S. § 9104 , provides the following with regard to police blotters: (a) General rule.-Except for the provisions of Subchapter B (relating to completeness and accuracy), Subchapter D (relating to security) and Subchapter F (relating to individual right of access and review), nothing in this chapter shall be construed to apply to: (1) Original records of entry compiled chronologically, including, but not limited to, police blotters. (b) Court dockets and police blotters.-Court dockets and police blotters and information contained therein shall, for the purpose of this chapter, be considered public records. (Emphasis added.)
