638 N.E.2d 614 | Ohio Ct. App. | 1994
In October 1990, fire fighters for the respondent-appellee, the city of Parma Heights, complained about the smell of marijuana at the Parma Heights Police Station. As part of the ensuing investigation conducted by the Parma Heights Police Department, one fire fighter underwent a polygraph examination in January 1991. No evidence of misconduct was disclosed by the investigation, and it was completed without any charges being leveled against anyone. *351
Relator-appellant, James M. Sweeney, filed a petition for a writ of mandamus in the Court of Common Pleas of Cuyahoga County on November 16, 1992. Relator sought to receive, pursuant to R.C.
The trial court, after conducting an in camera inspection of the respondent's investigatory materials, denied the writ in part. As a result, respondent was ordered to release to relator all of its records pertaining to the investigation, including the polygrapher's report which was redacted to conceal the polygraph subject's identity; however, the polygraph tracings were excluded from the order pursuant to R.C.
It is the partial denial which compelled relator to file the instant appeal and to submit the following error for our review:
"The trial court erred in denying disclosure of polygraph reports on the basis that they would disclose the subject of the tests, where the respondent has previously publicly revealed both the fact of the test and the identity of the test subject."
Initially, relator is limited to arguing on appeal those arguments he presented to the trial court in support of his petition. See First Fed. S. L. Assn. of Akron v. Cheton Rabe (1989),
The only issue before this court is whether the results of the polygraph test administered by respondent's police department fall within R.C.
"To determine whether a record is exempt from public disclosure under R.C.
R.C.
"(A) As used in this section:
"(1) `Public record' means any record that is kept by any public office, including, but not limited to, state, county, city, village, township, and school district units, except medical records, records pertaining to adoption, probation, and parole proceedings, records pertaining to actions under section
"(2) `Confidential law enforcement investigatory record' means any record that pertains to a law enforcement matter of a criminal, quasi-criminal, civil, or administrative nature, but only to the extent that the release of the record would create a high probability of disclosure of any of the following:
"(a) The identity of a suspect who has not been charged with the offense to which the record pertains, or of an information source or witness to whom confidentiality has been reasonably promised[.]"
R.C.
As stated above, R.C.
This statutory protection is not diminished where there is neither a current investigation or suspect nor where there has been a passage of time or a lack of follow-up investigation.Moreland, supra,
As the Supreme Court of Ohio stated in Thompson Newspapers,Inc.:
"[O]ne of the purposes for the public records exception * * * is to avoid the situation in which the release of confidential law enforcement investigatory records would subject a person to adverse publicity where he may otherwise never have been identified with the matter under investigation." ThompsonNewspapers, Inc., supra,
Applying R.C.
Judgment affirmed.
HARPER, P.J., KRUPANSKY and NUGENT, JJ., concur.