Although original, the points which the plaintiff Whirty argues on appeal are without merit. Whirty complains that Adrienne Lynch, in performing her duties as an assistant district attorney, disseminated to newspaper reporters information which: (1) should not have been made public under the Criminal Offender Record Information (“CORI”) Act (G. L. c. 6, §§ 167-178); and (2) unreasonably interfered with his privacy, in violation of G. L. c. 214, § 1B. Judgment was entered in favor of the assistant district attorney upon allowance of her motion for summary judgment.
In November, 1985, Ms. Lynch was responsible for prosecuting Whirty on charges of attempted kidnapping and assault and battery. She addressed the court at a hearing on a continuance sought by the government on November 26, 1985, and at Whirty’s arraignment on December 18, 1985. For purposes of considering the appeal, we take it Ms. Lynch was the source of information that: Whirty had been convicted of the murder and rape of a fifteen year old girl in Texas; he was in violation of his Texas parole; and there was an outstanding warrant for the arrest of Whirty in Natick for assault and battery and contributing to the delinquency of a minor. Articles reporting this information appeared in two newspapers, The Middlesex News and NewsWest. The earlier of those articles was published after December 8, 1985, when Whirty’s indictment was handed up.
1.
The affidavits.
Ms. Lynch’s affidavit in support of summary judgment (Mass.R.Civ.P. 56[c],
2. CORI. The CORI Act limits the dissemination of criminal records and empowers the Criminal History Systems Board to promulgate regulations in furtherance of the law. G. L. c. 6, §§ 171-172. The Act also creates a private right of action for a violation of the CORI Act and abrogates a defense of “any privilege, absolute or qualified,” if the violation is willful. G. L. c. 6, § 177. 1 As to matter specifically related to a contemporaneous criminal proceeding, the board has specifically authorized the release of such information. 803 Code Mass. Regs. 2.04 (1986). 2
*501 It was entirely appropriate for Ms. Lynch, as a prosecutor arguing continuance and bail matters, to acquaint the judge with what she knew about the accused’s criminal record. See G. L. c. 276, § 58. That information would bear on whether the accused should be admitted to bail and at what dollar level.
3.
Invasion of privacy.
As the assistant district attorney’s dissemination of information about Whirty’s criminal record was permissible under CORI, it could hardly constitute an unreasonable interference with his privacy within the meaning of G. L. c. 214, § 1B. As to any action under § 1B, a prosecutor acting, as here, within the scope of her prosecutorial duties enjoys absolute immunity. See
Imbler
v.
Pachtman,
That absolute immunity from civil suit precludes attaching any legal consequence in this case to Whirty’s assertions that the assistant district attorney misstated details of his criminal record. The CORI Act deals with limitations on making a criminal record public, not with the accuracy of the information made public in cases, such as this, where making the information public is permissible. We might add that Whirty has failed to specify in which respects his record was erroneously reported and he could not, in any event, rest on the generalized assertions of his affidavit.
4. Miscellaneous. It is unnecessary to address Whirty’s argument that the judges and clerks for the Superior Court have conspired to excise certain submissions from the docket and from the papers in the case. We have examined the documents, including the press clippings, which Whirty included in the record appendix as if they had been part of the record.
Judgment affirmed.
Notes
We assume, without deciding, that this applies with equal force to the principle of prosecutorial immunity adverted to below. See
Imbler
v.
Pachtman,
The regulation provides in part:
(5) Authorization For Public Dissemination of CORI
(a) A criminal justice agency with official responsibility for a pending *501 criminal investigation or prosecution may disseminate CORI that is specifically related to and contemporaneous with an investigation or prosecution; . . .
(6) Dissemination of CORI During Certain Proceeding. No provision of these regulations shall be construed to prohibit dissemination of criminal offender record information in the course of criminal proceedings, or other proceedings expressly required by a statute to be made public, including published opinions, where such disclosure is limited to that necessary to carry on such proceedings effectively.
