Larry Welch Director Kansas Bureau of Investigation 1620 Tyler Topeka, Kansas 66612
Dear Director Welch:
You request our opinion regarding the public disclosure of juvenile offender records maintained by the Kansas bureau of investigation. Specifically, you ask us to interpret two provisions of the Kansas juvenile offenders code, K.S.A. 1994 Supp.
We begin our analysis with the general premise of the Kansas open records act, K.S.A.
Your inquiry concerns two distinct provisions of the Kansas juvenile offenders code, K.S.A.
As a general rule, the juvenile offenders code prohibits law enforcement agencies from disclosing records concerning the commission or alleged commission of a public offense by a juvenile under age 16. See K.S.A. 1994 Supp.
"(a) All records of law enforcement officers and agencies and municipal courts concerning a public offense committed or alleged to have been committed by a juvenile under 16 years of age shall be kept readily distinguishable from criminal and other records and shall not be disclosed to anyone except:
"1) The judge and members of the court staff designated by the judge of a court having the juvenile before it in any proceedings;
"(2) parties to the proceedings and their attorneys;
"(3) the department of social and rehabilitation services;
"(4) any individual, or any officer of a public or private agency or institution, having custody of the juvenile under court order or providing educational, medical or mental health services to the juvenile or a court-approved advocate for the juvenile;
"(5) law enforcement officers or county or district attorneys or their staff when necessary for the discharge of their official duties;
"(6) the central repository, as defined by K.S.A.
22-4701 and amendments thereto, for use only as a part of the juvenile offender information system established under K.S.A.38-1618 and amendments thereto;"(7) any other person when authorized by a court order, subject to any conditions imposed by the order; and
"(8) as provided in subsection (c)." (Emphasis added.)
Subsection (c) of K.S.A. 1994 Supp.
"(c) All records of law enforcement officers and agencies and municipal courts concerning a public offense committed or alleged to have been committed by a juvenile 14 or more years of age shall be subject to the same disclosure restrictions as the records of adults."
Read in light of the Kansas open records act and the general rule of nondisclosure set forth in subsection (a) for juveniles under age 16, we interpret subsection (c) to mean that information maintained by law enforcement officers and agencies concerning offenses committed or alleged to have been committed by juveniles age 14 and older must be open to public inspection, except to the extent that disclosure of such records for adults is otherwise specifically restricted by statute or regulation. We note that subsection (c) is consistent with K.S.A. 1994 Supp.
In contrast to the general provisions of the juvenile offender code governing the disclosure of juvenile information by courts and law enforcement agencies, K.S.A.
The purpose of the juvenile offender information system is to provide an accurate source of general information to the executive, legislative, and judicial branches of state government regarding the operation of the juvenile justice system. See
K.S.A.
To this end, K.S.A.
"Juvenile offender information maintained in the juvenile offender information system is confidential and shall not be disseminated or publicly disclosed in a manner which enables identification of any individual who is a subject of the information, except that the information shall be open to inspection by county and district attorneys, by attorneys for the parties to a proceeding under [the juvenile offenders] code or upon order of a judge of the district court or an appellate court." L. 1983, ch. 140, sec. 36(e).
Since its original enactment, the statute has been amended to extend the right of inspection to certain agencies and institutions under specified circumstances, but as a general rule the information in the system remains confidential. See K.S.A.
As you know, the juvenile offender information system, as part of the central repository, K.S.A.
We note that K.S.A. 1994 Supp.
As you know, the director has the authority to issue rules and regulations governing the dissemination of criminal history information. See K.S.A. 1994 Supp.
We note that a "conviction" is not one of the results of proceedings undertaken pursuant to the juvenile offender code. If the court finds that a juvenile committed the acts constituting the alleged offense or an included offense, the result is an "adjudication" as a juvenile offender, rather than a criminal conviction. See K.S.A.
Even if K.S.A. 1994 Supp.
In summary, both K.S.A. 1994 Supp.
Very truly yours,
CARLA J. STOVALL Attorney General of Kansas
J. Lyn Entrikin Goering Assistant Attorney General
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