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Deleted member 222031
Guest
@CGray123 and I respectfully disagree. Just like the media and the judge do! It is a question of weight given to the rights of each party. Whether their primary interest is salacious or not, the media is all that stands between darkness and light for the public. Should we citizens remain in ignorance because knowing may serve the media's financial interest? I think not. Unless our system of justice recognizes the right of ordinary citizens to appeal/seek info from the courts, we are stuck relying on the media. I believe this has served the public well. But I am open to a better system. I do not believe cloaking the courts in darkness - which is the historical precedent in CO - is at all acceptable. MOOI have looked through the response, because I thought it was worth the attempt to understand what they are getting at - other than wanting the AA released now instead of waiting a couple of months.
They don't reference any cases where temporary suppression of an AA in CO has been overruled. Or not that I can see.
People V Thompson reference is about the length of a grand jury indictment - 64 pages - that was then released (so how can 130 pages be too long to analyse for redaction)
People V Holmes reference is about suppression for law enforcement reasons, not defense reasons (so if law enforcement don't oppose why should the judge)
Then again another People V Holmes reference saying there are others ways to protect victims than redacting their info
And then it cites one case in each of New York State, Illinois, and the Phillipines where 'important immediate access' was found. (Access to what, I don't know, because I haven't looked for the actual cases - and it doesn't say in their response.)
Then they argue Rule 55.1 - which CGray123 has given an opinion (of the judge's interpretation) in an above post.
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