As to victims and witnesses, the difference in this case may relate to the court's reliance on the Colorado Victim Rights Act, and specifically
§ 24-4.1-302.5. Rights afforded to victims. The prosecution did not oppose Morphew's reference to this statute.
This is an early case applying a new rule. I think the Judge is taking an approach he thinks will preclude arguments for a change of venue and/or post-conviction claims that the jury pool was unfairly tainted by exposure to inadmissible evidence. By making the order temporary, he reduced the Media Consortium's incentive to appeal. He limited the complete seal order to the time required for the parties to make redactions and for the Morphew daughters to figure out how to cope and where they go from here. Smart move.
I think the DA, in an "abundance of caution" when filing a rarely pursued, no-body murder case, threw in the kitchen sink to assure that the judge would find probable cause and the public would see this as a just prosecution.
The judge's concerns were clearly and strongly expressed, and related not only to evidence admissibility under rules like hearsay, but also to relevance. It will be interesting to see the DA's next move, given what I see as a strong statement of concern by the judge.
For lawyers, a question - when does the right to avoid double jeopardy apply? If the DA withdrew the case to investigate further, could she re-file it next year? Or, does she have to follow through now, and take whatever the outcome may be?
I just noticed that Fox News chose not to cover this latter aspect of the judge's ruling in its article, but only the witness protection part. Interesting.
All MOO, a non-expert court watcher's two cents.