justice wide open: david banisar - catching up with the transparency revolution

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  • 7/31/2019 Justice Wide Open: David Banisar - Catching Up with the Transparency Revolution

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    David Banisar 57

    CATCHING UP WITH THETRANSPARENCY REVOLUTION

    A ruling allowing the media to access court documents in extraditionproceedings helps to entrench openness, argues David Banisar

    The Court of Appeal took a bold step forward in advancing court transparency in

    April 2012. The decision1 in Guardian News and Media Ltd v City of Westminster

    Magistrates Court2 established in common law for the first time the right of ordinary

    people and the media to obtain documents that are used in court cases.It has been a long time coming. The UK has undergone a transparency

    revolution over the past 10 years. The Freedom of Information Act 2000 (FOIA) has

    forced over 100,000 government bodies to make the information that they collect

    and use in daily actions available on request to the public. Recent government

    initiatives have made the expenditures of government bodies and local governments

    available online. Parliamentary bills, reports and proceedings are available online

    quickly.The courts were an early proponent of openness: open justice has been a

    principle since the 17th century. It is essential to ensure that courts are accountable

    by allowing any person to attend court hearings. But as other governmentinstitutions have become more open, courts practices have not evolved to the same

    extent. The decision to allow tweeting (in principle) is welcome and the BAILII3

    initiative and others have resulted in many decisions becoming publicly available,

    but many gaps remain. The Justice Wide Open event at City University revealed that

    there were many legal and practical limits to open justice. Few local newspapers now

    cover local courts and even the larger national media only attend a few cases;

    transcripts remain the commercial property of the court reporters and video and

    audio recording of cases is forbidden for reasons that are hard to understand; non-

    media such as community micro-sites have little access to anything; the FOIA onlyhas limited application to the courts.

    In this case, the growing practice of judges and the lawyers moving to a more

    document-focused case system and referring to documents that are only partially

    read out triggered the need to change the rules. An average court case is a

    bewildering series of references to documents contained in the large boxes on the

    judges and parties tables. A member of the public or reporter has little chance to

    1 Rob Evans, Judgment over extradition case is victory for open justice The Guardian (London 3 April2012) , accessed April 20122R (Guardian News & Media Ltd) v City of Westminster Magistrates Court[2012] EWCA Civ 4203 At < http://www.bailii.org>, accessed April 2012

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    58 Justice Wide Open

    follow, especially when the documents are non-public and only briefly summarised.

    This decision will allow for better scrutiny of the arguments and the evidence, which

    is especially crucial in extradition cases where a foreign government is demanding

    the handing over of persons based on crimes different than under UK law.The Court based its decision on the common law rather than the still evolving

    case law on the right to access from the European Court of Human Rights, which is

    still being resisted by the courts here. But after reviewing cases from Canada, the US,

    New Zealand and South Africa, the court found that the rest of the world had moved

    forward on this and considered it wise to follow suit4.A strange aspect of this case was that the US government was the only party

    opposing the release of the documents. The documents that the Guardian were

    trying to obtain were so basic you really do have to wonder why there was any

    opposition to their release, especially since no arguments were made that their

    release would cause any harm. Had the case been held in the US, they would have

    been routinely made available to anyone who wanted them. Perhaps it was US fear of

    having to release evidence in more controversial future cases, such as the potential

    extradition of Julian Assange to the US.In the US, the Public Access to Court Electronic Records system allows anyone

    for a very small fee to be able to access most documents submitted electronically,

    including the briefs in any federal court case. It has over a million users. Taking this

    decision forward, the UK should now adopt a similar system of proactive disclosure.

    In the 21st century, open justice should be online justice.

    This article is reproduced with the permission of Guardian.co.uk, where

    the original version first appeared on 3 April 20125.

    David Banisaris senior legal counsel for Article 19, the Global Campaign for Free

    Expression. He has worked in the field of information policy for nearly 20 years on

    the intersection of human rights and ICTs including privacy, freedom of expression,

    cyber-crime and the right to information.

    4 Article 19s submission in the case is available here: , accessed April 20125 At: < http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/libertycentral/2012/apr/03/guardian-court-victory-transparency>, accessed April 2012