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Caveat Lector - Politics, Government and the Free Press – by Mark B. Evans

Electronic documents are public records, court rules

by on Oct. 29, 2009, under Politics

Although it’s an esoteric issue, the Arizona Supreme Court today handed down perhaps one of the most important public records decisions in its history.

The court unanimously ruled that public records kept in an electronic format are public records and the native format must be released if requested.

Here’s what I wrote about it last month on the eve of the court hearing oral arguments in the case:

As open records cases go, this one is pretty dry. It’s hard to get the public excited about whether something you can’t see is a public record. But it might be as important of a public access case as has ever been before the court. The case has generated at lot of interest with at least four friend of the court briefs filed in the case, including one from the First Amendment Coalition, which represents numerous government openness advocates including news media, private investigators and government watchdog groups (Full disclosure: I’m a FAC board member).

The case revolves around records Phoenix police officer David Lake requested from Phoenix PD in 2006. Among the records requested were the typed notes of one of his supervisors. When he got the notes, he suspected his supervisor had altered the date they were typed. He requested the metadata to determine if that were true.

The city denied the request, saying metadata wasn’t part of the public record. Lake sued and the Superior Court and later the Court of Appeals agreed with the city that metadata is not a public record.

That’s wrong.

Think of metadata as akin to the black box of a commercial airplane. When you get on an airplane, you can see the wings, fuselage, tail, engines and all of the other visible parts of the plane that make it able to fly.

But what you don’t see when the plane is flying is all of the thousands of electronic signals and switches the plane’s computers are controlling to keep the plane in the air. All of that electronic information is stored in the plane’s black boxes.

The recording devices don’t really play a role in the plane’s flying and nobody really cares that they’re there until something goes wrong. Then everybody cares.

It’s the same for metadata, though metadata do more than just record what happens to the document, such as when it’s opened or saved, they are the document: The document and the metadata are symbiotic – one can’t exist without the other.

When you’re typing something in Microsoft Word, you don’t really care that metadata is allowing you to see what you’re typing or embedding behind the scenes the electronic wizardry that makes e-mail addresses and Internet links live (all you see is they changed to blue). Until your computer crashes, then you care that there’s metadata.

In its ruling, the appellate court went to great lengths to argue that there are government records and then there are public government records. The court argued that just because metadata exists doesn’t mean they are public records. Amazingly, the appellate justices ruled that the printed version of the electronic record Lake requested was public but systemic parts of the electronic version of that record were not and therefore could be withheld.

The court, obviously, rejected the appellate court’s arguments. Key to the win was the work of FAC attorney Dan Barr and the examples of what metadata are provided by ASU journalism professor and computer assisted reporting guru Steve Doig.

Below are the Court’s ruling and amicus briefs filed by FAC that include Doig’s explanation.

Supreme Court Ruling Lake v. Phoenix

Brief of Amici Curiae First Amendment Coalition, et al.

FAC Amicus Brief: Exhibit_A

FAC Amicus Brief: ExhibitB


  • tiponeill

    It’s good news. As far as it’s importance goes I wouldn’t quite rank it up there with their decision that sending tax money to the Bishop’s schools is hunky dory, but … small steps

  • Mark B. Evans

    That wasn’t a records ruling, which is all I was talking about.
    An example of the importance of this ruling: A few years ago UA J-school students in a computer assisted reporting class requested from the UA its payroll database. It wanted it as an electronic database. The UA rejected the request and said it would only provide the database as printed records – thousands of pages of lists of names, titles, departments and salaries. It said nothing in the state public records law required it to produce electronic versions of records.
    The result of the denial is that in order for the payroll database to be of use to the public, the students would have had to manually enter the printed version into Excel or Access. A daunting task and a “chilling effect” on the public’s right to know, to be sure. (Full disclosure, the UA eventually did release its salary database in an electronic format to the Arizona Republic and Tucson Citizen a few years later, although those requests had nothing to do with the J-school request).
    This ruling prevents denials like the one above. It also will serve as another check on government to determine if records have been altered or manipulated. A bill in the Legislature this past session that would have amended the state’s public records law to require public agencies to release records in their native format if so requested died in committee. The need for that law is mostly moot now.

  • Mark B. Evans

    Arizona Republic reporter Robert Anglen posted a blog about the decision this afternoon in which he describes how the city of Phoenix has refused to provide electronic records for years.
    The Right to Know in Arizona is better off today than it was yesterday.

  • ldonyo

    Excellent news! The best part is that this ruling can be used in other states to support the release of metadata with public records there, as well.