RISING SECRECY IN CIVIL CASES PROMPTS LEGISLATIVE BACKLASH

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Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP92M00732R001000040037-3
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RIPPUB
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U
Document Page Count: 
3
Document Creation Date: 
December 23, 2016
Document Release Date: 
April 15, 2014
Sequence Number: 
37
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Publication Date: 
March 17, 1989
Content Type: 
MEMO
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PDF icon CIA-RDP92M00732R001000040037-3.pdf245.96 KB
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STAT Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2014/04/21 : CIA-RDP92M00732R001000040037-3 R Next 1 Page(s) In Document Denied Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2014/04/21 : CIA-RDP92M00732R001000040037-3 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2014/04/21 : CIA-RDP92M60732-14001000040037-3 Rising Secrecy in Civil Cases Prompts Legislative Backlash Calls for Limits Reflect Consumer Concerns By Elsa Walsh Washington Post Staff Writer ? Several lawmakers?including some in Maryland, Virginia and the Congress?have undertaken sep- arate and unprecedented efforts to enact legislation aimed at curbing the growing use of secrecy in civil lawsuits involving questions of health and safety. ? Secrecy procedures have become entrenched in the past 15 years as a favored way for companies and oth- er parties in lawsuits to avoid the disclosure of sensitive or potentially damaging information. Attorneys also use them to bargain for larger settlements, and judges rely on them as useful tools to clear crowded court calendars. The legislative proposals face stiff opposition from corporations and the insurance industry, which tend to view lawsuits exclusively as disputes between private parties. They say the secrecy procedures are their only protection against the disclosure of proprietary informa- tion of interest to competitors. The initiatives, which have the backing of several consumer groups, include: ? A bill that has won majority sup- port in both houses of the Virginia General Assembly and that would allow attorneys to share with each other confidential documents that they obtain from companies in lit- igation. The measure, introduced by Del. Bernard S. Cohen (D- Alexandria), is awaiting final action in the House of Delegates after mi- nor amendments were made Friday by the Senate. If approved, the law would make Virginia the first state in the country to legalize such shar- ing. Although the legislation would not allow attorneys to share the documents directly with the public, supporters say it would significantly increase the likelihood that impor- tant safety information would reach government regulators and even- tually be aired publicly at a trial. ? A bill in Maryland, sponsored by Del.' Samuel I. (Sandy) Rosenberg (D-Baltimore), that would make it more difficult for judges to seal rec- ords or close court proceedings. A similar measure is pending in the Texas Legislature. ? A bill in Congress, introduced by Rep.. Cardiss Collins (D-Ill.), that would permit attorneys to share con- fidential company documents with safety regulators and each other. In addition, Sen. Arlen Speeter (R- Pa.) has announced his intention to introduce federal legislation, while Sens. Edward M. Kennedy (D-Mass.) and Paul Simon (D-Ill.), who like Specter are members of the Senate Judiciary Committee, have said they may submit bills. Rep. John Conyers Jr. (D-Mich.), chairman of the House Government Operations Committee, also has announced his intention to hold oversight hearings to review how court secrecy procedures "un- dermine ..the health and safety pro- cess set up by the federal govern- ment," according to his chief aide, Ju- lian Epstein., "Everyone is sort of working to- gether to find a way to come up with something that will have a meaningful difference," said a spokeswoman for Rep. James Scheuer (D-N.Y.), member of the subcommittee on commerce, con- See SECRECY, B9, Col. 1 - Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2014/04/21 : CIA-RDP92M00732R001000040037-3 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2014/04/21 : CIA'-li-DP92M60732R001000040037-3 ? . THE WASHINGTON POST Consumer Concerns Reflected in Efforts To Limit Secrecy Orders in Civil Cases SECRECY, From B1 sumer protection and competitive- ness. "Its time has come." The proposals that may draw the most opposition are those that would restrict judges' broad discre- tion to grant protective orders dur- ing the early stages of a lawsuit. Such orders permit attorneys in a dispute to share confidential doc- uments on the condition that they not share them with anyone else. Collins filed a similar version of her legislation as an amendment to another bill last year, but the other lawmakers said their measures were prompted, in part, by a recent series of articles in The Washington Post on eourt secrecy. The Post re- ported that judges routinely grant requests for ' protective orders in the pretrial stages of lawsuits with- out reviewing any of the confiden- tial documents. Because more than 90 percent of most lawsuits are set- tled before trial, the information is rarely made public or brought to the attention of government safety regulators. For example, General Motors Corp., in defending itself against scores of lawsuits filed by victims of fiery car crashes, avoided that type of public debate about the safety of its gas tanks by obtaining protective orders preventing the disclosure of key documents. Johnson & Johnson adopted a similar strategy in defending itself. against more than 600 lawsuits that followed the company's decision to withdraw its popular painkiller Zomax from the market after re- ports of hundreds of adverse reac- tions to the drugs. Specter's proposal would make it far more difficult for judges to grant protective orders. According to his administrative assistant, Carl Feld- baum, Specter's initiative, which is being drafted, would require judges to "consider the public interest be- fore granting a protective order" "The public courts have been closing the door on a lot of information that could have saved lives and prevented injuries for too long." ? Ralph Nader and establish a three-pronged test that would weigh heavily toward public disclosure, including proof that no less restrictive alternative is available. Such measures concern lawyer Victor E. Schwartz, author of a text on product liability and general counsel to the Product Liability Al- liance, which represents the inter- ests of manufacturers. Schwartz said the current procedures "are one of the greatest means we have of facilitating settlement negotia- tions and not going to trial." He sug- gested that a more appropriate remedy for ferreting out defective products would be to strengthen re- gulatory reporting standards and in- vestigations. Others, such as consumer advo- cate Ralph Nader, disagree. "The public courts have been closing the door on a lot of information that could have saved lives and prevented inju- ries for too long," he said. The Post series also reported that several local judges have sealed cases in which doctors were accused of professional misconduct. Implicit in the sealing orders was an understanding that the information would not be brought to the atten- tion of regulatory authorities. Under the Maryland bill, a re- ' quest to seal court records or pro- ceedings would trigger an automat- ic hearing, and state judges would be required to give three-day notice to the public and the media, a pro- cedure long advocated by' consumer groups such as Public Citizen, which unsuccessfully proposed that a sim- ilar process be adopted in U.S. Dis- trict Court here nine years ago. Public Citizen has fought for ac- cess to confidential documents in several courtrooms across the country, winning a federal appeals court ruling last fall that said public policy dictated that the confidential material in a liability case against a cigarette manufacturer should be made available to the public. "The problem has been and re- mains acute," said Collins, whose bill would permit safety regulators to in- spect the confidential documents in addition to permitting the sharing of the documents among attorneys with similar cases. "The big loser contin- ues to be public safety." 18 1 - , ciari? - Saniti7Pd CODV Approved for Release 2014/04/21 : CIA-RDP92M007321R001000040037-3 _ _