A bill to restrict public access to divorce records was revised this week to allow couples to keep much financial information secret even without a judicial finding that their privacy outweighs the public's right to scrutinize court proceedings.
Critics say the changes contradict amendments discussed earlier this month by the Assembly Judiciary Committee, which said it would add language to the controversial bill requiring judges to balance privacy against the public's interest in open courts.
Instead, the new wording appears to create a loophole. It requires the divorce court to withhold certain information at the request of either party, without a balancing test.
In addition to Social Security, home addresses and bank account numbers, the information that could be withheld on request includes account balances, annual salary or income, and net worth.
First Amendment advocates, who oppose Senate Bill 1015, say that such financial information is at the heart of divorce cases, crucial to the public's assessment of whether they are being handled fairly.
"They are the records that are essential to understanding whether justice is being served," said Tom Newton, general counsel for the California Newspaper Publishers Association.
Newton said the new wording reverses the changes discussed earlier by the Judiciary Committee.
"I truly am amazed at what they've done here," he said.
The changes are meant to strike a balance, said Steve Maviglio, a spokesman for Assembly Speaker Fabian Núñez, who has taken a lead role on the bill. Núñez is trying to forge a compromise on the bill and embraces the new wording, Maviglio said.
Even though certain records can be withheld on request, Maviglio said, others are still subject to the balancing test, including debts, child support payments and certain tax information.
"There's still a lot of balancing required," he said.
The bill has been criticized as a favor to billionaire grocery store magnate and financier Ron Burkle, a major campaign contributor to Democrats and some Republicans, who sought to seal records in his own divorce case.
The bill's author, Sen. Kevin Murray, D-Culver City, and his staff did not return phone calls. Neither did Assemblyman Dave Jones, D-Sacramento, chair of the Judiciary Committee.
Maviglio said that the changes resulted from the Judiciary Committee's agreement to come up with a set of amendments to reach a balance between public access and privacy.
"On an issue that like this attempts to balance fundamental personal and constitutional rights, of course there will always be folks on both sides upset at the outcome," he said in an e-mail. "The key is fairness and ensuring that the bill passes constitutional muster."
The Judiciary Committee added an urgency clause to the bill, meaning that it can take effect immediately if it is passed by a two-thirds vote. It is scheduled to be heard by the Assembly Appropriations Committee next week.
Murray and other backers deny that the bill is motivated by a desire to help Burkle. Instead, they say it's meant to thwart identity theft and unwarranted invasions of privacy, concerns that are so pressing that the bill should take effect immediately instead of in 2007, as it would without an urgency clause.
Burkle cited an earlier version of the law, passed in 2003, in his own divorce case. When Burkle tried to seal 28 pleadings, the Los Angeles Times and the Associated Press challenged the law.
In January, a state appeals court found that it was unconstitutional, ruling that the restrictions on the public's right of access were too broad. The ruling is on appeal to the California Supreme Court.
Murray's bill tried to overcome the appellate court's objections by requiring only financial information to be blacked out instead of entire pleadings.
But First Amendment groups said the changes made little difference.
The Judiciary Committee committed to adding language requiring judges to decide case-by-case whether privacy interests trumped the public's right of access.
Susan Seager, a First Amendment lawyer who challenged the earlier law, said the changes this week would render the bill unconstitutional again.
From the Sacramento Bee.