State ex rel. Plain Dealer Publishing Co. v. Geauga Cty. Court of Common Pleas, Juv. Div.

2000 Ohio 35, 90 Ohio St. 3d 79
CourtOhio Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 11, 2000
Docket2000-0439 & 2000-0442
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 2000 Ohio 35 (State ex rel. Plain Dealer Publishing Co. v. Geauga Cty. Court of Common Pleas, Juv. Div.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State ex rel. Plain Dealer Publishing Co. v. Geauga Cty. Court of Common Pleas, Juv. Div., 2000 Ohio 35, 90 Ohio St. 3d 79 (Ohio 2000).

Opinion

[This opinion has been published in Ohio Official Reports at 90 Ohio St.3d 79.]

THE STATE EX REL. PLAIN DEALER PUBLISHING COMPANY v. GEAUGA COUNTY COURT OF COMMON PLEAS, JUVENILE DIVISION. THE STATE EX REL. NEW WORLD COMMUNICATIONS OF OHIO, INC. v. GEAUGA COUNTY COURT OF COMMON PLEAS, JUVENILE DIVISION, ET AL. [Cite as State ex rel. Plain Dealer Publishing Co. v. Geauga Cty. Court of Common Pleas, Juv. Div., 2000-Ohio-35.] Prohibition—Delinquency proceeding in juvenile court closed to the public and news media—No qualified constitutional right of access—Juvenile delinquency proceedings are neither presumed open nor closed—Person seeking closure has burden of proof that closure is warranted—Abuse of discretion shown—Writ granted. (Nos. 00-439 and 00-442—Submitted August 9, 2000—Decided August 11, 2000.) IN PROHIBITION. __________________ {¶ 1} These consolidated cases involve the propriety of a decision by respondents, Geauga County Court of Common Pleas, Juvenile Division, and Judge Charles E. Henry, to deny the public, including the media, access to a delinquency proceeding in the juvenile court. Relator Plain Dealer Publishing Company (“Plain Dealer”) owns and publishes The Plain Dealer, a Cleveland, Ohio newspaper. Relator New World Communications of Ohio, Inc. (“New World”) owns and operates Channel 8, a Cleveland television station. According to media reports, including those issued by relators, the underlying juvenile delinquency proceeding is based upon the following facts. {¶ 2} On the night of February 18, 2000, at approximately 11:00 p.m., three teenagers, Wesley Pearson (age nineteen), J.H. (seventeen), and Marcus Moorer SUPREME COURT OF OHIO

(fifteen), entered a Clark Oil gasoline station and convenience store in Chester Township, Geauga County, Ohio, to rob it. The police reported that the three teenagers also planned to kill Danielle Kovacic, the station’s nineteen-year-old clerk, and her seventeen-year-old girlfriend, who was present at the station to give Kovacic a ride home, because Kovacic and her friend could identify them. Moorer shot Kovacic twice in her chest, followed her as she staggered to a back room, and then shot her once more between her eyes, killing her. Moorer also shot twice at Kovacic’s friend, missing her once and grazing her slightly the other time. When Moorer ran out of bullets, he, Pearson, and J.H. took the money from the station and fled. The surviving girl identified them, and they were arrested shortly thereafter. {¶ 3} A grand jury indicted Pearson, the nineteen-year-old teenager, on two counts of aggravated murder with death-penalty specifications and one count each of attempted aggravated murder, attempted kidnapping, and aggravated robbery. Pearson entered a plea of not guilty to the charges. {¶ 4} Delinquency charges were filed in juvenile court against the other two teenagers, J.H. and Moorer, who, unlike Pearson, were juveniles at the time the crimes were committed. J.H. was charged with being a delinquent child because of her alleged commission of aggravated murder, attempted aggravated murder, and aggravated robbery. The Geauga County Prosecuting Attorney moved to transfer jurisdiction of the cases involving J.H. and Moorer to the General Division of the Geauga County Court of Common Pleas so that they could be tried as adults. {¶ 5} Judge Henry closed access to the public, including the media, for the detention hearings in juvenile court concerning J.H. and Moorer and instructed the media to submit written requests for access to further proceedings involving the juveniles. {¶ 6} On February 25, Judge Henry conducted a hearing on the requests of the media, including relators, for access to the delinquency proceedings in the J.H.

2 January Term, 2000

and Moorer cases. By the time of the hearing, the names of all three teenagers had been reported by the media, and pictures of the teenagers had appeared in newspapers and on television. At the hearing, Moorer’s attorney specified that he did not object to the media being present for additional juvenile court proceedings. Moorer’s counsel stated that Moorer’s privacy and confidentiality concerns had “already been compromised in the media” and that “access by the media would provide more accurate information.” The prosecuting attorney’s office stated that it would leave the issue of closing J.H. and Moorer’s juvenile delinquency proceedings to Judge Henry’s discretion. {¶ 7} J.H.’s attorney, however, objected to opening the proceedings involving J.H. to the public because he did not believe that it would be in J.H.’s “best interest to have the case tried in the newspapers.” But J.H.’s attorney failed to present any evidence in support of his contention. In fact, no evidence, testimonial or otherwise, was presented by either the prosecutor, the juveniles, or the media, including relators, during Judge Henry’s closure hearing. {¶ 8} At the conclusion of the hearing, Judge Henry issued an order opening the Moorer case to the public, including the press, subject to certain local rule restrictions, and took the issue of whether to close the J.H. case under consideration. {¶ 9} On February 29, Judge Henry ruled that “[p]ublic access to the proceedings and records of [the J.H.] case [is] denied with the exception that the complaint and substantive decisions of [the Juvenile] Court, redacted to remove identifying information, shall be made available to the public.” In so ruling, Judge Henry noted that public interest in the case was “understandably intense” because it was the first allegation of murder by a local child in over twenty years. Judge Henry further noted that in the court’s “institutional memory,” delinquency proceedings had always been presumed closed to the public, and the most important protection afforded juveniles was the confidentiality of delinquency proceedings. Judge Henry reasoned that although he was not “concerned that public access to the

3 SUPREME COURT OF OHIO

proceedings would negatively affect the fairness of the proceedings,” he believed that the seventeen-year-old juvenile, J.H., presumed innocent of the delinquency charges until a court finding of delinquency, would suffer “self-evident” harm if her case were conducted in public. (Emphasis sic.) Judge Henry concluded that “[i]n weighing the competing interests in this case * * * the state’s interests in protecting the juvenile from harm and in preserving the system it has created for rehabilitating its youth outweighs the public’s interest in viewing these proceedings.” {¶ 10} On March 6 and 7, relators filed these actions for writs of prohibition to prevent Judge Henry and the juvenile court from enforcing their February 29, 2000 order barring the public and the press from the delinquency proceedings involving J.H. On March 9, we granted an alternative writ and issued a schedule for the presentation of evidence and briefs. 88 Ohio St.3d 1441, 724 N.E.2d 1154. {¶ 11} We subsequently consolidated the cases and granted relators’ emergency motion to amend the alternative writ so that it would also apply to the Moorer delinquency case. 88 Ohio St.3d 1455, 725 N.E.2d 672; 88 Ohio St.3d 1494, 727 N.E.2d 919. The latter amendment was necessitated by Moorer’s subsequent attempt to withdraw his prior consent to open proceedings in his case. On May 2 and 3, Judge Henry held an amenability hearing in the Moorer case that was open to the public, and on May 4, he ordered that Moorer be bound over to the general division of the common pleas court to be tried as an adult. As a result of these subsequent developments, relators agreed that their claims in this case do not involve the Moorer proceedings. We denied respondents’ motion to expedite a ruling in this case. 89 Ohio St.3d 1445, 731 N.E.2d 1134. {¶ 12} This cause is now before the court for a consideration of the merits. __________________ Baker & Hostetler L.L.P., Louis A. Colombo, Marcia E.

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Bluebook (online)
2000 Ohio 35, 90 Ohio St. 3d 79, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-plain-dealer-publishing-co-v-geauga-cty-court-of-common-ohio-2000.