TERESA J. JAMES, Magistrate Judge.
Before the Court are Plaintiffs' Motion for Leave to File Confidential Exhibits to Plaintiffs' Motion to Compel Under Seal (ECF No. 96), Defendants' Motion for Leave to File Under Seal (ECF No. 98), and Plaintiffs' Motion for Leave to File Plaintiffs' Response to Defendants' Motion for Protective Order Under Seal (ECF No. 99). For the reasons discussed below, the Court denies the motions.
The Supreme Court has recognized a "general right to inspect and copy public records and documents, including judicial records and documents."
This case involves allegations of sexual harassment and related inappropriate conduct by Defendant Brock Hutchinson, a teacher and coach at USD No. 237, Smith Center School District. Among other things, the complaint sets out multiple incidents of alleged sexual harassment and related inappropriate conduct by Hutchinson toward Plaintiff Jane Doe, while she was a minor high school student, as well as an alleged inappropriate romantic relationship between Hutchinson and another minor high school student. This second student has been deposed in this case and she is referenced throughout the parties' briefing as Jane Doe Witness.
Plaintiffs request to file their entire Motion to Compel and 11 of 13 exhibits to the motion under seal. The exhibits at issue are: third-party Jane Doe Witness's deposition, a declaration of Jane Doe Witness's father, a declaration of a former Smith Center cheerleading sponsor, a declaration of a former Smith Center teacher, a declaration of a former Smith Center student, a declaration of a former Smith Center student's parent, and Defendants' responses and objections to Plaintiffs' various discovery requests.
In their motion, Plaintiffs' very broad request for a sealed filing does not articulate any facts upon which the Court may base a finding of a public or private harm that would overcome the public's right of access. Instead, Plaintiffs argue the exhibits risk revealing third-party Jane Doe Witness's identity and the identities of the witnesses who provided declarations, but Plaintiffs never explain why it is essential to protect the identities of all these witnesses or what harm there would be if the identities were revealed. Indeed, the Court finds the public interest in having access to information significant in this case, which involves allegations that a teacher/coach has been inappropriate with at least one, if not multiple, minor high school students, and yet the school district has failed to take any disciplinary action. But Plaintiffs make no attempt to balance any potential harm of identifying these witnesses against the public's right of access.
In addition, the Amended Complaint consists of 169 numbered paragraphs which recount in some detail a number of specific instances of alleged inappropriate conduct by Hutchinson involving minor high school students, and include details such as the names of the school district superintendent, principal and a school counselor at times material to the allegations. Much of the information that the parties now request to have sealed is already in the court record and available to the public, as it should be.
The Court is mindful that it has previously entered an order allowing Plaintiff Jane Doe, who was a minor at the time this case was filed, to continue to proceed in the case by pseudonym after she turned eighteen years old.
Applying similar reasoning, the Court finds that references to Jane Doe Witness in documents and filings in this case should also be under a pseudonym. Like the plaintiff, Jane Doe Witness was a minor at all times material to the allegations regarding her in the complaint. The allegations concerning Jane Doe Witness involve matters of a highly sensitive and personal nature, which occurred while Jane Doe Witness was a minor high school student.
Plaintiffs do not articulate any explanation for why redacting these names in the exhibits to their motion would not be feasible or sufficient to protect the identities of Jane Doe, Jane Doe Witness, or other witnesses who were minor students at the time of the allegations in the complaint. For the declaration of Jane Doe Witness's father, Plaintiffs state redaction "risks rendering it unintelligible" but provide no support for this statement. The Court does not agree that redaction of names would render the document "unintelligible." Plaintiffs also state redaction of Defendants' discovery responses "may hinder the court's ability to consider the merits of Plaintiffs' motion," again with no support. The Court again does not agree that redaction would hinder its ability to consider the merits of Plaintiffs' motion.
As to the motion itself, it is twenty pages and consists primarily of legal arguments and authorities as well as other information already in the public record in this case. Plaintiffs make no argument as to why the motion itself should be filed under seal except that it "contains necessary context that would potentially identify witnesses whose information is protected pursuant to the Agreed Protective Order."
"When a piece of information or a data point qualifies for restricted access, the court should make that restriction no greater than necessary to serve the interest deserving protection."
Similar to Plaintiffs, Defendants seek a very broad order sealing their entire Memorandum in Support of Motion for Protective Order and all 12 supporting exhibits.
Finally, Plaintiffs' Motion for Leave to File Plaintiffs' Response to Defendants' Motion for Protective Order Under Seal is denied. Plaintiffs seem to have only filed this motion "out of an abundance of caution" because Defendants' have sought to seal their Memorandum in Support for Protective Order. Plaintiffs fail to provide any other justification for their request. There does not appear to be any mention of the Jane Doe Witness by name in Plaintiffs' response, and Plaintiffs do not suggest that anything in their response should be redacted. Therefore, Plaintiffs' Motion for Leave to File Plaintiffs' Response to Defendants' Motion for Protective Order Under Seal is denied