PER CURIAM.
Defendant D.E. has been indicted and charged with the sexual assault of several children. In this interlocutory appeal, defendant seeks reversal of an order that denied his request for an in camera review of school records and the Institutional Abuse Investigation Unit's (IAIU) file of a child who is not a named victim in the indictment. We affirm for the reasons that follow.
While defendant was employed as a teacher at an elementary school, several students alleged incidents of inappropriate touching and comments. Following an investigation, defendant was charged with: sexual assault,
Defendant requested an in camera review of the IAIU investigation file and the school records pertaining to the case, which was granted, and redacted records were issued to the parties in August 2012. After reviewing the redacted files, a second request was submitted by defendant for an in camera review of the same files, which resulted in additional information being released to him.
Following a dismissal of the original indictment, a superseding indictment was returned with similar charges, and the addition of two victims. Defendant made a subsequent request for an in camera review of (1) the IAIU file pertaining to the additional victims named in the superseding indictment, and (2) the school records pertinent to any accusations made by the new victims. As a result, additional redacted records were released. Defendant's motion to dismiss several counts of the indictment was denied. We affirmed.
The subject of this appeal arises from the denial of defendant's request for an in camera review of the school records and IAIU file of N.Q., a child not named in the indictment as a victim. In a written opinion dated October 5, 2015, the motion judge noted the applicable statutes, regulation and case law, and found that defendant had not offered "a reasonable basis for requesting [the school records as the child was] not a named victim in the present indictment." He further determined that defendant had failed to demonstrate "how the records of [the child] would be material to his case" and concluded that because the request was for "information ... not essential to the resolution of an issue before the [c]ourt." As such the motion judge denied the review of both the school files and IAIU records. We granted leave to appeal the interlocutory order.
We review the denial of defendant's application under an abuse of discretion standard.
In addressing the school records, we note that "[a] child's school records are confidential, and access to their contents is limited."
We find that defendant has failed to provide the required factual predicate to justify an in camera review of a child's records who is not named in the indictment as a victim. Other than a generalized argument that the records may "shed some light on the allegations against him," defendant does not articulate any particularized need for the review of school records pertaining to this child.
As to the IAIU file, pursuant to
Restricting the availability of these records encourages "the reporting of child abuse."
We therefore find that the motion judge's decision to deny a review of the records pertaining to a child not named in the indictment or as a victim in this case was justified by the lack of a factual predicate or showing of a particularized need.
Affirmed.