Current:Home > NewsMaryland judges’ personal information protected under bill passed by Senate after fatal shooting-VaTradeCoin
Maryland judges’ personal information protected under bill passed by Senate after fatal shooting
View Date:2025-01-08 16:41:41
ANNAPOLIS, Md. (AP) — Maryland judges would be able to shield their personal information online to prevent hostile people from tracking them down, under a bill the state Senate passed Thursday in response to the fatal shooting of a judge in his driveway.
The Senate voted 43-1 for the Judge Andrew F. Wilkinson Judicial Security Act, named for the Maryland circuit court judge who was shot by a man just hours after Wilkinson ruled against him in a divorce case and awarded custody of his children to his wife in October.
“He was murdered for serving our state, for doing his job and for protecting the children in a domestic case,” said Sen. Paul Corderman, a Washington County Republican who sponsored the bill, adding that “this vicious attack requires immediate action.”
Corderman noted before the vote that his own father was a Maryland judge who survived an explosion from pipe bombs sent to his home in 1989.
The measure now goes to the House, where a similar bill is pending.
State lawmakers across the U.S. have stepped up efforts to shield personal information from being publicly disclosed about judges, police, elected officeholders and various public employees.
Maryland Supreme Court Chief Justice Matthew Fader testified at a bill hearing last week that judicial officers “are in real danger, as are their families, from the ease of access to their personally identifiable information from publicly available sources, especially over the internet.”
The bill identifies specific types of personally identifiable information that would be protected from disclosure on the internet by private and government entities, including home addresses and previously unpublished phone numbers, Fader said. It protects other sensitive information that could lead someone to a judge or family members, such as license plates, social security numbers or where their children go to school.
The measure exempts information that a judge has previously made public with consent, and information that is a matter of public concern, Fader said.
“The types of information that are covered by this law will rarely be matters of public concern, but where they are, they are protected and can be disclosed,” Fader said.
Stephanie Wilkinson, the slain judge’s widow, urged lawmakers to pass the bill.
“If we do not step in and offer our judiciary the protection and the privacy they should have, we will surely water down the strength of the judicial system by getting less qualified candidates to fill those positions,” Wilkinson testified.
Judges across the U.S. have been the target of threats and sometimes violence in recent years.
President Joe Biden last year signed a bill to give around-the-clock security protection to the families of Supreme Court justices after the leak of a draft court opinion overturning the Roe v. Wade abortion-rights decision, which prompted protests outside of conservative U.S. Supreme Court justices’ homes.
Federal Judge James Bredar, who serves as the chief judge of the U.S. District Court for the District of Maryland, testified at the hearing last week that federal judges already have some protection of personal identifying information under federal law. But he said it only protects information stored or traded by commercial entities.
“There’s no protection in federal law for judges’ personal and private information that is stored in governmental repositories, but the bill you have under consideration, if passed, would fill this critical gap in our lines of defense,” Bredar said.
Bredar noted the bill would protect judges’ most sensitive personal information now stored openly by state government, including deeds and land records for homes.
“We live in a time when two phenomena are intersecting: an increasing disposition to harm judicial officers when they rule against litigants at a time when personal information such as home addresses can be acquired quickly with just a few clicks on a computer,” Bredar said.
The measure creates an Office of Information Privacy in Maryland’s Administrative Office of the Courts. The legislation also creates a task force to study the safety of judicial facilities.
Pedro Argote, the man Judge Wilkinson had ruled against in the divorce case, was found dead about a week after the shooting in a heavily wooded area nearby.
veryGood! (88645)
Related
- TikToker Campbell “Pookie” Puckett Gives Birth, Welcomes First Baby With Jett Puckett
- Texas will build camp for National Guard members in border city of Eagle Pass
- Two's company, three's allowed in the dating show 'Couple to Throuple'
- 7 killed in 24 hours of gun violence in Birmingham, Alabama, one victim is mayor's cousin
- Eva Longoria Shares She and Her Family Have Moved Out of the United States
- Taylor Swift donates $100,000 to family of woman killed in Kansas City Chiefs Super Bowl parade shooting
- Sleater-Kinney talk pronouncing their name the secret of encores
- Kansas and North Carolina dropping fast in latest men's NCAA tournament Bracketology
- Amazon's 'Cross' almost gets James Patterson detective right: Review
- Target launches new brand 'dealworthy' that will give shoppers big savings on items
Ranking
- Gold is suddenly not so glittery after Trump’s White House victory
- Tiger Woods withdraws from Genesis Invitational in second round because of illness
- Dakota Johnson's new 'Madame Web' movie is awful, but her Gucci premiere dress is perfection
- Bears great Steve McMichael contracts another infection, undergoes blood transfusion, family says
- The Office's Kate Flannery Defends John Krasinski's Sexiest Man Alive Win
- Amazon argues that national labor board is unconstitutional, joining SpaceX and Trader Joe’s
- New ban on stopping on Las Vegas Strip bridges targets people with disabilities, lawsuit alleges
- Boy who was staying at Chicago migrant shelter died of sepsis, autopsy says
Recommendation
-
Mike Tyson emerges as heavyweight champ among product pitchmen before Jake Paul fight
-
'Wait Wait' for February 17, 2024: With Not My Job guest Sleater-Kinney
-
FDA approves first cell therapy to treat aggressive forms of melanoma
-
Trump rails against New York fraud ruling as he faces fines that could exceed half-a-billion dollars
-
Colts' Kenny Moore II ridicules team's effort in loss to Bills
-
Israeli troops enter Al Nasser Hospital, Gaza's biggest hospital still functioning, amid the war with Hamas
-
FYI, Anthropologie Is Having an Extra 40% Off On Over 3,000 Sale Items (& It's Not Just Decor)
-
Virginia Lawmakers Elect Pivotal Utility Regulators To Oversee Energy Transition