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Article published Dec 1, 2003
Greenville going online, posting court records
Associated Press
GREENVILLE -- Records from one of the
state's busiest court systems soon will be just a few clicks away on the
Internet.Starting early next year, the Greenville County Clerk of Court's office
will put criminal and civil court records online, joining a handful of South
Carolina counties that have their court records on the Internet. State Supreme
Court Chief Justice Jean Toal said the ultimate goal is for all counties to go
online and link to one another.While the records have always been available to
the public at the courthouse, they weren't as public as they will be now, said
Anita L. Allen-Castellito, law and philosophy professor at the University of
Pennsylvania specializing in Internet privacy."It's more than just making what's
already public more public," she said. "It's making what was functionally
private now functionally public."That wider availability worries people who make
money from researching court records, including Jimmy Davis, owner of A-1
Investigations in Easley.Davis drives from one Upstate courthouse to the next,
running background checks on as many as 2,000 people a month at the request of
prospective employers and landlords. The comfortable living that work makes for
Davis and his wife is threatened as more counties put those records online.Davis
and his wife now get that information to their clients within 24 to 36 hours.
With online access, their clients can get it as fast as their browser
allows."Why would they need a middle man?" Davis said. "A person can just stay
at the computer and run anything."There are privacy concerns, too.Putting those
records out there for everyone will greatly reduce the amount of anonymity
people now enjoy, especially those who have something they may want to keep from
public consumption, Allen-Castellito said."It will definitely change the sense
of privacy that currently surrounds people with bankruptcy, divorces, marriages,
child-custody fights, lawsuits, civil suits and so forth," she
said.Allen-Castellito said putting the records online should not pose identity
problems as long as vital numbers are arranged properly for
publication.Greenville County Clerk of Court Paul Wickensimer said social
security numbers will be blocked from public view and, for now, the documents
themselves will not be available online.But other information will be available.
If a person has ever been charged as an adult and their record has not been
expunged, their street address, race, age and offense all will appear on the
screen.Sometimes the records of those who paid a fee to have them expunged could
appear, according to Rick Hill, a programmer for Anderson County's Management
Information Systems, which put Anderson County court records online earlier this
year.Anderson County's Web site has been extremely popular, Hill said. The
records have been searched more than 662,000 times since it began in
January.Charleston County has been putting its records on the Internet since
1998, said Robert Duncan, operations manager for the county's clerk of court.Not
only does it make it easier for the attorneys, he said people have told him
they've used the program to run background checks on doctors and
contractors.