As was reported last week in the Mirror, the Virginia Supreme Court has ruled that some internal court records are not subject to Freedom of Information Act requests. By blocking FOIA requests, the Attorney General and the Governor can effectively hide their backroom dealings from the public.
The new rules bar the public from seeing records such as written personnel communications and documents used to create court orders.
Democratic Del. Mike Mullin says he’s concerned the ruling hides court finance and administration information. The court says the ruling is meant to protect the separation of the state’s judicial and legislative branches.
Legislation passed in 2018 required the state agency that oversees the courts to create a database listing what information is public. That legislation confirmed that the public is allowed to see general district court records. State law already said higher court records are supposed to be publicly available.

Respected experts say that AI is begining to be affected by some human traits such as bias, compulsive behavior, envy,…
Damn Shame...
Unfortunately Stewart, the only people that have any influence here on the shore are the people that are in government…
Arguing with someone on here is one thing, but talking about their family members proves you're an ass.
Angry? I really do not care if you and your daddy evaporated into thin air last Wednesday at noon. My…