CONTACT: Gilles Bissonnette, ACLU-NH Legal Director, gilles@aclu-nh.org, 603-224-5591 ext. 103

NASHUA, NH —Today, the ACLU of New Hampshire and six media entities filed a public records lawsuit in Hillsborough County Superior Court (Southern Division) demanding the production of a list that the N.H. Department of Justice maintains of police officers who have engaged in misconduct that reflects negatively on their credibility or trustworthiness.  The list includes at least 171 New Hampshire officers.  The Department of Justice has declined to produce this list, arguing that doing so would invade the officers’ privacy. 

The media outlets participating in this lawsuit are InDepthNH.org, the Nashua Telegraph, the Union Leader, the Concord Monitor/Valley News, the Portsmouth Herald/Foster’s Daily Democrat, and the Keene Sentinel

This list is designed to help prosecutors identify when they have a constitutional duty to produce to a defendant potentially exculpatory evidence in a police officer’s personnel file.  However, the list is kept secret and both defense attorneys and the public have no way of knowing whether local prosecutors are making the necessary disclosures to defense attorneys. 

As explained in this lawsuit, under both RSA Chapter 91-A and Part I, Article 8 of the New Hampshire Constitution, this list is a public record and should be disclosed to the public.  Any privacy interest held by the 171 officers on the list, who have engaged in misconduct that bears on their credibility or truthfulness, must yield to the central purpose of the public’s right to know: to know of any misconduct by public officials, including police officers, so the public can hold them accountable.  As the lawsuit notes: “Keeping information secret, especially when it comes to police behavior and how prosecutors do their jobs, only creates distrust and suspicion that minimizes the hard work and dedication shown by the overwhelming majority of law enforcement professionals.”

The petition can be found here: https://www.aclu-nh.org/sites/default/files/field_documents/final_-_ees_chapter_91-a_lawsuit.pdf

Gilles Bissonnette, the ACLU-NH’s Legal Director and co-counsel on the case has this statement concerning the lawsuit:

Today’s lawsuit is about government transparency and accountability. The list of police officers who have engaged in misconduct relating to their truthfulness or credibility, often known as the “Laurie List,” must be made public.  Granite Staters have a right to know when law enforcement officers engage in conduct that impedes their ability to serve the public effectively in court as a testifying witness.  Any privacy interest held by the officers in these situations is minimal, particularly in comparison to the public’s compelling interest in learning this information.  As the New Hampshire Supreme Court has repeatedly explained, the public interest in disclosure is great when it will expose potential government misconduct.