North Jersey Media Group, Inc. v. Township of Lyndhurst , 441 N.J. Super. 70 ( 2015 )


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  •                 NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE
    APPROVAL OF THE APPELLATE DIVISION
    SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW JERSEY
    APPELLATE DIVISION
    DOCKET NO. A-2523-14T1
    NORTH JERSEY MEDIA GROUP, INC.,
    Plaintiff-Respondent,             APPROVED FOR PUBLICATION
    v.                                          June 11, 2015
    APPELLATE DIVISION
    TOWNSHIP OF LYNDHURST, HELEN
    POLITO, RMC, in her capacity
    as the Custodian of Records for
    the Township of Lyndhurst,
    BOROUGH OF NORTH ARLINGTON,
    KATHLEEN MOORE, in her capacity
    as the Custodian of Records for
    the Borough of North Arlington,
    BOROUGH OF RUTHERFORD, MARGARET M.
    SCANLON, RMC, in her capacity as
    the Custodian of Records for the
    Borough of Rutherford, BERGEN
    COUNTY POLICE DEPARTMENT, CAPTAIN
    UWE MALAKAS, in his capacity as
    Custodian of Records for the
    Bergen County Police Department,
    NEW JERSEY STATE POLICE and
    SERGEANT HARRY ROCHESKEY, in his
    capacity as Custodian of Records
    for the New Jersey State Police,
    Defendants-Appellants.
    ______________________________________
    Argued April 21, 2015 – Decided June 11, 2015
    Before Judges Messano, Ostrer and Sumners.
    On appeal from an interlocutory order of the
    Superior Court of New Jersey, Law Division,
    Bergen County, Docket No. L-19048-14.
    Jeffrey S. Jacobson, Director, Division of
    Law, argued the cause for appellants New
    Jersey State Police and Sergeant Harry
    Rocheskey (John J. Hoffman, Acting Attorney
    General, attorney; Mr. Jacobson and Raymond
    R. Chance, III, Assistant Attorney General,
    of counsel; Daniel M. Vannella, Deputy
    Attorney General, on the briefs).
    Richard J. DiLascio, attorney for appellants
    Township of Lyndhurst and Helen Polito,
    joins in the brief of appellants New Jersey
    State Police and Sergeant Harry Rocheskey.
    Rubenstein, Meyerson, Fox, Mancinelli, Conte
    & Bern, P.A., attorneys for appellants
    Borough of North Arlington and Kathleen
    Moore, join in the brief of appellants New
    Jersey State Police and Sergeant Harry
    Rocheskey.
    LaPorta & LaPorta, attorneys for appellants
    Borough   of  Rutherford  and   Margaret  M.
    Scanlon, join in the brief of appellants New
    Jersey State Police and Sergeant Harry
    Rocheskey.
    Julien X. Neals, Bergen County Counsel,
    attorney for appellants Bergen County Police
    Department and Captain Uwe Malakas, joins in
    the brief of appellants New Jersey State
    Police and Sergeant Harry Rocheskey.
    Samuel J. Samaro argued the cause for
    respondent North Jersey Media Group Inc.
    (Pashman  Stein   and  Jennifer  A.  Borg,
    attorneys; Mr. Samaro and Ms. Borg, of
    counsel; Mr. Samaro and CJ Griffin, on the
    briefs).
    American   Civil  Liberties  Union  of   New
    Jersey, attorneys for amicus curiae American
    Civil Liberties Union of New Jersey (Edward
    Barocas, Jeanne LoCicero and Iris Bromberg,
    on the brief).
    2                         A-2523-14T1
    Loccke, Correia & Bukosky, attorneys for
    amicus   curiae  State   Troopers Fraternal
    Association and Bergen County Policemen's
    Benevolent Association Conference (Michael
    A. Bukosky, on the brief).
    The opinion of the court was delivered by
    OSTRER, J.A.D.
    This appeal, by leave granted, concerns the public's right
    to access records pertaining to a criminal investigation under
    the Open Public Records Act (OPRA), N.J.S.A. 47:1A-1 to -13, and
    the    common   law   right   to   inspect   government   records.     The
    Attorney General — on behalf of three municipalities, the Bergen
    County Police Department, the New Jersey State Police (NJSP),
    and their records custodians — appeals from the trial court's
    order compelling disclosure pursuant to both OPRA and the common
    law.     Having reviewed the State's arguments in light of the
    record and applicable principles of law, we conclude the trial
    court    misinterpreted       OPRA's   provisions   governing   criminal
    investigatory records.         The court also erred in declining to
    consider the State's proposed ex parte showing of why releasing
    certain requested documents would undermine its investigation
    and be inimical to the public interest.         As a result, we reverse
    the court's order compelling release of the requested documents,
    and remand for reconsideration in light of the principles we set
    forth below.
    3                         A-2523-14T1
    I.
    Plaintiff       North    Jersey    Media       Group,    Inc.       (NJMG)    is   the
    owner    of    numerous       print     and       web-based     news      organizations,
    including The Record, a general circulation daily newspaper, and
    the South Bergenite, a weekly community newspaper.                                Reporters
    for   these    two    publications       sought       various       records   of    local,
    county, and state law enforcement agencies (LEAs) pertaining to
    the fatal police shooting of a criminal suspect, Kashad Ashford.
    The shooting followed a high-speed chase of Ashford and his
    passenger Jemmaine T. Bynes across multiple municipalities.
    The     records     custodians          of    the   LEAs      did     not    respond
    consistently.         None provided documents before NJMG filed its
    November 3, 2014, complaint.                  Thereafter, NJMG received 9-1-1
    call recordings, various redacted police documents containing
    computer      aided   dispatch        (CAD)       reports,    and    a    uniform     force
    report (UFR).1        However, the defendants continue to deny access
    to many other requested documents, or to even acknowledge they
    exist.
    1
    At oral argument, the Director of the                             Division of Law
    represented that a further search of the LEAs'                       files uncovered a
    UFR, which the State disclosed the preceding                         week.   The State
    did so pursuant to O'Shea v. Township of West                        Milford, 410 N.J.
    Super. 371 (App. Div. 2009). The document is                         not in the record
    before us.
    4                                    A-2523-14T1
    The events leading to the fatal shooting are set forth in a
    September    16,    2014,      press    release       of   the   Attorney    General's
    Office    (OAG);     a    December     9,     2014,     certification    of       Cortney
    Lawrence, the NJSP's lead detective in the Attorney General's
    Shooting Response Team (SRT) investigation; and a December 10,
    2014, certification of New Jersey Division of Criminal Justice
    (DCJ)      Lieutenant         Robert         McGrath,       Detective       Lawrence's
    supervisor.2        A North Arlington resident called 9-1-1 at 2:12
    a.m. on September 16 to report an attempted burglary of her
    vehicle from her driveway.             A North Arlington patrol vehicle was
    dispatched to the scene to interview the resident.                          Meanwhile,
    additional      officers       from    the       police    departments       of    North
    Arlington, Lyndhurst, Rutherford, and Bergen County joined the
    investigation       into      the   attempted       burglary.3       Officers        soon
    spotted    an   SUV      matching      the    information        provided.        Police
    determined the SUV was stolen.
    Police attempted to perform a motor vehicle stop, but the
    driver, later identified as Ashford, refused.                      Instead, Ashford
    led      officers        on    a    high-speed          chase     through         several
    2
    Det. Lawrence's statement was based on the detective's
    "review[] [of] all the evidence and investigative materials in
    the related file."   Lt. McGrath did not specify the basis for
    his "understanding" of the events leading to the shooting.
    3
    Lt. McGrath stated that NJSP officers also were involved in the
    investigation although he did not specify when that occurred.
    5                                A-2523-14T1
    municipalities.     At one point, Ashford attempted to ram a police
    vehicle head-on.          He later crashed into a guardrail on Ridge
    Road at Route 3 in Lyndhurst.
    The press release and the detective's certification present
    different versions of what happened next.                   According to the
    press release, more than one officer fired upon Ashford after he
    spun his tires and allegedly backed his SUV at the officers,
    ramming a police vehicle.4          Det. Lawrence's certification issued
    nearly three months later was less definitive.                     The detective
    stated Ashford and Bynes revved the engine "as if to force their
    way out"; police had surrounded the vehicle; and ultimately,
    Ashford    was   shot   and     killed.       The   detective   did   not    assert
    Ashford    backed   up,    or   rammed    a    police   vehicle,    nor   did     the
    detective state how many officers shot at Ashford.5
    4
    The press release states:
    Police positioned their vehicles around the
    SUV in an attempt to apprehend the vehicle's
    occupants, but the driver put the car in
    reverse, spinning the tires of the vehicle
    until the roadway was filled with smoke.
    The driver allegedly backed the SUV at the
    officers,   ramming   a    police   vehicle.
    Officers fired upon the driver of the SUV,
    striking him.
    5
    Det. Lawrence certified: "Even after becoming stuck in the
    wall, the suspects revved their engines at high RPM, as if to
    force their way out.     Police vehicles and law enforcement
    (continued)
    6                                 A-2523-14T1
    Ashford       was    fatally        shot    at    around      2:27     a.m.,    and
    pronounced dead at a nearby hospital at 7:05 a.m.                              Officers
    found   a     .357-caliber       Magnum     handgun     and     a   facemask    in    the
    vehicle.       Bynes      was    arrested    at   the    scene      and    charged   with
    weapons     offenses       and    receiving       stolen      property.        The    SRT
    immediately assumed control of the investigation.                          According to
    released      CAD   reports,       NJSP     investigators        began     interviewing
    officers that morning.
    Following the shooting, The Record reporter Abbott Koloff
    and   South    Bergenite        reporter    Meghan      Grant    submitted     separate
    requests under OPRA and the common law regarding the incident.
    On September 16, 2014, Koloff asked Lyndhurst, North Arlington,
    Rutherford, and the Bergen County Police Department to produce:
    1.   Incident Reports, Operation Reports,
    Investigation    Reports,   and/or    Offense
    Reports (including supplemental reports);
    2.   Log book notations, daily activity
    logs, daily bulletins, daily statistical
    sheets, tally sheets, vehicle logs;
    3.   Audio recordings, and if available,
    written transcripts of such audio recordings
    of all police and law enforcement dispatches
    and recorded conversations including all 911
    calls;
    (continued)
    vehicles positioned around the suspects' vehicle.     Ultimately,
    driver Kashad Ashford was fatally wounded by gunshot."
    7                                  A-2523-14T1
    4.   Arrest reports for individual(s) in the
    incidents;
    5.   All   information   required  to   [be]
    released by law enforcement under Section
    3(b) of the New Jersey Open Public Records
    Act, N.J.S.A. 47:1A-3(b) where (i) an arrest
    has not yet been made; and (ii) where an
    arrest has been made;
    6.      Use of force reports;
    7.   Audio and Video recordings from the
    mobile recorders (MVRs) in the vehicles of
    law enforcement personnel;
    8.   Motor Vehicle Accident         Reports,   Crash
    and Investigation Reports;
    9.      Computer Aided Dispatch reports;
    10.     Mobile Data Terminal Printouts (MDTs).
    The same day, Koloff requested the following records from the
    State Police:
    1.   use   of   force    report[;]   2.   audio
    recordings of law enforcement dispatches and
    recorded conversations including 911 calls;
    3. audio and video recordings from mobile
    recorders   (MVRs)    in    vehicles   of   law
    enforcement personnel; 4. computer aided
    dispatch reports[;] 5. arrest reports[;] 6.
    Motor Vehicle Accident Reports, Crash and
    Investigation    Reports[;]      7.    incident
    reports, operation reports, investigation
    reports   and  offense     reports   (including
    supplemental reports)[.]
    Grant's     September   17,   2014,   request   asked   Lyndhurst   to
    disclose the following documents "as they are created":
    8                            A-2523-14T1
    -All police reports concerning the Sept. 16,
    2014 pursuit of suspects later identified as
    Kashad Ashford and Jemmaine Bynes.
    -All use of force                reports by         Lyndhurst
    officers concerning              the Sept.          16, 2014
    shooting.
    -Any additional documentation kept by the
    Lyndhurst Police Department concerning the
    Sept. 16, 2014 pursuit of suspects later
    identified as Kashad Ashford and Jemmaine
    Bynes and shooting.
    -Any video tape (or a transcription of the
    video tape) obtained during the course of
    the investigation into the Sept. 16 pursuit
    and shooting.
    Although the responses varied, none of the LEAs' records
    custodians produced responsive documents before NJMG filed its
    complaint.       Lyndhurst's records custodian denied both reporters'
    requests    on    September      25,   2014,       based   on   the   OAG's    ongoing
    investigation.         Before doing that, the custodian had referred
    the records request to OAG, which referred it back to Lyndhurst.
    North Arlington's records custodian wrote to Koloff on September
    25, 2014, stating that his requests were subject to an "ongoing
    [OAG]   investigation"         and     the       OAG   would    determine     what   to
    release.         The    Bergen       County       Police   Department's        records
    custodian likewise denied Koloff's request based on the criminal
    investigatory records exemption.
    Rutherford's borough clerk also denied Grant's request in a
    September    23,       2014,   letter,           stating   it    pertained     to    an
    9                                A-2523-14T1
    investigation in progress, and release would jeopardize persons'
    safety, the investigation, or would otherwise be inappropriate.
    The clerk provided a statement from the Rutherford Police Chief,
    disclosing     that   the   department        generated   one    CAD    entry,       two
    incident reports, a daily activity log, and a copy of radio and
    telephone transmissions, which were to be turned over to the
    Attorney General's Office.              The police chief stated that all
    further information requests should be directed to the OAG, at
    the request of Lt. McGrath, the supervisor.6
    NJSP     postponed     its   response     three   times,    the     last     time
    promising to respond by November 6, 2014.                  As late as October
    23, 2014, the NJSP records custodian wrote that he was "still
    trying   to    determine    if    the   investigation     into    the        death    of
    Kashad   Ashford      was   conducted     by     the   NJSP."7         The    records
    6
    It is unclear from the record whether a similar letter was sent
    to Koloff.
    7
    The   records  custodian   asserted  a  lack   of  knowledge,
    notwithstanding that the State Police's involvement was publicly
    acknowledged in the OAG's September 16, 2014, press release.
    Entitled "Attorney General's Shooting Response Team Investigates
    Fatal Shooting in Rutherford Involving State Police & Local
    Officers," the release stated:
    Under an Attorney General Directive, the
    Shooting Response Team, made up of deputy
    attorneys   general,   detectives    of    the
    Division of Criminal Justice, and detectives
    of the State Police Major Crime Unit, are
    dispatched   to    the   scene    to    handle
    (continued)
    10                                   A-2523-14T1
    custodian stated his search was impeded by the lack of a "case
    number."
    NJMG's two-count complaint alleged violations of OPRA and
    the common law right to know.            NJMG sought an order compelling
    the release, or an in camera review, of documents believed to be
    exempt; and fees and costs pursuant to N.J.S.A. 47:1A-6.                  The
    court entered an Order to Show Cause (OSC) returnable December
    12, 2014, which was adjourned to January 9, 2015, at the OAG's
    request.
    After    the     complaint   was   filed,   Rutherford   and   the   OAG
    released documents.        On December 5, 2014, Rutherford's counsel
    wrote that he determined disclosure was appropriate under OPRA
    "despite initially being advised to the contrary by the New
    Jersey     Attorney    General's    Office."       The   counsel    provided
    unredacted copies of: a CAD report, a property report, a compact
    disc (CD) containing the recordings of three phone calls from
    the public regarding the incident, and a CD containing "Radio
    Transmissions from Rutherford PD Case # 14-19344, 9-16-14."8              The
    (continued)
    investigations of shootings involving state
    troopers or officers employed by county
    prosecutors as detectives/investigators or
    members of county task forces.
    8
    Actual playable copies of the recordings were not included in
    the record on appeal.      Instead, the State simply provided
    (continued)
    11                          A-2523-14T1
    CAD report listed the names of the officers dispatched, their
    car numbers, along with their response times, and the name of
    the   dispatcher.      It    included       an   entry    that     all    additional
    information and reports were to be generated by the OAG.
    Rutherford's     attorney      also    provided      three      investigation
    reports, which were redacted.9              A Vaughn10 index was provided,
    explaining   the     records   were    redacted      for    three        reasons:    to
    protect    against    disclosing      personal      information          that     would
    violate   "reasonable     privacy     interests,"        pursuant        to   N.J.S.A.
    47:1A-1 and Burnett v. County of Bergen, 
    198 N.J. 408
    (2009); to
    shield    criminal    investigatory     records,         pursuant      to     N.J.S.A.
    47:1A-1.1;    and    to     shield    records      related       to      an     ongoing
    investigation, the release of which would be detrimental to the
    (continued)
    photocopies of the CDs.         Rutherford's counsel stated they were
    unredacted.
    9
    The reports consisted of: (1) a two-page supplemental
    investigation report, dated September 16, 2014, by a detective
    who responded to the scene of "a police involved shooting," and
    reported taking possession of the handgun found in the suspect's
    vehicle; (2) a two-page supplemental investigation report, dated
    September 16, 2014, by a detective-sergeant, who reported that
    he responded at 3:27 a.m. to the police-involved shooting,
    conferred with other officers and the police chief, and later
    made a copy of phone and radio recordings, which were to be
    turned over to the NJSP; and (3) a November 10, 2014,
    supplemental investigation report by the detective-sergeant,
    which was almost completely redacted.
    10
    Vaughn v. Rosen, 
    484 F.2d 820
    , 826-28 (D.C. Cir. 1973), cert.
    denied, 
    415 U.S. 977
    , 
    94 S. Ct. 1564
    , 
    39 L. Ed. 2d 873
    (1974).
    12                                     A-2523-14T1
    public interest, under N.J.S.A. 47:1A-3(a) and (b).                                  Rutherford
    Police Department telephone and radio recordings were placed on
    a CD-R, which was turned over to the NJSP.
    On   December       22,    2014,       the     OAG    released       a    9-1-1          call
    recording, and what its counsel described as "CAD reports" in
    the possession of the DCJ.                   The dispatch reports were actually
    contained within other documents, which were to varying degrees,
    redacted without explanation.                  These included: a North Arlington
    Police Department Investigation Report, which included mostly
    unredacted incident details, and completely redacted sections
    entitled    "name     details"         and    "narrative      details";         a     Lyndhurst
    Police Department Dispatch Log, with the officer name section
    redacted;      a    Bergen    County         Police    Department         Incident          Report
    Form, which included unredacted information about the incident,
    but    redacted      the     names     of     the     officers      who     generated           and
    approved the report, and included a blacked-out half page.                                       The
    State   did    not    provide      a    Vaughn      index,    nor     did       it    expressly
    confirm whether the remaining requested documents existed.
    In     its    response          to     the     OSC,     the        State        provided
    certifications from Det. Lawrence and Lt. McGrath.                               In addition
    to setting forth details of the events leading to the shooting,
    Det.    Lawrence      stated      that       the    SRT     assumed    control             of   the
    investigation        "once       the    shooting       took    place."               The    SRT's
    13                                      A-2523-14T1
    investigation of the shooting, as well as its investigation into
    Bynes's actions, were ongoing at the time of the certification,
    on December 10, 2014.           However, Bynes, who was released on bail,
    was   fatally    shot     in    Newark    in    March   2015.11       Det.    Lawrence
    asserted that all documents generated after the initial 9-1-1
    call were investigatory.
    Lt.    McGrath      generally      explained      the   Attorney       General's
    Directive       2006-5,        which     established      the       procedures      for
    investigating fatal police shootings, and the role of the SRT,
    which operates independently from the ordinary chain of command.
    Lt. McGrath stated that consistent with the directive, the SRT
    assumed control of the investigation of the shooting, and the
    underlying alleged criminal actions of Ashford and Bynes.                         Also
    consistent with the directive, Lt. McGrath expected the matter
    to be presented to a State Grand Jury after the SRT completed
    its    investigation.              DCJ     maintained         all    evidence       and
    investigative materials.           Lt. McGrath asserted the investigation
    was ongoing.
    With    respect      to    the   reporters'       document     requests,      Lt.
    McGrath     conceded      the    reporters      were    entitled     to   the    9-1-1
    11
    See Dan Ivers, Newark murder victim was second suspect in
    Lyndhurst fatal police shooting, NJ.com (Mar. 12, 2015, 5:29
    PM),     http://www.nj.com/essex/index.ssf/2015/03/newark_murder_
    victim_was_second_suspect_in_lyndhur.html.
    14                                 A-2523-14T1
    recordings and related CAD reports, which the OAG released soon
    thereafter with redactions in the case of the CAD reports.                     He
    explained the initial 9-1-1 recording was not a product of the
    investigation,   although     the    call   prompted     it.     He    did    not
    explain the basis for releasing the CAD reports.                   Lt. McGrath
    asserted that releasing "any of the other requested records . . .
    would   irrevocably   compromise      the   ongoing    investigation."         He
    contended     that    release       would    "corrupt     the      independent
    recollections of witnesses," and lead witnesses to alter prior
    statements,    resulting     in     inconsistent      statements      that    may
    benefit a defendant.       However, Lt. McGrath did not confirm which
    of the other requested documents were actually withheld, and
    which simply did not exist.
    Lt. McGrath sought the opportunity to present, under seal
    and ex parte, "case-specific examples of how the threats to the
    integrity of the ongoing investigation and the negative impact
    of same on the public interest, would be evident in release of
    the records being sought for production here."                  He stated he
    could   not   provide    a    more     specific    justification        without
    disclosing the information the OAG sought to keep confidential.
    On the return date of the OSC, the trial court concluded
    NJMG was entitled to all the records requested pursuant to both
    OPRA and the common law, effective upon entry of the court's
    15                                A-2523-14T1
    order.     The court denied the OAG's motion to review an ex parte
    certification from Lt. McGrath.
    In its decision, the court reviewed the factual history of
    the case, and the various governmental entities' responses to
    NJMG's OPRA requests.          The court held that redacting documents
    was equivalent to the denial of access, citing Newark Morning
    Ledger Co. v. New Jersey Sports & Exposition Authority, 423 N.J.
    Super. 140, 148 (App. Div. 2011).
    Addressing      NJMG's         access    rights     under     OPRA,   the   court
    concluded    that      neither      the     criminal        investigatory    records
    exception,    N.J.S.A.       47:1A-1.1,      nor     the     ongoing   investigation
    exception,    N.J.S.A.       47:1A-3(a),          shielded    the   documents    from
    release.     The former provision excludes "criminal investigatory
    records" from the definition of government records subject to
    disclosure under OPRA, unless the records are "required by law
    to be made, maintained or kept on file."                    N.J.S.A. 47:1A-1.1.
    The     court   concluded        the    governmental       entities   failed    to
    meet their burden to show the "required by law" exception-to-
    the-exception did not apply.                 The court held that UFRs were
    required    by   law    to    be    made,        pursuant    to   Attorney   General
    directives, which have the force of law, citing 
    O'Shea, supra
    ,
    410 N.J. Super. at 382.            The court held that 9-1-1 calls, police
    dispatch records, and CAD entries were also "required by law"
    16                               A-2523-14T1
    documents, citing Serrano v. South Brunswick Township, 358 N.J.
    Super.     352,    364    (App.     Div.     2003),     N.J.S.A.    52:17C-1,      and
    N.J.A.C. 17:24-2.4.            Motor vehicle accident reports were not
    exempt from disclosure because they must be made public pursuant
    to N.J.S.A. 39:4-131.           As for the remaining documents, the court
    held that local police general orders and policies have the
    force of law necessary to remove the records from the exemption,
    citing 
    O'Shea, supra
    , 410 N.J. Super. at 382-83, and the State
    failed to demonstrate by competent evidence that those orders or
    policies did not apply.
    The    court       also   rejected      the    State's      reliance    on    the
    "ongoing investigation" exception, which applies only if release
    of   documents      would      be   "inimical      to     the   public     interest."
    N.J.S.A. 47:1-3(a).            The court was unpersuaded by the State's
    general argument that release of investigatory materials would
    taint witnesses' independent recollections.                     The court declined
    to consider Lt. McGrath's proposed ex parte submission.                            The
    court held that whether to consider documents under seal was a
    discretionary       decision,       citing      Hammock    ex    rel.    Hammock    v.
    Hoffmann-LaRoche, Inc., 
    142 N.J. 356
    , 380 (1995).                          The judge
    concluded Lt. McGrath had failed to provide sufficient proof of
    injury     if     the    proposed    second      certification      were     publicly
    released.
    17                                A-2523-14T1
    The court likened the State's arguments to the claim that
    release of investigatory documents would taint potential jurors,
    which the court stated was rejected in Courier News v. Hunterdon
    County    Prosecutor's      Office,         358       N.J.    Super.       373    (App.    Div.
    2003).        Additionally,         the      court           discussed       the     public's
    substantial       interest        in      police         shootings          of     suspects,
    particularly given recent incidents in Ferguson, Missouri, and
    Staten Island, New York.            The court noted that significant time
    had passed since the shooting of Ashford, and witness statements
    were likely already obtained.
    The court also held that the OAG failed to comply with the
    OPRA     provision    requiring         release          of     certain          information,
    specified    in    the     law,    absent         a    showing       the    release       would
    jeopardize persons' safety, an investigation, or was otherwise
    inappropriate.       N.J.S.A. 47:1A-3(b).                    The court determined the
    press    release     was    insufficient,              and    release       of     underlying
    documents was required.
    The court found the responding entities failed to comply
    with the timelines mandated by OPRA.                     Also, the court concluded
    NJMG was entitled to fees under OPRA and asked the parties to
    attempt to agree upon a "reasonable quantum of fees."                                 Absent
    agreement,     the   court        set   a    schedule          for     submission         of   a
    certification of services, as well as a response.
    18                                       A-2523-14T1
    Finally, the court addressed NJMG's rights under the common
    law right of public access.             Citing Keddie v. Rutgers, 
    148 N.J. 36
    (1997), the court identified the three predicates                            to the
    common law right of access.               As stated in Keddie, the three
    predicates    are:     "(1)    the     records    must      be    common-law    public
    documents;    (2)     the     person    [or    entity]       seeking    access     must
    establish an interest in the subject matter of the material; and
    (3) the citizen's right to access must be balanced against the
    State's interest in preventing disclosure."                      
    Id. at 50
    (internal
    quotation marks and citations omitted).                     The trial court noted
    that no party disputed that the requested documents were common
    law public records.            Moreover, NJMG had standing, given its
    interest     in    policing     the    workings       of    government.        Lastly,
    balancing the factors set forth in Loigman v. Kimmelman, 
    102 N.J. 98
    (1986), the court found that the public's interest in
    disclosure        outweighed    the     responding         entities'    interest      in
    confidentiality.
    By     order     entered    January    22,    2015,      the    court   compelled
    defendants to "locate, identify and produce, without redactions,
    all responsive records to [NJMG's] OPRA requests and provide
    such records to [NJMG]" within three days.                    On January 26, 2015,
    the court granted a stay until January 30, 2015, but otherwise
    denied   a   stay     pending    appeal.         We    subsequently       granted     an
    19                                   A-2523-14T1
    emergent motion for leave to appeal, and stayed the court's
    order.12
    II.
    We exercise de novo review of the trial court's decision
    that OPRA requires disclosure of publicly held records.                                    See,
    e.g., K.L. v. Evesham Twp. Bd. of Educ., 
    423 N.J. Super. 337
    ,
    349 (App. Div. 2011), certif. denied, 
    210 N.J. 108
    (2012).                                   "We
    apply      the   same    standard      of     review          to     the    court's      legal
    conclusions with respect to whether access to public records is
    appropriate      under   the    common-law         right       of    access."         Drinker
    Biddle & Reath LLP v. N.J. Dep't of Law & Pub. Safety, 421 N.J.
    Super. 489, 497 (App. Div. 2011).                        We apply a different and
    deferential      standard      of    review       when    a    court       conducts     an    in
    camera review of documents and balances competing interests in
    disclosure and confidentiality in connection with a common-law-
    based request to inspect public records.                           Shuttleworth v. City
    of Camden, 
    258 N.J. Super. 573
    , 588 (App. Div.), certif. denied,
    
    133 N.J. 429
    (1992).            However, "to the extent [the appellate
    court]     can   be     said    to    be     reviewing             essentially    a      legal
    12
    The motion was filed by the Attorney General on behalf of the
    NJSP and its records custodian.       The Bergen County Police
    Department, Lyndhurst, North Arlington, and Rutherford, as well
    as their records custodians, joined in the Attorney General's
    request for emergent relief from the court order.     They have
    joined in the Attorney General's brief on appeal.
    20                                        A-2523-14T1
    determination, [it] can review the documents which the trial
    judge ordered disclosed . . . ."                     
    Ibid. In determining whether
    documents or information related to
    a criminal investigation must be disclosed under OPRA, a court
    must     engage        in    a    three-stage        statutory    analysis,         which    we
    describe below.                  See N.J.S.A. 47:1A-1.1, -3(a), -3(b).                      The
    governmental entity bears the burden to establish a basis for
    non-disclosure.              N.J.S.A. 47:1A-6.           It is undisputed that but
    for any exemptions, the requested records qualify as "government
    record[s]"        subject         to   access    under       OPRA,   because        they    are
    documents or recordings made, maintained, or kept on file by
    public     officials.              N.J.S.A.     47:1A-1.1.           The     trial    court's
    decision raises interpretational issues as to each stage of the
    statutory analysis.
    First,      the     court      must    consider      whether        the    requested
    document        is     a    "criminal      investigatory         record[],"         which    is
    excluded        from       the    definition    of     government      record       generally
    subject     to       disclosure        under    OPRA.        N.J.S.A.      47:1A-1.1.         A
    "criminal investigatory record" is defined as a document "held
    by   a    law     enforcement          agency   which    pertains       to    any    criminal
    investigation or related civil enforcement proceeding[,]" which
    is "not required by law to be made, maintained or kept on file."
    
    Ibid. The provision thus
    raises two issues for analysis: what
    21                                   A-2523-14T1
    "pertains to" an investigation or enforcement proceeding; and
    what satisfies the "required by law" standard.
    Second,      even      if     the      document          does       not     qualify    as    a
    "criminal investigatory record" — for example, because it is a
    "required by law" document — the court must consider whether the
    document may be withheld as a document that "pertain[s] to an
    investigation in progress by any public agency . . . if the
    inspection, copying or examination of such record or records
    shall be inimical to the public interest."                          N.J.S.A. 47:1A-3(a).
    This exception, however, does not apply to a record that was
    "open   for    public      inspection          .    .    .   before       the      investigation
    commenced."      
    Ibid. We examine the
    trial court's rejection of
    the State's claim that release of the documents was "inimical to
    the public interest."
    Regardless        of    whether        a       document       can   be      withheld    as   a
    "criminal investigatory record" under N.J.S.A. 47:1A-1.1, or as
    a document pertaining to an ongoing investigation, the release
    of which would be inimical to the public interest under N.J.S.A.
    47:1A-3(a),      a    public         agency         must     still        disclose        certain
    "information"        pertaining       to       a    criminal        investigation          within
    twenty-four     hours      of    a    request           or   as    soon       as   practicable.
    N.J.S.A. 47:1A-3(b).            This information includes:
    where a crime has been reported but no
    arrest yet made, information as to the type
    22                                       A-2523-14T1
    of crime, time, location and type of weapon,
    if any;
    if an arrest has been made, information
    as to the name, address and age of any
    victims unless there has not been sufficient
    opportunity for notification of next of kin
    of any victims of injury and/or death to any
    such victim or where the release of the
    names of any victim would be contrary to
    existing law or court rule. In deciding on
    the release of information as to the
    identity of a victim, the safety of the
    victim and the victim's family, and the
    integrity of any ongoing investigation,
    shall be considered;
    if an arrest has been made, information
    as to the defendant's name, age, residence,
    occupation,   marital  status  and   similar
    background information and, the identity of
    the complaining party unless the release of
    such information is contrary to existing law
    or court rule;
    information as to the text of any
    charges such as the complaint, accusation
    and indictment unless sealed by the court or
    unless the release of such information is
    contrary to existing law or court rule;
    information as to the identity of the
    investigating and arresting personnel and
    agency and the length of the investigation;
    information    of    the  circumstances
    immediately     surrounding   the    arrest,
    including but not limited to the time and
    place of the arrest, resistance, if any,
    pursuit, possession and nature and use of
    weapons and ammunition by the suspect and by
    the police; and
    information    as   to    circumstances
    surrounding bail, whether it was posted and
    the amount thereof.
    23                        A-2523-14T1
    [Ibid.]
    However,   the   public    agency   may   withhold   such   information    if
    release would "jeopardize the safety of any person or jeopardize
    any investigation in progress or may be otherwise inappropriate
    to release."     
    Ibid. This "exception shall
    be narrowly construed
    to prevent disclosure of information that would be harmful to a
    bona fide law enforcement purpose or the public safety."              
    Ibid. When a public
    agency relies on this exception, it shall issue a
    brief explanation.       Ibid.13
    13
    Under appropriate circumstances, a court must also ascertain
    whether a document pertaining to a criminal investigation is
    exempt from disclosure pursuant to other "statute; resolution of
    either or both houses of the Legislature; regulation promulgated
    under the authority of any statute or Executive Order of the
    Governor; Executive Order of the Governor; Rules of Court; any
    federal law, federal regulation, or federal order."     N.J.S.A.
    47:1A-1. Depending on the circumstances, a request for records
    relating to a criminal investigation may implicate other
    exemptions.    While we do not attempt here to present an
    exhaustive list, we note the definition of "government record"
    excludes documents in the following categories that conceivably
    may be implicated in a criminal investigation: "inter-agency or
    intra-agency advisory, consultative, or deliberative material";
    under specified circumstances, "photographs and videotapes of
    the body . . . of a deceased person" in connection with
    autopsies; "security measures and surveillance techniques which,
    if disclosed, would create a risk to the safety of persons,
    property, electronic data or software"; and "information which
    is to be kept confidential pursuant to court order."    N.J.S.A.
    47:1A-1.1.     Also, OPRA does not override any grant of
    confidentiality    or  privilege   previously   established   or
    recognized by the Constitution, statute, court rule, or judicial
    case law, N.J.S.A. 47:1A-9(b), which would include, among
    others, documents covered by the informer's privilege, N.J.R.E.
    516, and attorney-client privilege, N.J.R.E. 504. As defendants
    (continued)
    24                            A-2523-14T1
    III.
    We turn first to the court's determination that the State
    failed to meet its burden to show that the requested documents
    were    criminal        investigatory         records,       that     is,      records
    "pertain[ing]     to    any   criminal    investigation        or    related     civil
    enforcement proceeding[,]" and "not required by law to be made,
    maintained   or    kept    on   file."        See    N.J.S.A.       47:1A-1.1.      As
    explained    above,      "required   by       law"   documents       constitute     an
    exception-to-the-exception of documents pertaining to a criminal
    investigation or related civil enforcement proceeding.                       Based on
    the legislative history, and prior case law, we are persuaded
    that the court interpreted the "required by law" exception-to-
    the-exception     too    broadly.       On    the    other    hand,    the     court's
    findings with respect to release of 9-1-1 recordings and part of
    the CAD reports are consistent with principles we shall set
    forth below regarding what constitutes documents that do or do
    not "pertain[] to any criminal investigation."                  See 
    ibid. A. We address
    the "required by law" issue first.                    We begin by
    reviewing legislative history, which justifies applying pre-OPRA
    case law in interpreting this exception-to-the-exception.                           We
    (continued)
    do not invoke these exclusions, we                     do    not     address     their
    applicability to the case before us.
    25                                  A-2523-14T1
    then review that case law, and apply it to the requests in this
    case.
    OPRA was adopted in 2002 as an amendment to the Right to
    Know Law (RTKL), which had remained largely intact since its
    enactment in 1963.         L. 1963, c. 73.14          The RTKL generally created
    a statutory right of access to government documents "required by
    law to be made, maintained or kept on file."                    L. 1963, c. 73, §
    1, repealed by L. 2001, c. 404, § 17.                     The "required by law"
    precondition was narrowly construed.                  See, e.g., 
    Keddie, supra
    ,
    148 N.J. at 46 ("[T]his Court has consistently held that the
    Right-to-Know Law's definition of a public record is narrow and
    is to be strictly construed.").                  The RTKL also excluded from
    release documents pertaining to investigations in progress, if
    release would be inimical to the public interest.                     L. 1963, c.
    73,   §   3    (permitting       the    denial   of    access   to   records     that
    "pertain to an investigation in progress . . . [and] inspection,
    copying       or   publication     of    such    record    or   records   shall      be
    inimical to the public interest").
    The      "required    by     law"    standard       was   recognized      as    a
    significant impediment to public access under the law.                    As noted
    14
    Amendments were adopted in 1995 to address issues involving
    biotechnology trade secrets, see L. 1995, c. 23, and in 1998 to
    address convicts' access to certain information.    L. 1998, c.
    17, § 1.
    26                                A-2523-14T1
    by Senator Robert J. Martin, the principal co-author of the
    Senate version of the legislation that ultimately was enacted as
    OPRA:
    We have a Right to Know Act, which dates
    back to 1963. The problem with that law is
    that it only requires . . . [access to]
    documents that are required by law to be
    made . . . maintained, or kept on file. The
    statute, in other words, is very narrow in
    its form.   And what has happened is that
    many records, which the public, I think,
    would expect to be available to them, are
    not required by law to be made — to be
    maintained.
    [Public Hearing before Senate Judiciary
    Comm., Senate Bill Nos. 161, 351, 573, and
    866, 209th Legislature (March 9, 2000)
    (Statement of Sen. Martin) at 1-2.]15
    The   legislative   response       in    OPRA   required   access    to
    "government   records"   subject    to       enumerated   exceptions,    and
    defined "government records," as those in their various forms,
    "that ha[ve] been made, maintained or kept on file" without
    regard to whether the law required them to be made, maintained,
    or kept on file.   This change was embodied in the legislation as
    introduced, and as finally enacted.            Compare Assembly Bill No.
    15
    Senator Martin and Senator Byron M. Baer were the original
    sponsors of Senate Bill No. 2003, which was introduced in
    December 2000. That bill was similar — although not identical —
    to Assembly Bill No. 1309, originally introduced by Assemblymen
    George F. Geist and Jack Collins, which as amended was enacted
    as OPRA.    The public hearing pertained to prior versions of
    reform legislation.
    27                             A-2523-14T1
    1309, 209th Legislature (Pre-filed for Introduction in the 2000
    Session) and Senate Bill No. 2003, 209th Legislature (December
    14, 2000), with Assembly Bill No. 1309, 209th Legislature (Fifth
    Reprint) (January 8, 2002), and L. 2001, c. 404, § 2.
    In its initial version, the legislation did not single out
    criminal investigatory records for special treatment within the
    definition       of   "government    record."        However,        a   Senate   floor
    amendment    offered        by   Senator    Martin       to   the    Assembly-passed
    version of Assembly Bill No. 1309 changed that.                          The amendment
    excluded from the definition of government records, "criminal
    investigatory records," which it defined as "a record which is
    not required by law to be made, maintained or kept on file that
    is   held   by    a   law   enforcement         agency   which      pertains   to    any
    criminal investigation or related civil enforcement proceeding."
    See Assembly Bill No. 1309 (Fifth Reprint).                      Such records were
    "deemed . . . confidential" for the purposes of the statute, as
    were other documents covered by other exemptions.                         The purpose
    was to narrow access to criminal investigatory records.                              See
    Statement to Senate Bill No. 2003 with Senate Floor Amendments,
    209th Legislature (Proposed by Senator Martin) (Adopted May 3,
    2001) ("The amendments exempt criminal investigatory records of
    a law enforcement agency from the statutory right of access.
    28                                  A-2523-14T1
    However, a common law right of access could be asserted to these
    and other records not accessible under the statute.").
    Also part of the floor amendment was the provision now
    codified     at    section       3(b),    described         above,       which     requires
    disclosure        of     specified        information            about      a      criminal
    investigation,         notwithstanding         any    exemption      from       disclosure,
    provided     it        does     not     jeopardize          persons'       safety,         the
    investigation, or is otherwise inappropriate.                        The provisions of
    section    3(b)    were       largely    drawn       from   an   executive        order     of
    Governor Whitman, see Exec. Order No. 69, ¶ 3 (Whitman) (May 15,
    1997),    which    in     turn      largely    incorporated        the      terms     of   an
    executive order of Governor Kean.                    See Exec. Order No. 123, ¶ 2
    (Kean) (Nov. 12, 1985).
    Beginning          with    an     order    of     Governor       Hughes      in    1963,
    "[f]ingerprint cards, plates and photographs and other similar
    criminal investigation records which are required to be made,
    maintained or kept by any State or local government agency" were
    exempt from disclosure under the RTKL.                       Exec. Order No. 9, ¶
    2(e) (Hughes) (Sept. 30, 1963).                     Governor Kean continued this
    exemption,    with      the    proviso    that       the    information,         ultimately
    identified in section 3(b), "shall be made available to the
    public as soon as practicable unless it shall appear that the
    release of such information will jeopardize the safety of any
    29                                    A-2523-14T1
    person     or    any    investigation          in     progress    or     be   otherwise
    inappropriate."         Exec. Order No. 123, ¶ 2 (Kean).                      The order
    went on to state that "'as soon as practicable' shall generally
    be understood to mean within 24 hours."                  
    Ibid. Thus, Senator Martin's
    amendment restored, with respect to
    criminal    investigatory           records,    the    RTKL's    "required     by   law"
    standard.        Criminal       investigatory         records     were    exempt    from
    access if they were "not required by law to be made, maintained
    or kept on file."           In other words, the public's right of access
    to criminal investigatory records reverted to what existed pre-
    OPRA: access was granted to records "required by law to be made,
    maintained       or    kept    on    file."         However,     the   drafters     also
    codified the mandate to release of identified information, in
    place since Governor Kean's 1985 order.
    In view of this history, it is appropriate to interpret the
    "criminal investigatory records" exception in OPRA in light of
    pre-OPRA    case      law     interpreting      the    RTKL's    "required     by   law"
    standard in cases involving requests for records pertaining to
    criminal        investigations.            According        to     well-established
    principles       of     statutory        construction,           the     Legislature's
    reinsertion of the RTKL's formulation reflected its approval of
    prior    judicial       interpretation,         as     it   applied      to    criminal
    investigatory records.
    30                                   A-2523-14T1
    The construction of a statute by the
    courts, supported by long acquiescence on
    the part of the Legislature, or by continued
    use of the same language or failure to amend
    the   statute,   is    evidence  that   such
    construction is in accordance with the
    legislative intent.    The persuasive effect
    of such legislative inaction is increased
    where the statute has been amended after a
    judicial construction without any change in
    the language so interpreted.
    [Lemke v. Bailey, 
    41 N.J. 295
    , 301 (1963)
    (citations omitted).]
    "Moreover, courts will not impute a legislative intention to
    alter   an    established     judicial    interpretation        absent      a    'clear
    manifestation'       of    such   intent."        Coyle    v.    Bd.     of       Chosen
    Freeholders of Warren Cnty., 
    170 N.J. 260
    , 267 (2002) (citation
    omitted).       The case for inferring legislative endorsement of
    prior judicial interpretation is especially strong in this case,
    which presents not merely the acquiescence in prior language, or
    amendment without change of prior language, but the affirmative
    restoration     of   prior    language    after    its    deletion     in       earlier
    versions of the legislation.16
    We recognize that OPRA generally commands that limitations
    on access to government documents "shall be construed in favor
    of   the     public's     right   of   access."     N.J.S.A.      47:1A-1.              By
    16
    We thus part company with the view of the panel in 
    O'Shea, supra
    , 410 N.J. Super. at 381, that gave little weight to
    decisions under the RTKL, in interpreting the "criminal
    investigatory records" exception.
    31                                     A-2523-14T1
    contrast, as noted, the "required by law" standard was narrowly
    construed, including as applied to records related to criminal
    investigations.          See 
    Shuttleworth, supra
    , 258 N.J. Super. at
    581; Home News Publ'g Co. v. State, 
    224 N.J. Super. 7
    , 11 (App.
    Div.    1988).          We       do    not   construe        OPRA's       general    rule     of
    construction       as        a     basis     to     deviate     from       the   established
    interpretation      of           the   "required       by    law"    standard,       which    by
    amendment    was        reinserted           into      OPRA.         The    OPRA     rule     of
    construction guides statutory interpretation where the statute
    is unclear, or ambiguous.                    The "required by law" standard was
    already clearly defined by established case law.
    B.
    According    to           pre-OPRA    judicial        interpretation,        documents
    are "required by law to be made, maintained or kept on file," if
    so   mandated     by     a        statute,       regulation,        executive       order,    or
    judicial decision.                We are not persuaded that a generic record
    retention policy, or an internal agency directive of a public
    official would suffice to satisfy the "required by law" standard
    with respect to criminal investigatory records.
    The distinction between documents "required by law," and
    documents    created             through     the       exercise      of    discretion,       was
    recognized   in     Irval          Realty     Inc.      v.   Board    of    Public    Utility
    Commissioners,          
    61 N.J. 366
        (1972),     which       involved      civil
    32                                  A-2523-14T1
    investigational records.           
    Id. at 369-71.
          After a gas explosion,
    the plaintiffs sought reports that a utility prepared and filed
    with the Board of Public Utility Commissioners (PUC), and an
    investigative report prepared by the PUC staff.                 
    Id. at 369-70.
    The    utility's     report    was    prepared    pursuant      to     a    formally
    promulgated PUC regulation requiring utilities to report certain
    accidents.         
    Id. at 370.
           The   Court    held   that       the   RTKL
    encompassed the utility's reports because the PUC's regulation
    had "the force of law and require[d] that such reports be made."
    
    Id. at 375.
           The Court did not so find as to the PUC staff's
    reports, stating, "Whether the investigation reports prepared by
    members of defendant's staff meet this definition is less clear,
    but need not be decided here since they certainly qualify as
    public records within the scope of the common law rule."                     Ibid.17
    See also Attorney General George F. Kugler, Jr., New Jersey's
    Right to Know, A Report On Open Government 9 (1974) (stating
    that    the   "required       by   law"    precondition     "clearly        embodies
    administrative rules and regulations as well as statutes").
    In another utility case, the Court held that an order of
    the Board of Public Utilities (BPU), which directed solid waste
    17
    The Court did not address the exemption under section 3 of the
    RTKL governing release of documents pertaining to ongoing
    investigations, where release would be inimical to the public
    interest. See L. 1963, c. 73, § 3.
    33                                A-2523-14T1
    utilities      to   provide       the       BPU    with    customer     lists,    did   not
    satisfy the RTKL's "required by law" standard, meaning the lists
    were not subject to release under the RTKL.                           In re Request for
    Solid Waste Util. Customer Lists, 
    106 N.J. 508
    , 525 (1987) ("In
    re Request").           The Court stated: "The lists are not 'records
    which are required by law to be made, maintained[,] or kept on
    file    by    any   board     .    .    .    .'         [T]he   order   was   merely     an
    administrative directive, and not the equivalent of either a
    statute or a Board regulation . . . and therefore not subject to
    disclosure as public records."                    
    Ibid. (citation omitted). In
    another case, the Court also held that the RTKL did not
    cover        documents      pertaining             to     a     background       character
    investigation,          performed           in     response      to     the   Governor's
    discretionary request.                 Nero v. Hyland, 
    76 N.J. 213
    , 220-21
    (1978).        The records were not "required by law to be made,
    maintained or kept on file" because "[n]o statute, regulation,
    executive       order    or       judicial         decision     require[d]       that   the
    Governor conduct a character investigation . . . ."                           
    Ibid. The Court rejected
    the trial court's "engrafting upon [the RTKL] the
    definition of a public record contained in the Destruction of
    Public Records Law [(DPRL)], N.J.S.A. 47:3-16."                         
    Id. at 221.
    The Court directly addressed a RTKL request for documents
    pertaining to a criminal investigation in State v. Marshall, 148
    34                               A-2523-14T1
    N.J. 89, cert. denied, 
    522 U.S. 850
    , 
    118 S. Ct. 140
    , 
    139 L. Ed. 2d
      88   (1997).       In    his    effort       to    collaterally     challenge    his
    conviction, Marshall sought access to the entire investigative
    file in his case.           
    Id. at 268.
    The Court broadly and unqualifiedly held, "The Right-to-
    Know Law does not provide defendant with the right to inspect
    the law-enforcement files sought in this case because no law or
    regulation         requires   that    such    files       'be   made,    maintained    or
    kept.'"       
    Id. at 272-73
    (citation omitted).                 The court cited with
    approval River Edge Savings & Loan Association v. Hyland, 
    165 N.J. Super. 540
    , 545 (App. Div.), certif. denied, 
    81 N.J. 58
    (1979), for the proposition that "no law required that results
    of     law-enforcement         official's          investigation         into   alleged
    criminal offense be maintained or kept, and thus such results
    were not subject to Right-to-Know Law."                         
    Marshall, supra
    , 148
    N.J.    at    273.     The    court    also       approvingly     cited    Asbury    Park
    Press, Inc. v. Borough of Seaside Heights, 
    246 N.J. Super. 62
    ,
    67 (Law Div. 1990), for the principle that "no law required that
    police reports be maintained or kept and thus reports were not
    subject to [the] Right-to-Know Law."                     
    Marshall, supra
    , 148 N.J.
    at 273.
    We applied these principles in denying a newspaper's claim
    under        the     RTKL     to     access        to     a     police    department's
    35                                 A-2523-14T1
    investigational reports in Daily Journal v. Police Department of
    Vineland,       351   N.J.    Super.      110,    120-21    (App.    Div.),      certif.
    denied, 
    174 N.J. 364
    (2002).
    We have found no case holding that criminal
    investigation reports are public records
    under the RTKL.     Indeed, the courts have
    held to the contrary, on the basis that no
    law or regulation requires the making,
    maintaining or keeping on file the results
    of a criminal investigation by a law
    enforcement officer or agency.
    [Id. at 120.]
    We rejected the contention that the "required by law" standard
    was satisfied by N.J.S.A. 40:48-6, which we stated "provides how
    . . . governmental material shall be kept in order to secure the
    material        against    fire     and   ordinary    theft,"       or   by   N.J.S.A.
    40A:14-118, which "provides only for the creation of a police
    force and for the maintenance, regulation and control thereof."
    
    Id. at 121.
          Thus,    the     incidental     or    indirect     creation       or
    retention of documents is not enough.
    We reached a similar conclusion in Shuttleworth, where, as
    here,    the     plaintiff    sought      records    involving      a    fatal    police
    shooting of a criminal suspect.                  
    Shuttleworth, supra
    , 258 N.J.
    Super.     at    579-81.      The    shooting      victim   in   that     case,     named
    Watson, was already in custody.                  
    Id. at 578.
        Specifically, the
    plaintiff sought "all reports relating to Watson's arrest and
    the related firearm discharges[,] . . . tape recordings of the
    36                                   A-2523-14T1
    investigation, the police inventory of Watson's possessions, and
    copies     of     any    rules      or     procedures         of     the       Camden      Police
    Department       pertaining         to    firearms      in     the    area       of     prisoner
    detentions."          
    Id. at 580.
            We rejected the plaintiff's argument
    that   N.J.S.A.         40:48-6      or    provisions        of    the     municipal         code
    required     "that       the      investigative         reports       .    .     .    be     made,
    maintained or kept on file."                    
    Ibid. We stated, "Rather,
    they
    provide     how       material      which       is    in     the     possession         of       the
    government,       whether      by    virtue      of     some      legal     requirement           or
    otherwise,       is     to   be     maintained.            Thus,     they       need       not   be
    'maintained' by law within the meaning of the [RTKL]."                                 Ibid.18
    A broad reading of the "required by law" exception to the
    "criminal investigatory record" exception, as suggested by NJMG,
    also conflicts with the Legislature's intent as expressed by the
    adoption of the provision, previously found in Governor Kean's
    and Governor Whitman's executive orders, mandating disclosure of
    specified       information        about    a    reported      crime.           See     N.J.S.A.
    47:1A-3(b).        Were access to investigative records as extensive
    as NJMG suggests, notwithstanding the "criminal investigatory
    records" exception, then there would have been little need to
    18
    Strictly speaking, these observations were dictum, as the
    court stated it did not need to decide whether the police
    investigative file was a public record under the RTKL. 
    Id. at 581.
    37                                      A-2523-14T1
    mandate   disclosure    of   information         in   section    3(b).        We   are
    unpersuaded by NJMG's argument that the principal purpose of
    adding section 3(b) was simply to assure the speedy release of
    the specified information.
    We recognize that the RTKL authority reviewed above does
    not    expressly   address   whether        an   internal       agency   directive
    satisfies the "required by law" standard.                      Nor do the cases
    address the impact of judicial decisions requiring the creation
    or preservation of investigational materials.                    However, we are
    unprepared    to   endorse   including       them     within    the   universe     of
    documents "required by law to be made, maintained or kept on
    file."
    First, the Court in Marshall spoke definitively and without
    reservation that the defendant's law enforcement file did not
    include "required by law" documents.                  See 
    Marshall, supra
    , 148
    N.J. at 273.       We hesitate to find exceptions to the Court's
    definitive statement of law.       See White v. Twp. of N. Bergen, 
    77 N.J. 538
    ,   549-50   (1978)   (noting      that      trial    and   intermediate
    appellate     courts   are   "bound,    under         the   principle    of    stare
    decisis, by formidable precedent").              Moreover, we are unprepared
    to explore the applicability of any judicial mandates to create
    or preserve investigatory records, inasmuch as NJMG does not
    38                                 A-2523-14T1
    rely on any such requirement, and the issue has not been briefed
    by the parties.19
    Second, administrative directives of the Attorney General,
    similar      to   the   BPU   order    in     In    re    Request,      are    "not   the
    equivalent of either a statute or a . . . regulation."                           See In
    re    
    Request, supra
    ,     106     N.J.        at    525.          Concededly,     an
    administrative directive may be deemed, in one sense, to carry
    the   full    force     and   effect   of     law       within   the    administrative
    structure.        See 
    O'Shea, supra
    , 410 N.J. Super. at 382 (stating
    that Attorney General's "Use of Force Policy" which requires
    police departments to complete and maintain UFRs "has the force
    of law for police entities," based on the Attorney General's
    authority     under     the   Criminal      Justice       Act    of    1970,   N.J.S.A.
    19
    For example, the Court has held that police officers must
    retain notes of witness interviews, in order to preserve them
    for post-indictment production under Rule 3:13-3.      State v.
    W.B., 
    205 N.J. 588
    , 607-08 (2011) (stating "law enforcement
    officers may not destroy contemporaneous notes of interviews and
    observations at the scene of a crime after producing their final
    reports").    The Court has also mandated the creation and
    retention of documents pertaining to identifications "as a
    condition to the admissibility." State v. Delgado, 
    188 N.J. 48
    ,
    63 (2006); see also R. 3:11. There is no indication the Court
    intended or anticipated that such records would, as a
    consequence of its mandate, be subject to access under OPRA as
    government records "required by law to be . . . kept on file,"
    even before a defendant is entitled to their release under court
    rule. Rather, the failure to maintain these records may result
    in an adverse inference charge in the case of destroyed notes,
    
    W.B., supra
    , 205 N.J. at 608-09, or the exclusion of an out-of-
    court identification. 
    Delgado, supra
    , 188 N.J. at 63-64.
    39                                     A-2523-14T1
    52:17B-97 to -117 to adopt "guidelines, directives and policies
    that bind local police departments").                      On the other hand, the
    same may be said of the BPU order in In re Request — it had the
    force of law as it concerned the regulated utilities.                               In re
    
    Request, supra
    , 106 N.J. at 513.
    The    issuance       of    directives,      such    as     the    UFR   directive,
    usually lies within the Attorney General's discretion and may be
    withdrawn or modified at will.                    They also are internal to the
    agency      and    related       agencies.         Attorney       General      directives
    address other aspects of the investigative process.                            See, e.g.,
    
    Delgado, supra
    , 188 N.J. at 61-62 (discussing Attorney General
    guidelines        requiring      preservation       of    materials      pertaining      to
    identification        procedures).           On    the    other    hand,       "[a]gencies
    should   act      through       rulemaking    procedures        when     the    action   is
    intended     to    have     a    'widespread,      continuing,          and    prospective
    effect,' deals with policy issues, materially changes existing
    laws, or when the action will benefit from rulemaking's flexible
    fact-finding procedures."               In re Provision of Basic Generation
    Serv. for Period Beginning June 1, 2008, 
    205 N.J. 339
    , 349-50
    (2011) (quoting Metromedia, Inc. v. Dir., Div. of Taxation, 
    97 N.J. 313
    , 329-31 (1984)); see also Woodland Private Study Grp.
    v.   N.J.    Dep't     of       Env't   Prot.,     
    109 N.J. 62
    ,    69-76     (1987)
    (analyzing the difference between internal agency directives,
    40                                   A-2523-14T1
    which may be adopted informally, and directives that affect the
    general public and must be adopted through formal rule-making);
    In   re    
    Request, supra
    ,     106        N.J.   at     518-19   (discussing
    administrative agency's informal action, as distinct from formal
    rulemaking or adjudication).
    Treating internal agency directives on record creation or
    retention as "required by law" would also create an anomaly
    under the law.        OPRA retained the provision of the RTKL that
    authorizes    agencies     to   exempt       documents     from   disclosure    by
    "regulation promulgated under the authority of any statute or
    Executive Order of the Governor."                N.J.S.A. 47:1A-1; see also
    
    Irval, supra
    , 61 N.J. at 374 (stating this exemption power was
    not intended to be "unlimited" and must "be exercised only when
    necessary for the protection of the public interest").                 Thus, an
    agency    may,   through    formally         promulgated    regulations,    both
    require the making of a document, and exempt it from access.                   By
    its plain language, the exemption power refers to promulgated
    regulations, and does not extend to informally adopted agency
    directives.      See N.J.S.A. 47:1A-1.              It would, therefore, be
    anomalous to treat documents required or preserved pursuant to
    internal directives as documents "required by law," since the
    41                              A-2523-14T1
    directive's author would lack the accompanying power to control
    its accessibility, which is otherwise granted under OPRA.20
    C.
    We    interpret    next    what        constitutes   a    document    that
    "pertains" to a criminal investigation.                The issue is relevant
    both    to   (1)    the   interpretation        of   "criminal    investigatory
    record" in N.J.S.A. 47:1A-1.1 — which is defined as a document
    that "pertains to any criminal investigation or related civil
    enforcement proceeding" and is "not required by law to be made,
    maintained or kept on file"; and (2) the interpretation of the
    ongoing investigation exception in N.J.S.A. 47:1A-3(a) — which
    exempts      from    disclosure     records          that   "pertain    to     an
    investigation in progress by any public agency" if release would
    be "inimical to the public interest" and the record was not
    already open for public inspection.
    The ongoing investigation exception, as noted above, was
    first established in the RTKL.                OPRA added the "exception-to-
    the-exception" for documents already open to the public.                        L.
    2001, c. 404, § 5.        Aside from minor wording changes, the RTKL
    20
    To the extent the panel's decision in O'Shea relied upon the
    opposite view, that is, that the "required by law" standard may
    be satisfied by "guidelines, directives and policies," 
    O'Shea, supra
    , 410 N.J. Super. at 383, we respectfully disagree.
    However, the holding in O'Shea was also based on the fact that
    the UFRs did not "pertain" to an investigation. 
    Id. at 385-86.
    42                             A-2523-14T1
    exception remained unchanged in OPRA.        However, we have found no
    pre-OPRA,   RTKL   case   that   expressly    interprets     the    phrase
    "pertain to an investigation."
    OPRA cases have established that a document that is created
    before an investigation starts, and therefore does not "pertain"
    to an investigation at that point, does not change its character
    once an investigation begins, even if the document relates to
    the investigation.     For example, a 9-1-1 tape created before an
    investigation   begins    does   not    pertain   to   an   investigation
    commenced later, even if triggered by the 9-1-1 call.              Courier
    
    News, supra
    , 358 N.J. Super. at 376, 380-81.            In Serrano, the
    court addressed the "pertain to an investigation" language used
    in the ongoing investigation exception.            
    Serrano, supra
    , 358
    N.J. Super. at 366.       "The tape that is the subject of this
    appeal was created hours before the police investigation began.
    If it was a public record when created, then it would remain
    accessible to the public under N.J.S.A. 47:1A-3(a) even if its
    release would be inimical to the public interest."            Ibid.; cf.
    
    O'Shea, supra
    , 410 N.J. Super. at 385-86 (rejecting argument
    that a UFR generically pertains to a criminal investigation, as
    "it cannot be assumed that a UFR might become part of a criminal
    investigation").     On the other hand, when an officer turns on a
    mobile video recorder to document a traffic stop or pursuit of a
    43                              A-2523-14T1
    suspected criminal violation of law, that recording may pertain
    to a "criminal investigation," albeit in its earliest stages.21
    However,    there   are   other    documents    that    police     prepare,
    whether or not an investigation is commenced, which may partly
    pertain to an investigation that has already commenced.                       For
    example,    daily   activity   logs    or   CAD    reports   are    apparently
    prepared on a regular basis, regardless of whether an officer is
    performing a community caretaking function, such as assisting a
    boy who fell off a bicycle; or investigating a crime, such as
    interviewing    a   confidential       informant    regarding      an    ongoing
    investigation into gang activity.            An entry about the former
    activity would not "pertain to an investigation," but the latter
    would.     Similarly, a UFR prepared after a police officer shoots
    a dangerous dog may not pertain to a criminal investigation.
    However, a UFR documenting the use of force in the course of
    arresting a criminal suspect would.               We conclude that entries
    related to criminal investigative activities are properly deemed
    to "pertain[] to any investigation."
    21
    We do not address whether a recording initiated to document a
    suspected non-criminal violation of motor vehicle law or a
    subsequent stop would properly be deemed to "pertain[] to any
    criminal investigation." See N.J.S.A. 47:1A-1.1.
    44                               A-2523-14T1
    D.
    Applying these principles, we are persuaded that most of
    the documents sought by the reporters fall within the criminal
    investigatory records exception, because they are "not required
    by    law   to     be   made,    maintained       or    kept     on    file"   and      they
    "pertain[] to any criminal investigation."                       See N.J.S.A. 47:1A-
    1.1.
    The reporters seek documents that report officers' daily
    activities, including CAD reports detailing information received
    by     or   from    police      dispatchers,       log    book        notations,     daily
    activity logs, daily bulletins, daily statistical sheets, tally
    sheets, and vehicle logs.                 The requesters also seek various
    forms of audio and video recordings (as well as transcriptions),
    including recordings of the pursuit and shooting; communications
    among police officers and between police officers and others;
    and    recordings       made    by   mobile     video    recorders         (MVRs).       The
    reporters        also   requested        various       reports        or   officer      work
    product,     including         UFRs,   police      reports,       incident      reports,
    operation reports, investigation reports, offense reports, and
    supplemental reports.            All of these documents are exempt.                      No
    law cited to the court required their creation or retention.
    They pertain to a criminal investigation, to the extent the
    entries     concern      or    address    an     officer's       involvement       in    the
    45                                    A-2523-14T1
    search    for     the    attempted      burglary       suspect,       the       pursuit    of
    Ashford and Bynes once they were identified as suspects, the
    shooting     of    Ashford       and    arrest       of      Bynes,       the   subsequent
    investigational activities related to Bynes's arrest, and the
    SRT investigation of the fatal shooting.
    We      reject       NJMG's    argument          that     these       documents       are
    "required by law" because the various LEAs are governed by the
    DPRL and regulations, which require adoption of record retention
    schedules.      N.J.S.A. 47:3-19, -20.               No person may destroy public
    records under his or her control without obtaining consent under
    the DPRL or regulations thereunder.                       N.J.S.A. 47:3-17.             These
    provisions of law have been in place unchanged since 1953.                                 L.
    1953, c. 410, §§ 5, 6.
    The Court in Nero expressly declined to read the DPRL "in
    pari materia" with the RTKL.               
    Nero, supra
    , 76 N.J. at 221.                    As
    discussed above, we have also repeatedly held that general, non-
    specific    record      preservation       statutes          or    regulations      do    not
    satisfy the "required by law" standard under the RTKL.                                    See
    Daily    
    Journal, supra
    ,    351    N.J.       Super.    at    120-21      (regarding
    N.J.S.A.    40:48-6,       stating      that    a    statute       that    "provides      how
    . . . governmental material shall be kept in order to secure the
    material against fire and ordinary theft" does not satisfy the
    "required    by     law"    standard);         
    Shuttleworth, supra
    ,      
    258 N.J. 46
                                         A-2523-14T1
    Super.     at    580        (stating      that        statute      or    code     that      merely
    "provide[s]          how    material      which       is   in     the    possession         of   the
    government,          whether       by    virtue    of      some     legal      requirement       or
    otherwise, is to be maintained" does not satisfy the RTKL).
    We     reach         the    same    conclusion         with       respect    to    general
    retention schedules adopted pursuant to the DPRL.                                     Were we to
    reach the opposite conclusion, then the criminal investigatory
    records exception would have virtually no effect.                                 Particularly
    in   light      of    the        legislative      history,        and    the    RTKL     case-law
    shielding criminal investigatory records, we shall not presume
    that the exception is insignificant surplusage.                                See In re Civil
    Commitment of J.M.B., 
    197 N.J. 563
    , 573 ("Interpretations that
    render       the           Legislature's          words         mere        surplusage           are
    disfavored."), cert. denied, 
    558 U.S. 999
    , 
    130 S. Ct. 509
    , 
    175 L. Ed. 2d 361
    (2009).
    Requested             records       that        fall      outside         the      criminal
    investigatory         records        exception        include      the    recording         of   the
    9-1-1 call, which are "required by law" to be maintained for no
    less than thirty-one days according to promulgated regulations.
    N.J.A.C.     17:24-2.4.22               Also   outside       the     exception        are    motor
    22
    We do not address whether a countervailing privacy claim by a
    9-1-1 caller may lead to the withholding of a 9-1-1 recording,
    notwithstanding that it is not exempt from the definition of
    (continued)
    47                                      A-2523-14T1
    vehicle accident reports, which are required by law to be made
    available to the public.       N.J.S.A. 39:4-131.            In addition, those
    portions of the CAD records and other logs of police activity,
    which do not discuss or relate to the criminal investigations,
    are excepted because they do not "pertain[] to any criminal
    investigation."
    IV.
    As discussed above, even if documents are not exempt from
    OPRA as criminal investigatory records, they may be shielded
    from   public    access   if   they   pertain     to    an    investigation       in
    progress and release would be "inimical to the public interest."
    We    have    already   reviewed    the     meaning    of    the    "pertain     to"
    language.      The related issue presented on appeal is the trial
    court's rejection of the State's argument that release of the
    withheld documents would be "inimical to the public interest."
    Although we conclude that most of the records requested were
    exempt under the criminal investigatory records exception, for
    the    sake     of   completeness     we     address    the        trial   court's
    consideration of this issue.
    A case-by-case analysis is appropriate.               Cf. 
    Irval, supra
    ,
    61 N.J. at 375-76 (rejecting, under common law analysis, after
    (continued)
    government record. See 
    Serrano, supra
    , 358 N.J. Super. at 371-
    72 (Coburn, J., concurring).
    48                                   A-2523-14T1
    review      of    disputed       documents,          defendant's        claim    that       public
    interest in confidentiality outweighed plaintiff's interest in
    access in the case presented, but observing "nevertheless the
    facts of another case may quite possibly call for a different
    result").         The Irval Court stated that, as a general rule, a
    trial judge should "call for and examine the report or other
    record" to determine "[i]f in his sound judgment some part or
    all of the information therein contained should not be revealed
    . . . ."         
    Ibid. In our own
       decision          in    Irval,      we    rejected    the     general
    argument that "if inspection [by the public] of utility company
    accident reports were permitted the reports would be less than
    candid."         Irval Realty, Inc. v. Bd. of Pub. Util. Comm'rs., 115
    N.J.   Super.       338,    345       (App.       Div.    1971),      aff'd,     
    61 N.J. 366
    (1972).      Moreover, we found no threat to the public interest in
    permitting         review        of    the        Board's      own     reports,       once     its
    investigation was completed.                      
    Id. at 345-46.
    In    Serrano,       we    were       unpersuaded        that     release       of    9-1-1
    recordings was "inimical to the public interest" assuming for
    argument's        sake     they       were    deemed      to    pertain     to    an     ongoing
    investigation.            
    Serrano, supra
    , 358 N.J. Super. at 367.                               In
    particular, we rejected the argument that release of the 9-1-1
    tape   to    a     news    organization,            and   its       anticipated       widespread
    49                                   A-2523-14T1
    dissemination, would interfere with the selection of a jury.
    
    Ibid. We surmised that
        the    9-1-1        caller    had        no    presumed
    expectation of privacy; the public's interest in release was
    substantial;      any    difficulties         in     impaneling       a    jury       would    be
    manageable; and we noted the attorney for the defendant agreed
    that release would not deprive the defendant of a fair trial.
    
    Id. at 367-69.
    In Courier News, we likewise rejected the argument that
    release     of   9-1-1      recordings         was       "inimical        to     the    public
    interest,"       where         the     defendant            asserted           that     public
    dissemination      of    the    recording          would    risk     tainting         the   jury
    pool, and anticipated playback at trial of an electronically
    enhanced version of the recording would cause juror confusion.
    Courier 
    News, supra
    , 358 N.J. Super. at 381-83.                             We found that
    the first concern did not present an insurmountable barrier to
    selecting a fair and unbiased jury, and the second concern was
    purely speculative.         
    Ibid. On the other
    hand, our courts have recognized "a real need
    to   deny    access     where        there    is    an     ongoing        law    enforcement
    investigation, or where the protection of witness information or
    a witness's identity is at stake. . . ."                        
    Shuttleworth, supra
    ,
    258 N.J. Super. at 585 (applying common law balancing).                                       The
    Court     in     Marshall        recognized           the     public            interest       in
    50                                       A-2523-14T1
    confidentiality of ongoing criminal investigations, albeit in
    the context of applying the common law right to inspect public
    documents:
    The receipt by appropriate law enforcement
    officials of information concerning the
    existence    or    occurrence    of   criminal
    activities is critical to the uncovering and
    the prosecution of criminal offenses, and is
    thus crucial to effective law enforcement.
    In order that the flow of such information
    be not impeded or cut off, the law has long
    treated the information as confidential and
    privileged    against    disclosure,   thereby
    protecting witness security, the State's
    relationship    with   its    informants   and
    witnesses,      and     other     confidential
    relationships, among other things.
    [
    Marshall, supra
    , 148 N.J. at 273 (quoting
    River Edge Sav. & Loan 
    Ass'n, supra
    , 165
    N.J. Super. at 543-44).]
    See also 
    Loigman, supra
    , 102 N.J. at 107-08 (discussing "the
    vital    public    interest     in    .   .     .     the   success    of   criminal
    prosecutions      and    the   protection        of    potential      witnesses    and
    informants").
    In    reference       to   criminal        investigations,        the   need   for
    confidentiality     generally        declines       once    the   investigation     is
    closed; but the need for confidentiality, at least as to some
    materials — such as those pertaining to confidential informants
    — may survive.          See 
    Keddie, supra
    , 148 N.J. at 54 (recognizing
    "the need for confidentiality is greater in pending matters than
    in closed cases," but stating "[e]ven in closed cases . . .
    51                                 A-2523-14T1
    attorney work-product and documents containing legal strategies
    may be entitled to protection from disclosure"); River Edge Sav.
    & Loan 
    Ass'n, supra
    , 165 N.J. Super. at 545 (noting that "even
    inactive investigatory files may have to be kept confidential in
    order to convince citizens that they may safely confide in law
    enforcement officials") (internal quotation marks and citation
    omitted);   cf.      
    Shuttleworth, supra
    ,    258    N.J.    Super.    at   585
    (stating that the "same values do not survive a balancing after
    the investigation is closed").
    The trial court dismissed as exaggerated the State's fear
    that premature release of witness statements might taint other
    witnesses' independent recollections and undermine the integrity
    of the investigation into the police shooting.                   However, absent
    review of Lt. McGrath's proposed ex parte, in camera submission,
    we cannot be so sure.
    First,   we    are   convinced    that    where   an     investigation    is
    ongoing, the public reporting of one witness's recollections may
    risk    causing      another   witness    to     question     his   or    her   own
    recollections, or intentionally or unintentionally conform them
    to the reported reality.         Assessing the extent of the risk is a
    fact-sensitive inquiry.          Notably, the United States Department
    of Justice recently documented that phenomenon in its report on
    the fatal police shooting in Ferguson, Missouri.                    See Dep't of
    52                               A-2523-14T1
    Justice    Report   Regarding   the       Criminal      Investigation    into    the
    Shooting Death of Michael Brown by Ferguson, Missouri Police
    Officer    Darren   Wilson   (March       4,    2015)    46,   58,   available    at
    http://www.justice.gov/sites/default/files/opa/press-releases/
    attachments/2015/03/04/doj_report_on_shooting_of_michael_brown.
    pdf   (discussing       witnesses'    alteration         of     statements     after
    watching    media   reports).        In    other   contexts,      the   Court    has
    recognized the fallibility of memory, and its susceptibility to
    suggestion and error.        State v. Henderson, 
    208 N.J. 208
    , 268-71
    (2011).    We have also endorsed prophylactic measures to prevent
    witnesses, who may be in league with each other, from learning
    what others have said and tailoring their testimony accordingly.
    See Morton Bldgs., Inc. v. Rezultz, Inc., 
    127 N.J. 227
    , 233
    (1992) (addressing a trial court's discretion regarding witness
    sequestration).
    Second, the trial court's rejection of the State's concern
    was premature, as the court did not review the documents at
    issue, nor permit the State to explain, ex parte, the reasons
    why   release   would    compromise       its   ongoing       investigation.      An
    assessment of the public's interest will often require review of
    requested documents in camera.             See 
    Loigman, supra
    , 102 N.J. at
    108-09; 
    Keddie, supra
    , 148 N.J. at 53-54.                      In some cases, in
    camera review of a Vaughn index may be appropriate, because the
    53                              A-2523-14T1
    release of even a "detailed Vaughn index" to a requesting party
    "may in some cases enable astute parties to divine with great
    accuracy the names of confidential informers, sources, and the
    like . . . ."    
    Loigman, supra
    , 102 N.J. at 111.
    Where      appropriate,     a    court    should    also     allow    the
    governmental entity to submit an ex parte explanation as to why
    disclosure is inimical to the public interest.            "Because of the
    in camera nature of the review, the custodian, if necessary or
    appropriate, can explain ex parte the significance of documents
    and the impact their disclosure might have and the trial judge
    can state his reasons for non-disclosure."           
    Shuttleworth, supra
    ,
    258 N.J. Super. at 589 (applying common law right to inspect).
    Applying these principles, we conclude it was error for the
    court to deny the State's motion to submit the proposed McGrath
    certification ex parte and in camera.          As discussed above, there
    are few requested records in this case that fall outside the
    "criminal investigatory record" exception; any that did would
    still   be   subject   to   review   under   the   "ongoing    investigation
    exception."     Moreover, the foregoing discussion is relevant to
    the court's consideration of NJMG's claim of a common law right
    to inspect the documents, which we discuss below.
    54                             A-2523-14T1
    V.
    With respect to section 3(b), the State contends: (1) NJMG
    is   entitled        only    to   the   information        delineated    in    the
    subsection, and not documents that contain such information; and
    (2) the State disclosed all the information required.                   We agree
    with the State as to the first point, but not as to the second.
    Had   the   Legislature        intended     section    3(b)   to   oblige    a
    public agency to release records, as opposed to information, it
    would have said so.           We are guided by the plain language of the
    statute.    In interpreting a statute, "[i]f the plain language is
    clear, the court's task is complete."               In re Kollman, 
    210 N.J. 557
    , 568 (2012).            We assign to words their generally accepted
    meaning.    In re Petition for Referendum on Trenton Ordinance 09-
    02, 
    201 N.J. 349
    , 358 (2010).                We must "read every word in a
    statute    as   if    it    was   deliberately    chosen     and   presume    that
    omitted words were excluded purposefully."                 State v. Scott, 
    429 N.J. Super. 1
    , 6-7 (App. Div. 2012) (internal quotation marks
    and citation omitted), certif. denied, 
    214 N.J. 117
    (2013).                      In
    particular, we presume the Legislature acts intentionally when
    it uses "particular language in one section of the statute but
    omits it in another section of the same Act."                      N.J. Dep't of
    Children & Families v. A.L., 
    213 N.J. 1
    , 21 (2013) (internal
    quotation marks and citation omitted).
    55                               A-2523-14T1
    We conclude the word "information," as used in the statute,
    is    not   synonymous      with        tangible      records,   such     as    written
    documents,    notes,       or     recordings        that    contain    the     specified
    information.     The required "information" may be conveyed in a
    newly drafted press release.                 Conceivably, the information could
    be provided in a public oral announcement.
    The principal provision of OPRA generally authorizes access
    to    "government    records,"          N.J.S.A.      47:1A-1    (emphasis      added),
    defined to include, among other things, tangible items such as
    "any paper, written or printed book, document, drawing, map,
    plan, photograph, microfilm, data processed or image processed
    document."     N.J.S.A. 47:1A-1.1.                  The drafters recognized that
    "information"       is    not     limited      to    its    tangible    forms.        See
    N.J.S.A. 47:1A-1.1 (stating that "[g]overnment records" include
    "information    stored       or    maintained         electronically,"         exempting
    "information    received          by"    a    legislator,      "including       but   not
    limited to information in written form or contained in any e-
    mail or computer data base") (emphasis added); N.J.S.A. 47:1A-
    2.2     (discussing        government             records    containing         personal
    "information").          Section 3(b) refers only to "information" and
    not specific tangible records.
    As discussed above, section 3(b) was drawn from Governor
    Whitman's    executive      order.           That    order    expressly      authorized
    56                                 A-2523-14T1
    public officials to respond orally to requests for the specified
    information.       "The law enforcement official responding to oral
    requests should make best efforts to respond orally over the
    telephone . . . ."         Exec. Order No. 69 (Whitman), ¶ 3.                     Although
    this provision was not imported into OPRA, we reject NJMG's
    assertion     this      non-inclusion        imbues         "information"         with     a
    different     meaning.        Therefore,        we     conclude         the    State     was
    permitted     to     comply       with    section      3(b)        by    providing       the
    "information" in a press release.
    However,     we     agree    with    NJMG      that    the     State     failed    to
    include all the information required by the law.                          In particular,
    the   State   omitted       "information        as    to     the    identity       of    the
    investigating and arresting personnel and agency and the length
    of the investigation."            N.J.S.A. 47:1A-3(b).              The press release
    also did not include information on the "use of weapons and
    ammunition by . . . the police."                
    Ibid. The OAG did
    not "issue
    a brief statement" explaining the omissions.                        Nor did the State
    argue that its omissions were warranted because release of the
    information       would    "jeopardize      the      safety     of       any   person     or
    jeopardize any investigation in progress or may be otherwise
    inappropriate to release."                
    Ibid. The State shall
    promptly
    release     the    omitted    information,           or,    upon        remand,   make     a
    57                                     A-2523-14T1
    sufficient showing under section 3(b) to the trial court why it
    should be excused from doing so.
    VI.
    Lastly,    we     consider          the    State's     appeal        from    the     trial
    court's order compelling release of the documents pursuant to
    the   common     law    right        of    access.         The       State      concedes      the
    requested records are public records, subject to the common law
    right to inspect.             See 
    Nero, supra
    , 76 N.J. at 222 (stating
    "[t]he   elements       essential         to    constitute       a    public       record     are
    . . . that it be a written memorial, that it be made by a public
    officer, and that the officer be authorized by law to make it")
    (internal quotation marks and citation omitted).                             The State also
    concedes   that        NJMG    has        the    requisite       standing         to    request
    inspection.      See, e.g., S. Jersey Publ'g Co. v. N.J. Expressway
    Auth., 
    124 N.J. 478
    , 487 (1991) ("[A] newspaper's interest in
    keep[ing] a watchful eye on the workings of public agencies is
    sufficient to accord standing under the common law.") (internal
    quotation marks and citation omitted); 
    Irval, supra
    , 61 N.J. at
    372   (stating    that        some    showing         of   interest        is    required      to
    enforce the common law right to inspect).                        The State challenges
    the   court's    balancing           of    NJMG's      interest       in     the       documents
    against the LEAs' interest in confidentiality.
    58                                      A-2523-14T1
    The principles governing the common-law balancing are well-
    settled.     We discussed some of them in our discussion above of
    the   balancing     under     the      "inimical      to   the     public    interest"
    standard    under     the    RTKL      and    OPRA.        The    balancing       of      the
    competing    interests       in     disclosure      and    confidentiality           often
    involves an "exquisite weighing process by the trial judge."
    
    Loigman, supra
    , 102 N.J. at 108 (internal quotation marks and
    citation    omitted).         The      Loigman    Court    recognized       the    "vital
    public interest in . . . the success of criminal prosecutions
    and the protection of potential witnesses and informants."                                
    Id. at 107-08.
        Toward that end, pursuant to executive order, NJSP
    investigative files may not be disclosed without court order or
    executive    order.         
    Id. at 107-08
       (citing    Exec.      Order     No.      48
    (Hughes)).
    Since there is a high degree of need for
    confidentiality in such materials, more than
    a showing of good faith and citizen status
    will be required to overcome the public
    interest in confidentiality.    It does not
    constitute a clear showing of such public
    need to say only that there may be something
    corrupt that should be exposed for the
    benefit of the public.
    [Id. at 108.]
    Loigman specifically addressed a request under the common
    law   to    inspect    documents         related      to    an    OAG   audit        of    a
    prosecutor's office's confidential account.                      
    Loigman, supra
    , 102
    59                                   A-2523-14T1
    N.J. at 101.       The Court identified several factors the trial
    court should consider in balancing the requester's needs against
    the public agency's interest in confidentiality:
    (1) the extent to which disclosure will
    impede agency functions by discouraging
    citizens from providing information to the
    government; (2) the effect disclosure may
    have upon persons who have given such
    information, and whether they did so in
    reliance that their identities would not be
    disclosed; (3) the extent to which agency
    self-evaluation,  program   improvement,  or
    other decisionmaking will be chilled by
    disclosure; (4) the degree to which the
    information sought includes factual data as
    opposed     to   evaluative    reports    of
    policymakers; (5) whether any findings of
    public misconduct have been insufficiently
    corrected by remedial measures instituted by
    the investigative agency; and (6) whether
    any agency disciplinary or investigatory
    proceedings    have    arisen    that    may
    circumscribe the individual's asserted need
    for the materials.    Against these and any
    other relevant factors should be balanced
    the importance of the information sought to
    the plaintiff's vindication of the public
    interest.
    [Id. at 113 (citation omitted).]
    The motivation of the requester is a relevant consideration
    in   the   balancing   process   under   the   common   law.     "Somewhat
    different    but   related   considerations    arise    when   the   citizen
    seeks access to information to further a public good" as opposed
    to a private interest.        
    Loigman, supra
    , 102 N.J. at 104.              In
    connection with requests for a criminal investigatory file, the
    60                                A-2523-14T1
    Court held in Marshall that "the common-law right to inspect
    public documents may not be invoked in a pending criminal case
    by a defendant seeking discovery rights beyond those granted by
    Rule 3:13-2 to -4."      
    Marshall, supra
    , 148 N.J. at 274.
    As we noted, the need for confidentiality in investigative
    materials may wane after the investigation is concluded.                         With
    respect to grand jury proceedings, for example, "our case law
    has with increasing frequency expanded the right of victims and
    some other persons with particular interest to gain access [to
    grand jury transcripts] after completion of the criminal case."
    
    Shuttleworth, 258 N.J. Super. at 585
    , n.6; see also State v.
    Doliner, 
    96 N.J. 236
    , 246 (1984) (stating that "a strong showing
    of a particularized need" must be made to secure access to grand
    jury materials).
    We applied the Loigman principles in Shuttleworth which, as
    noted above, involved the request for documents pertaining to a
    Camden Police investigation into the fatal police shooting of a
    suspect in custody.        
    Shuttleworth, supra
    , 258 N.J. Super. at
    578.      The   investigation      in   Shuttleworth         was   closed,     and    a
    determination     had    already    been      made     not    to   prosecute       the
    involved officer or officers.                
    Ibid. We affirmed the
    trial
    court's   release   of   an   autopsy        report    "precisely    because       the
    investigation     was    closed     without      the    filing      of   charges."
    61                                   A-2523-14T1
    
    Shuttleworth, supra
    , 258 N.J. Super. at 595.                           On the record
    presented, we were unable to determine which other documents the
    trial court actually ordered disclosed pursuant to the common
    law right to inspect.           We remanded for an in camera review of
    documents listed on a Vaughn index.                
    Id. at 589-91.
    By   contrast,     in    Daily     Journal,        we    affirmed       the    trial
    court's denial of access to records of a grand jury presentment
    regarding alleged government corruption.                      Daily 
    Journal, supra
    ,
    351 N.J. Super. at 127-31.             Although the investigation was also
    closed,    the    trial       court      found         that    the     interests          in
    confidentiality     were      warranted,      particularly        in    light       of   the
    unique nature of the presentment process.                     
    Id. at 128-30.
            Other
    circumstances      may        establish           an     overriding           need       for
    confidentiality, despite the closing of an investigation.                                See
    
    Keddie, supra
    , 148 N.J. at 54; River Edge Sav. & Loan 
    Ass'n, supra
    , 165 N.J. Super. at 545.
    As   a   procedural     matter,     a   court      must    make     a    threshold
    determination     whether      an   in    camera        review    of    documents         is
    warranted.     
    Loigman, supra
    , 102 N.J. at 109.                   The review itself
    may   cause    unjustified       risks       to    the    public's       interest         in
    conducting effective criminal investigations.                      
    Ibid. The court may
    first require the submission of a Vaughn index, to identify
    the   documents     at     issue,      and    the       asserted       rationale         for
    62                                      A-2523-14T1
    nondisclosure.         
    Id. at 109-10.
                The court may, if appropriate,
    require the submission of the index in camera, as well as a
    further explanation of the reasons for non-disclosure.                              
    Id. at 111-12.
    Applying these principles, the trial court's order granting
    access to the requested materials is flawed because it is based
    on    an    incomplete      record.         We    recognize    the    intense       public
    interest in a case involving the possible use of excessive force
    by police. The issue has arisen in cases across the country.
    The    public's      need    to    know     is    not   limited    to      the    public's
    interest       in    knowing      what    happened      in    a    particular           case.
    Information may assist the public in evaluating the adequacy of
    police procedures in general, and the claim that police force is
    used       disproportionately        against       members    of   minority        groups.
    Access to records related to fatal police shootings may also be
    relevant to public policy debates about proposed reforms.
    In    this    case,     the   discrepancy        between      the   OAG's        press
    release        and     the        investigating          detective's           subsequent
    certification        raises       obvious        questions    about     what      happened
    immediately prior to the shooting.                   As noted, it was asserted in
    the press release that Ashford rammed a police vehicle before
    being      shot.     The     detective's         certification     stated        only    that
    Ashford's engine revved "as if" to force his way out from the
    63                                    A-2523-14T1
    spot   where    the    car    was    lodged     against      the    guardrail.       The
    discrepancy between these two documents also raises questions
    about the reliability or accuracy of the information upon which
    the press release was based.
    The requesters' and the public's interest in access must be
    balanced   against      the     substantial       interests         in   conducting     a
    thorough   and    effective         investigation,         untainted     by   premature
    release of investigative materials.                   In order to engage in a
    proper   balancing      of    interests,        the   trial      court    should    have
    considered the proposed in camera and ex parte submission by Lt.
    McGrath.       See 
    Shuttleworth, supra
    , 258 N.J. Super. at 589.                        If
    the    court    were    still       unpersuaded       that       non-disclosure      was
    warranted, the court should have ordered the State to prepare a
    Vaughn index, for submission in camera if appropriate.                               See
    
    Loigman, supra
    ,      102    N.J.    at   108-12.         The   court    should    have
    reviewed    the    documents         themselves       in    camera,      applying    the
    Loigman factors, and retaining the ability to release a document
    in a redacted form.
    The government's interest in confidentiality may decline
    once   investigative         activity      ceases.         The     investigation     was
    ongoing according to certifications submitted to the trial court
    in December.      Over eight months have elapsed since the SRT began
    its investigation.           It is unclear that the investigation is
    64                                  A-2523-14T1
    still ongoing and, if it is, the nature of those continuing
    activities.        The trial court should ascertain, based upon in
    camera submissions if appropriate, the current status of the
    investigation, as part of its balancing of competing interests.
    Conceivably, one part of the investigation may be closed,
    while another part is still active.                  For example, the gathering
    of evidence of alleged criminal activity by Ashford and Bynes
    may have ceased, in view of their deaths.                   In other respects,
    records     regarding     the     actions       of   Ashford    and    Bynes,     and
    statements of Bynes, may still be relevant to the SRT's work.
    Such facts may be relevant in justifying the release of some
    documents, but not others.
    VII.
    In   sum,    we   remand    to     the    trial    court   to    reconsider
    plaintiff's requests in light of the principles set forth in
    this opinion.       We have identified those records that are exempt
    from    OPRA    pursuant     to    the    criminal       investigatory     records
    exception.      N.J.S.A. 47:1A:1.1.             With respect to the requests
    for any records that fall outside that exception, the court
    shall consider whether their release would be inimical to the
    public interest under N.J.S.A. 47:1A-3(a).                     In so doing, the
    court   shall      review,   in   camera,       McGrath's   proposed     ex     parte
    certification.        However, the State shall promptly comply with
    65                              A-2523-14T1
    its disclosure obligation under N.J.S.A. 47:1A-3(b), or make a
    sufficient showing to the trial court why it should be excused
    from doing so.
    The   trial    court    shall     also      reconsider    its   determination
    that plaintiffs are entitled to access under the common law.                         In
    so   doing,      the     court     shall      consider        McGrath's      proposed
    certification.         The court shall also determine whether a Vaughn
    index   should    be    prepared     and,     if   so,   whether     it    should   be
    submitted in camera.         In light of those submissions, the court
    shall   determine       whether   to   review      the   withheld    documents      in
    camera,    and    whether     release       of     the   requested        records    is
    warranted, in whole or in part, with or without redaction.
    Affirmed      in    part,    reversed       in   part,    and   remanded       for
    reconsideration.        We do not retain jurisdiction.
    66                                   A-2523-14T1