Multiple attempts were made to access the deal's documents through the Official Information Act and Ombudsman, but they were consistently blocked - on the grounds of legal privilege and confidentiality.This is just the privilege over settlement negotiations in the court record. But the precedent - that transparency supports the administration of justice and is more important than legal privilege where confidence in the system is on the line - should allow the families to gain access to other documents around the case currently being withheld under legal privilege. The big lever here is that the purpose of the OIA is to enable access to official information "to enhance respect for the law and to promote the good government of New Zealand". So far the Ombudsman has generally focused on the second part of that, but the court has just sent a very clear signal that the first part matters too. And hopefully the Ombudsman will listen (if not, I guess it will be back to court to get an actually binding precedent specifically about legal privilege and the OIA).But on Friday, a judgement obtained by 1News said transparency matters in the interests of justice.
It said that without transparency, "there is scope for false speculation and misunderstanding" which "can undermine confidence in the administration of justice".
It means the families may now see the privileged material and be able to learn why charges were dropped.
If they do, then this is going to have implications. Where the government has behaved disgracefully and called the administration of justice into question with apparently corrupt dealing, they will no longer be able to hide behind their lawyers. And that I think will make us a much better society.
Update: the full judgement is now online.