PACER Deleting Old Cases; Time To Fix PACER

from the down-the-memory-hole dept

For years, we’ve talked about the many problems with PACER, the horribly designed and managed electronic court records system that the federal court system uses here in the US. Beyond being clunky, buggy, horribly designed and slow — it’s also expensive. With some exceptions, it’s 10 cents per page you download, and also 10 cents per search. As many have noted, this almost certainly violates the law concerning PACER, which says that the Judicial Conference can only “prescribe reasonable fees? to reimburse expenses incurred in providing these services.” And yet the fees go way, way beyond what’s needed to maintain the (again, horrible) system which they refuse to update. Instead, it’s used for lots of other things. And, as many people note, it’s something of a travesty that all of these public records are locked up, rather than being made available. Even more ridiculous is that when people hack around this system, such as with the open RECAP project to free up PACER documents, courts freak out. Or, when people like Aaron Swartz try to use free access to PACER to free up its documents, they end up being the subject of an FBI investigation for computer hacking.

Aaron Greenspan, who runs an open court records site called Plainsite (and who is currently engaged in an unlikely-to-succeed lawsuit arguing that PACER should be free), has noticed that PACER is also shoving old cases down the memory hole so they will no longer be available. In a brief announcement on August 10th, PACER’s website announced that a bunch of cases would “no longer be available.”

Now, there have always been some cases not on PACER, but to actively start removing a bunch of cases, including many that are fairly recent (CAFC cases from just two years ago?!?) seems ridiculous and excessive. Yes, PACER is horribly designed and managed, but it’s not like the storage costs for some old PDFs is that high. Especially as storage keeps getting cheaper and cheaper. Does someone down at the Administrative Office of the US Courts want me to send them an external 2 TB hard drive? They run about $100 these days…

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Comments on “PACER Deleting Old Cases; Time To Fix PACER”

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16 Comments
Coyne Tibbets (profile) says:

Re: Re:

They cannot afford a disc drive for public records, but can pay for Bluffdale […]

Of course. Public records are used against the government; therefore, they must be locked up so the government can abuse its citizens in peace. Or if not abuse, well, public records are very not a priority.

But records on all those potential terro…ahem…all those awesome citizens, well, those are a priority, because those help us control the citizens.

Anonymous Anonymous Coward says:

So far behind.

“external 2 TB hard drive? They run about $100 these days”


Just bought two, along with another Raspberry Pi to run the NAS made up of USB drives.

Nothing like rebooting the computer acting as your server to mess up things for other devices unnecessarily, like the movie I was watching stops, and reboots all around to re-recognize.

Now the governments issues are different. There is certainly sufficient technology to serve the documents, all the documents, cheaply (and unlike my solution above, safely) and distribute them for free, as they should, and probably reduce costs. It take extra money to implement limitations.

Anonymous Coward says:

This might actually work in our favor. The Supreme Court has long recognized that “copies” of records must be made available, and if they’re no longer on PACER, that means they will have to be available from the courts, at cost. The way they get away with the PACER fees is by saying the documents can be viewed for free at the courts, but if you want copies of them, you have to pay (10 cents a physical page or electronic “page,” which is bs of course). If they can no longer be obtained on PACER, there’s an extremely strong case that digital copies must be provided electronically.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re:

It would make an interesting test case for a totally broke person (maybe a child or someone homeless) were to commit an offence which does not appear to be illegal based on the plain reading of the relevant legislation and is not “intuitively” illegal but which has been interpreted as being illegal, and to then claim that had he had no way to know that his actions were illegal because he could not afford to pay for access the the relevant documents, let alone obtain legal advice.

That might just about work because although a person has the responsibility to find out what the law is rather than just acting and claiming ignorance, if they cannot find out what the law is it would be unjust to penalise someone for breaking it. (I wouldn’t encourage anyone to try to set up such a situation, but it might be worth trying for an otherwise hopeless case.)

Anonymous Coward says:

Architecture

Given that it’s “clunky, buggy, horribly designed and slow” (taking your word for it, since I’ve never used it), I can think of a possible reason for them to remove older cases: their system’s architecture can deal only with a limited number of cases.

It might be a performance problem which gets worse the more cases they have available. It might be a design restriction which causes it to break if there are above a certain number of cases (like the issue slashdot had a long time ago when the number of comments no longer fit on a 4 byte integer). It might be that the older cases have their metadata formatted differently than the newer cases, and they want to make a change which needs the newer metadata. And so on.

Whatever the true cause is, it’s not going to be something that simply adding a new drive could fix (if they can even add a new drive; the cause might be that their architecture limits the number of drives).

David Lewis says:

Pacer

A couple of points. Judge Newman (C.J. of the Second Circuit) advocated a free pacer in the early ’90’s and got overruled by the other courts. The cases disappearing from the Second Circuit are those prior to the inclusion of the actual documents filed and are less important than the more recent docket sheets, which include links to documents and thus actually show what is going on substantively in a case. Not to say they aren’t useful on occasion. I don’t think it’s so clunky, but I’ve got free access through work.

But what are they doing with cases like the one of the guy who called me, having been convicted ca. 1990 and still on supervised release (like parole) with occasional active entries. They shouldn’t be wiping his case out, I had to refer to it to advise him.

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