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May 7, 1975
THE HONORABLE ROBERT F. RIPLEY, JR.
Commonwealth's Attorney for York County
74-75 583
This is in reply to your recent letter wherein you inquire:
"The question has arisen in my jurisdiction as to whether
or not the jail book maintained by the Sheriff of the County of
York should be open to inspection by the public and the news media
under the Virginia Freedom of Information Act. The jail book
cnntains the name of every prisoner incarcerated in the York
County Jail. In addition to his name it records the color of his
eyes, sex, age, weight, height, charge, his or her reason for
being in jail, the date of his trial, the Court he is to be tried
in, the sentence that he receives including the number of days,
months, years, his fine, his costs, the date that he was admitted,
the date that he was released, whether or not he has been
distributed to a State, County, City, Town or Federal institution
for confinement, or whether or not he was distributed to an
institution for the insane, the time admitted, the time released,
his arresting officers, the nativity, his address, occupation,
marital status, and at the end there is a place for remarks."
Section 2.1-342(a), Code of Virginia (1960), as amended,
provides:
"Except as otherwise specifically provided by law, all
official records shall be open to inspection and copying by any
citizens of this State during the regular office hours of the
custodian of such records. Access to such records shall not be
denied to any such citizen of this State, nor to representatives
of newspapers and magazines with circulation in this State, and
representatives of radio and television stations broadcasting in
or into this State; provided, that the custodian of such records
shall take all necessary precautions for their preservation and
safeguarding."
Section 2.1-341 (b) defines "official records" as:
"[A]ll written or printed books, papers, letters,
documents, maps and tapes, photographs, films, sound recordings,
reports or other material, regardless of physical form or
characteristics, made and received in pursuance of law by the
public officers of the state and its counties, municipalities and
subdivisions of government in the transaction of public business."
I am, therefore, of the view that a county sheriffs jail book is
an "official record" within the meaning of §2.1-341(b) and would
be subject to the public disclosure requirements of §2.1-342(a),
unless specifically exempted pursuant to §2.1-342(b),
subsections (1) through (6), or other provisions of law. I find none
of the exceptions to the general disclosure rule provided for in
§2.1-342(b), subsections (1) through (5) applicable. I,
furthermore, find no other provision of law exempting jail books from
public disclosure. Accordingly, I am of the opinion that the
sheriff's jail book is an "official record" subject to the public
disclosure requirements of the Freedom of Information Act.
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