dolcevita wrote:
Why is that? I don't know for sure, but I think it would more likely influence an understanding of the disscussions that helped arrive at the Majority/Minority views? I actually thought it would be an interesting way of a dissenting viewpoint to have reach beyond the decision of the actual trial, and tht judges may even write those papers anticipating the public reading them more than the other judges. Sort of a way of leaving information for others to expound on after a decision has been made. I think about all the "stars" that left diaries, and the jokes about those diaries being written with readers in mind. This could be a very interesting route for supreme court judges to take actually.
Well, judges can already write dissenting opinions and do all the time. When the Supreme Court makes a decision, there are many many pages explaining why they decided the way they did. Lawyer need those explanations so they can argue future cases, because you can't cite a case as precdent if you're not sure why the court decided the way they did.
The opinions are the finished product that are important, not the rough drafts.
However, the negotiating that goes on behind closed doors, as well as judges' personal opinions of each other, don't really help us much at all except in a historical perspective. That's why I say they should be made available only years after all of the parties involved are dead and it doesn't matter.
Studies have shown that jurors act differently when they know someone will be revieweing their negotiations. Confidentiality is important in the legal process.