Last May, the Connecticut Supreme Court granted the request of four newspapers for release of some 12,600 pages of documents filed in 23 cases alleging sexual abuse by Roman Catholic clergy. (See prior posting.) On motion of the Bridgeport Roman Catholic Diocese, the Connecticut Supreme Court issued a stay until the U.S. Supreme Court ruled on an application to extend the stay. (Background from Diocese website.) On Tuesday, as reported by the New York Times, U.S. Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg refused the Diocese's request for a stay. (Docket entry.) The Diocese could still ask the full U.S. Supreme Court to reconsider Ginsburg's ruling. A letter from Bishop William E. Lori distributed in all parishes sets out the Diocese's side of the case.
UPDATE: AP reports that on Friday, the Bridgeport Diocese submitted its request for a stay to Justice Antonin Scalia, hoping he will rule differently than did Justice Ginsburg. (Docket entry.) Supreme Court Rule 22 permits an application denied by the Justice assigned to the Circuit where the case arose to be refiled with any other justice. David Clohessy, national director of the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests, complained: "The appeal to the court's most stridently Catholic member, whose son is a priest, smacks of desperation and favoritism."