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Court rules Notre Dame can keep campus police reports secret

INDIANAPOLIS (AP) - The University of Notre Dame's police department doesn't have to release crime reports about student athletes to ESPN, the Indiana Supreme Court ruled Wednesday.

The court said in unanimous ruling that the private university's police department isn't a public agency that falls under the state open records law. The state's highest court reversed a state appeals court decision from March that said the law applied because the department has legal authority from the state to make arrests and has jurisdiction beyond the university's campus.

The Supreme Court justices found the public records law didn't apply to Notre Dame police because the department isn't part of any level of government.

"A grant of arrest powers enabling university police departments to keep order on their private campuses does not transform those officers or the trustees who oversee them into public officials and employees," Justice Mark Massa wrote.

Bristol, Connecticut-based ESPN said in a brief statement that it was "extremely disappointed by the ruling and what it represents for public transparency."

An ESPN attorney told the Indiana justices in September that the ability of Notre Dame police officers to arrest and apprehend represented "the core powers of the state."

ESPN sued Notre Dame in January 2015, asking a judge in South Bend to order the school to release campus police records detailing allegations against athletes. That St. Joseph County judge ruled in Notre Dame's favor three months later, finding that Indiana's private schools aren't subject to its open records law.

Peter Rusthoven, an attorney for Notre Dame, had argued that Indiana's law includes the wording "such as" in describing which law enforcement entities are subject, but lists only public agencies, not private entities. He said that if Notre Dame's police department had to comply with Indiana's records law, other aspects of the university's functions would be forced to as well.

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