State Ex Rel. Office of the State Public Defender v. Court of Appeals , 346 Wis. 2d 735 ( 2013 )


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    2013 WI 31
    SUPREME COURT               OF    WISCONSIN
    CASE NO.:               2012AP544-W
    COMPLETE TITLE:         In the Matter of State v. Michael B. Buchanan,
    2011AP1997-CR:
    State of Wisconsin ex rel. Office of the State
    Public
    Defender,
    Petitioner,
    v.
    Court of Appeals, District IV and the Honorable
    Paul Lundsten, presiding,
    Respondents.
    PETITION FOR SUPERVISORY WRIT
    BEFORE THE SUPREME COURT
    OPINION FILED:          April 9, 2013
    SUBMITTED ON BRIEFS:
    ORAL ARGUMENT:          November 5, 2012
    SOURCE OF APPEAL:
    COURT:
    COUNTY:
    JUDGE:
    JUSTICES:
    CONCURRED:
    DISSENTED:           BRADLEY, J., ABRAHAMSON, C.J., PROSSER, J.,
    dissent. (Opinion filed.)
    NOT PARTICIPATING:
    ATTORNEYS:
    For the petitioner, there were briefs by Joseph N. Ehmann,
    first assistant state public defender, and Kelli S. Thompson,
    state public defender, and oral argument by Joseph N. Ehmann.
    For      the    respondents,   there   was   a   brief   by   Patrick   J.
    Fiedler and Tyler Wilkinson, and Axley Brynelson, LLP, Madison,
    and oral argument by Patrick J. Fiedler.
    An amicus curiae brief was filed on behalf of the State of
    Wisconsin by Marguerite M. Moeller, assistant attorney general,
    with whom on the brief was J.B. Van Hollen, attorney general.
    2
    
    2013 WI 31
    NOTICE
    This opinion is subject to further
    editing and modification.   The final
    version will appear in the bound
    volume of the official reports.
    No.       2012AP544-W
    STATE OF WISCONSIN                            :            IN SUPREME COURT
    In the Matter of State v. Michael B. Buchanan,
    2011AP1997-CR (L.C. No. 2009CF113):
    State of Wisconsin ex rel. Office of the State
    Public Defender,                                                     FILED
    Petitioner,
    APR 9, 2013
    v.
    Diane M. Fremgen
    Clerk of Supreme Court
    Court of Appeals, District IV and the Honorable
    Paul Lundsten, presiding,
    Respondents.
    PETITION    for   supervisory   writ.       Rights      declared;       relief
    granted, case proceeds accordingly at the court of appeals.
    ¶1      ANNETTE KINGSLAND ZIEGLER, J.             This is a review of
    an order of the court of appeals1 that required defense counsel
    to seek permission from the circuit court in order to reference
    information from a presentence investigation report (PSI) in an
    appellate brief.
    1
    State v. Buchanan, 2011AP1997-CR, unpublished order (Wis.
    Ct. App. Feb. 13, 2012).
    No.     2012AP544-W
    ¶2       Assistant    State     Public    Defender      Steven       Grunder
    (Grunder) was appointed as postconviction counsel for Michael
    Buchanan (Buchanan).            Grunder, on Buchanan's behalf, filed a
    motion with the court of appeals seeking permission to use, cite
    to, and quote from2 Buchanan's PSI in his appellate brief.                       The
    court of appeals granted the motion.               The State, in turn, filed
    a motion seeking the same permission to use, cite to, and quote
    from the PSI for its own appellate brief.                     The State's motion
    stated that it had been the attorney general's practice to seek
    the circuit court's permission to cite a PSI in an appellate
    brief following State v. Parent, 
    2006 WI 132
    , 
    298 Wis. 2d 63
    ,
    
    725 N.W.2d 915
    .         The court of appeals then issued an order that
    placed under seal all copies of Buchanan's brief, directed the
    parties to move the circuit court for permission to cite the
    PSI, and denied the State's motion to the court of appeals for
    permission to cite the PSI.                 The State Public Defender (SPD)
    petitioned this court to issue a supervisory writ vacating the
    court       of   appeals'    order    and   clarifying   that    the   parties   in
    Buchanan's        case need not       ask permission     of    any   court   before
    citing the PSI in their appellate briefs.                 Uniquely, the State
    filed an amicus brief agreeing with the SPD.
    ¶3           We conclude that the SPD has not met the requirements
    for issuance of a supervisory writ.                However, pursuant to our
    superintending and administrative authority, we conclude that in
    2
    Throughout the opinion, "reference" includes use, citation
    to, and quotation from the PSI.
    2
    No.     2012AP544-W
    a merit appeal, parties who are entitled "to have and keep a
    copy" of a PSI pursuant to 
    Wis. Stat. § 972.15
    (4m) (2009-10)3
    need not ask any court's permission to reference a PSI in an
    appellate brief.            Parties may reference information from the PSI
    that       does    not     reveal    confidential        information         and      that    is
    relevant      to     the    appeal.       We    urge     counsel     to     be     abundantly
    cautious when deciding whether it is necessary to cite sensitive
    information and when choosing how to cite such content.
    I. FACTUAL BACKGROUND AND PROCEDURAL POSTURE
    ¶4         In 2010, Buchanan pled no contest to two crimes.                           The
    circuit      court       sentenced    Buchanan,        and    he   filed     a     notice     of
    intent       to    pursue    postconviction           relief.        The     SPD      assigned
    Attorney Grunder to represent Buchanan.                        On November 22, 2011,
    Buchanan's counsel filed              a    motion      with    the     court     of   appeals
    seeking permission to cite "the portions of the PSI relevant to
    the    defendant's         appeal."       The       motion    stated     that    Buchanan's
    appeal was focused on sentencing issues, that it was necessary
    to cite the PSI to develop Buchanan's appellate claims, and that
    the portions of the PSI that Buchanan sought to use contained no
    confidential information.                 On November 30, 2011, the court of
    appeals issued an order granting the motion.                           The order allowed
    Buchanan to "quote sparingly" from the PSI but directed him not
    to     use    the     initials      or,    by       extension,     the     names      of     any
    3
    All subsequent references to the Wisconsin Statutes are to
    the 2009-10 version unless otherwise indicated.
    3
    No.     2012AP544-W
    individuals          identified     in    the   PSI.       Buchanan     then      filed    the
    appellate brief.
    ¶5     On January 4, 2012, a motion was filed on the State's
    behalf       seeking    the   same       permission       to   "quote     from    the     PSI,
    subject to the same constraints" for the purposes of its own
    appellate       brief.        The    State's        motion     stated     that    to    fully
    respond to Buchanan's appellate brief, it needed permission to
    cite the PSI.           The motion noted that following Parent, it has
    been    the     practice      of    the   attorney        general's     office     to     seek
    permission from the circuit court to cite a PSI in an appellate
    brief.
    ¶6     On February 13, 2012, the court of appeals issued an
    order        that,    inter   alia,       placed      under     seal      all    copies    of
    Buchanan's brief, directed the parties to move the circuit court
    for permission to "access, discuss, cite to, or quote from the
    PSI," and denied the State's motion to the court of appeals for
    permission to cite the PSI.                 The court of appeals reasoned that
    "Parent makes clear that the circuit court, and not this court,
    is the proper tribunal to preside over motions requesting access
    to and disclosure of the contents of PSI reports."
    ¶7     On     February     24,    2012,     Buchanan      filed    a     motion    for
    reconsideration in the court of appeals.                       Buchanan argued that a
    defendant has a right to deny or explain statements in the PSI,
    which could be violated if he or she is required to obtain
    circuit       court    permission to use            the    PSI.     Further,       Buchanan
    argued that Parent is limited to no-merit appeals and that the
    confidentiality requirement of 
    Wis. Stat. § 972.15
    (4) and (4m)
    4
    No.     2012AP544-W
    is   met   by    compliance       with        Wis.    Stat.     § (Rule) 809.81(8)
    ("Every . . . document that is filed in the court and that is
    required by law to be confidential shall refer to individuals
    only by their first name and the first initial of their last
    name.").
    ¶8    On    March     2,    2012,     the       court    of    appeals        denied
    Buchanan's motion for reconsideration.
    ¶9    On March 14, 2012, the SPD petitioned this court for a
    supervisory writ.        The petition asks this court to vacate the
    court of appeals' order that required the parties to move the
    circuit court for permission to "access, discuss, cite to, or
    quote from the PSI."           The SPD, and the State as an amicus, asks
    this court to rule that parties who are entitled "to have and
    keep a copy" of a PSI need not ask any court's permission to
    cite to or quote from a PSI in an appellate brief, subject to
    the confidentiality requirement of 
    Wis. Stat. § 972.15
    (4)——(4m).
    ¶10   On    June    13,    2012,     we    accepted      the   case    for     full
    briefing and argument.
    II. STANDARD OF REVIEW
    ¶11   The   first     question      presented      is    whether      this     court
    should issue a supervisory writ vacating the court of appeals'
    order.     As    the     court     of    original       jurisdiction,         we    have
    discretion to issue a supervisory writ.                      See Wis. Const. art.
    VII, § 3; 
    Wis. Stat. § 751.07
    ; State ex rel. Dressler v. Circuit
    Court for Racine Cnty., 
    163 Wis. 2d 622
    , 630, 
    472 N.W.2d 532
    (Ct. App. 1991).        However, a supervisory writ is a drastic and
    extraordinary     remedy       that     will    not    be     granted     unless     the
    5
    No.    2012AP544-W
    petition meets "stringent prerequisites."                     State ex rel. Lynch
    v. County Court, Branch III, 
    82 Wis. 2d 454
    , 459, 
    262 N.W.2d 773
    (1978).
    ¶12    The second question presented is whether parties who
    are entitled "to have and keep a copy" of a PSI pursuant to 
    Wis. Stat. § 972.15
    (4m) need any court's permission to reference a
    PSI   in    an    appellate      brief.         This    question     requires    us    to
    interpret § 972.15.           Interpretation of a statute is a question
    of law that this court reviews de novo while benefitting from
    the analyses of the lower courts.                 See State v. Ziegler, 
    2012 WI 73
    , ¶37, 
    342 Wis. 2d 256
    , 
    816 N.W.2d 238
    .
    III. ANALYSIS
    A. Supervisory Writ
    ¶13    We conclude that the SPD has not met the requirements
    for issuance of a supervisory writ.                      However, pursuant to our
    superintending       and     administrative            authority,    we     nonetheless
    consider the second question presented.
    ¶14    "A    supervisory      writ    is     an    extraordinary       remedy    to
    prevent a court from refusing to perform, or from violating, its
    plain duty."        Madison Metro. Sch. Dist. v. Circuit Court for
    Dane Cnty., 
    2011 WI 72
    ,    ¶33,   
    336 Wis. 2d 95
    ,    
    800 N.W.2d 442
    (citing     Dressler,      163    Wis. 2d at       630).       A     petition    for    a
    supervisory writ will not be issued unless:
    (1) an appeal is an utterly inadequate remedy; (2) the
    duty of the [] court is plain; (3) its refusal to act
    within the line of such duty or its intent to act in
    violation of such duty is clear; (4) the results of
    the [] court's action must not only be prejudicial but
    6
    No.      2012AP544-W
    must involve extraordinary hardship; and, (5)                     the
    request for relief was made promptly and speedily.
    Id., ¶77 (quoting Dressler, 163 Wis. 2d at 630).
    ¶15   The parties agree on the first prong, that an appeal
    would be an inadequate remedy, and on the fifth prong, that the
    SPD's request for relief was made promptly and speedily.                       The
    SPD argues that under 
    Wis. Stat. § 972.15
    , the court of appeals
    had a plain duty to accept Buchanan's brief as filed and its
    refusal to accept Buchanan's brief was clear.                Further, the SPD
    argues that requiring it to seek circuit court permission to
    cite a PSI would be an extraordinary hardship because it may
    violate a defendant's due process right to appeal and would be
    too costly for the SPD.         The court of appeals argues that it did
    not   violate     a   plain   duty   when   it   ordered    Buchanan    to    seek
    circuit court permission to cite his PSI.               The court of appeals
    further argues that it would not be an extraordinary hardship
    for the SPD to seek circuit court permission to cite a PSI.
    ¶16   The standard for "extraordinary hardship" has been met
    in few cases.         For example, in Madison Metropolitan, after a
    school district expelled a student, the circuit court issued an
    order requiring the district to provide appropriate educational
    resources to the student.             
    336 Wis. 2d 95
    , ¶22.          This court
    affirmed    the   court of appeals' grant          of   a   supervisory writ,
    finding that the "extraordinary hardship" prong had been met:
    [T]he potential extraordinary harm to the District is
    inherent in the specter of interference by the courts.
    The District would be faced not only with the costs of
    any continued educational services ordered by the
    circuit court but also the prospect that such costs
    7
    No.     2012AP544-W
    would interfere with the District's performance of its
    duties in lawfully expelling students who endanger the
    health and safety of others.
    Id.,    ¶89.      In    Lynch,    in    response     to    a    criminal       defendant's
    demand for all exculpatory material in the district attorney's
    possession at the preliminary hearing stage, the circuit court
    ordered the district attorney to make its case files available
    for defense counsel's inspection.                   
    82 Wis. 2d at 458-59
    .                 The
    State    argued    that    the    circuit        court's       order    would    cause     an
    extraordinary          hardship         because     it         would,      inter        alia,
    "unjustifiably         delay"     the     case    below        and     would    "create     a
    precedent       which    is     likely     to     hinder       the     efforts     of     the
    prosecution in future cases."                
    Id. at 462-63
    .              We agreed that
    the extraordinary hardship test had been met:
    Inspection of the state's files by the defense at
    this early stage, where there has been no showing of
    particularized need for inspection, can serve only as
    an    opportunity    for    generalized,    unrestricted
    discovery,   rather   than   as   a   device   for   the
    constitutionally   mandated   disclosure   of   specific
    exculpatory   material.      Such   discovery . . . will
    unjustifiably delay the administration of justice.
    
    Id. at 466
     (footnote omitted).
    ¶17    In the case before the court, even assuming the delay
    and extra cost of obtaining circuit court permission would cause
    an "extraordinary hardship," we conclude that the SPD has not
    met the criteria to grant a supervisory writ.                             After Parent,
    there remained a legitimate question of whether parties to a
    merit appeal needed circuit court permission to cite a PSI in
    their appellate briefs.            When Buchanan filed his brief including
    information from his PSI, it was unclear whether the court of
    8
    No.     2012AP544-W
    appeals had a plain duty to accept the brief as filed.                                    Part
    III.B.1. of this opinion discusses that question.
    ¶18   We    nonetheless        conclude      that     it   is     appropriate      for
    this    court      to    exercise      our    superintending        and    administrative
    authority to clarify the procedure that a defendant's counsel
    and the State's representative should follow to cite a PSI in
    their     appellate        briefs.           Superintending        and     administrative
    authority allows this court to implement "procedural rules not
    specifically        required      by    the    Constitution        or    the     [statute]."
    State v. Ernst, 
    2005 WI 107
    , ¶19, 
    283 Wis. 2d 300
    , 
    699 N.W.2d 92
    (quoting United States v. Hasting, 
    461 U.S. 499
    , 505 (1983)).
    "Such rules are designed to implement a remedy for a violation
    of recognized rights."              
    Id.
          The Wisconsin Constitution provides
    that     "[t]he         supreme     court      shall      have     superintending         and
    administrative authority over all courts."                              Wis. Const. art.
    VII, § 3.          This power "is indefinite in character, unsupplied
    with    means      and     instrumentalities,          and     limited      only     by   the
    necessities of justice."               Ernst, 
    283 Wis. 2d 300
    , ¶19.
    B. Citation to a PSI in an Appellate Brief
    1. Interpretation of 
    Wis. Stat. § 972.15
    ¶19   Pursuant       to     our      superintending        and     administrative
    authority, we conclude that in a merit appeal, parties who are
    entitled "to have and keep a copy" of a PSI pursuant to 
    Wis. Stat. § 972.15
    (4m)         need      not    ask     any    court's      permission      to
    reference a PSI in an appellate brief.                           Parties may reference
    information        from    the    PSI     that     does      not   reveal       confidential
    9
    No.       2012AP544-W
    information and that is relevant to the appeal.                             Extreme caution
    should be undertaken when referencing sensitive information.4
    ¶20      The SPD, joined by the State as an amicus, argues that
    court permission is not needed before defense counsel or the
    State may cite to a PSI in an appellate brief.                              The SPD argues
    that       requiring         circuit         court    permission           may    violate       a
    defendant's rights, since a defendant has a due process right to
    be sentenced upon accurate information, see State v. Tiepelman,
    
    2006 WI 66
    ,    ¶9,    
    291 Wis. 2d 179
    ,         
    717 N.W.2d 1
    ,     a    right   to
    disclosure        of    all        information       in    the      PSI,   see    Gardner      v.
    Florida, 
    430 U.S. 349
    , 361-62 (1977), and a right to challenge
    any    statement        in     the     PSI    that        he   or    she   believes      to    be
    inaccurate or incomplete, see State v. Greve, 
    2004 WI 69
    , ¶11,
    
    272 Wis. 2d 444
    , 
    681 N.W.2d 479
    .                          The SPD further argues that
    
    Wis. Stat. § 972.15
    (4m), which authorizes the district attorney
    and the defendant's attorney "to have and keep a copy" of the
    PSI, should be interpreted to authorize those parties to use,
    cite, and quote the PSI in an appellate brief without court
    authorization.               The    SPD   additionally           argues    that       Parent   is
    limited to no-merit appeals.
    ¶21      The court of appeals concluded that the circuit court
    is the appropriate tribunal to grant authorization to cite a PSI
    in an appellate brief.                    It determined that under Wis. Stat.
    4
    A PSI should be quoted as sparingly as possible, and
    counsel must exercise sound discretion to avoid compromising
    sensitive information.   On occasion, appellate counsel may need
    guidance from the court of appeals.
    10
    No.     2012AP544-W
    § 972.15(4), after sentencing, the PSI "shall be confidential
    and    shall    not     be   made   available        to    any    person     except    upon
    specific authorization of the court."                     Further, under 
    Wis. Stat. § 967.02
    (7), "'Court' means the circuit court unless otherwise
    indicated."          The court of appeals reasons that though 
    Wis. Stat. § 972.15
    (4m) entitles the district attorney and defense counsel
    to "have and keep a copy" of the PSI, it does not authorize them
    to use, cite, or quote the PSI.
    ¶22    The      resolution        of         this         question      requires
    interpretation of 
    Wis. Stat. § 972.15
    , which states in relevant
    part:
    (3) The judge may conceal the identity of any
    person who provided information in the presentence
    investigation report.
    (4) Except as provided in sub. (4m), (5), or (6),
    after sentencing the presentence investigation report
    shall be confidential and shall not be made available
    to any person except upon specific authorization of
    the court.
    (4m) The district attorney and the defendant's
    attorney are entitled to have and keep a copy of the
    presentence investigation report. If the defendant is
    not represented by counsel, the defendant is entitled
    to view the presentence investigation report but may
    not keep a copy of the report. A district attorney or
    defendant's attorney who receives a copy of the report
    shall keep it confidential. A defendant who views the
    contents of a presentence investigation report shall
    keep the information in the report confidential.
    Under     § 972.15(4),         there   is        a   general        rule     that     after
    sentencing, the PSI is confidential and parties seeking access
    must    seek    "specific      authorization         of     the    court."      However,
    certain       parties    are   exempted      from         this    general    rule     under
    11
    No.    2012AP544-W
    § 972.15(4m),          including       "[t]he           district        attorney      and       the
    defendant's attorney."             These parties are entitled "to have and
    keep     a     copy"    of     the         PSI,        but     the     PSI    must    be        kept
    "confidential."
    ¶23     "'The    purpose        of     statutory              interpretation        is    to
    determine what the statute means so that it may be given its
    full, proper, and intended effect.'"                           Ziegler, 
    342 Wis. 2d 256
    ,
    ¶42 (quoting Heritage Farms, Inc. v. Markel Ins. Co., 
    2012 WI 26
    ,     ¶26,     
    339 Wis. 2d 125
    ,              
    810 N.W.2d 465
    ).           Statutory
    interpretation         "begins        with        the    language        of    the   statute."
    State ex rel. Kalal v. Circuit Court for Dane Cnty., 
    2004 WI 58
    ,
    ¶45, 
    271 Wis. 2d 633
    , 
    681 N.W.2d 110
    .                              Except for technical or
    specially-defined words, statutory language is given its common,
    ordinary meaning.         
    Id.
         Statutory language is interpreted in the
    context in which it is used, not in isolation but as part of a
    whole.         Id.,     ¶46.          We     must       construe        statutory     language
    reasonably; an unreasonable interpretation is one that yields
    absurd results or one that contravenes the statute's manifest
    purpose.       Id.
    ¶24    We conclude that in a merit appeal, parties who are
    entitled "to have and keep a copy" of a PSI pursuant to 
    Wis. Stat. § 972.15
    (4m)          need    not        ask        any   court's     permission        to
    12
    No.    2012AP544-W
    reference a PSI in an appellate brief, subject to restrictions
    outlined in Part III.B.2.5
    ¶25     While we agree      with    the    court       of   appeals    that   the
    circuit     court   is   a    "gatekeeper"      of     the    PSI,    the    statutory
    language does not require parties' attorneys to obtain circuit
    court permission before referencing a PSI in an appellate brief.
    The   court    of   appeals    determined       that    under     § 972.15(4),      the
    circuit court alone may authorize access to the PSI.                        It is true
    that 
    Wis. Stat. § 967.02
    (7) defines "court" as the circuit court
    and 
    Wis. Stat. § 972.15
     otherwise requires court authorization
    to release the PSI.          However, this determination does not fully
    consider that the defendant's attorney and the State are already
    entitled "to have and keep a copy" of the PSI under 
    Wis. Stat. § 972.15
    (4m).
    5
    As a practical matter, this holding applies whether a
    defendant maintains his or her trial counsel, retains new
    appellate counsel, or is appointed appellate counsel through the
    SPD on appeal.      Similarly, this rule applies whether the
    district attorney maintains responsibility or the attorney
    general assumes responsibility of the case on appeal.        As a
    general rule, appellate counsel has access to trial counsel's
    file in order to appropriately appeal or respond to the appeal.
    Once the attorney general takes over the appeal from the
    district attorney, the district attorney "shall transfer all
    necessary files and papers relating to the case to the attorney
    general."    
    Wis. Stat. § 752.31
    (4); Wisconsin Department of
    Justice, Appellate Practice for Wisconsin Prosecutors 10 (May
    2012) (discussing transfer of files between district attorney
    and attorney general).     Similarly, the defendant's appellate
    counsel obtains the defendant's case file from trial counsel.
    See The Wisconsin State Public Defender's Office SPD Appellate
    Division,   Comprehensive    Checklist   Guide,    available   at
    http://www.wisspd.org/htm/ATPracGuides/Appellate.asp   (appellate
    counsel should secure case materials from trial counsel within
    one week of appointment).
    13
    No.     2012AP544-W
    ¶26    The court of appeals also turns to the fact that the
    statute does not specifically authorize those who are entitled
    "to have and keep a copy" of the PSI to actually "use" it.                             We
    disagree with the court of appeals' reasoning.                        The court of
    appeals      points   to      
    Wis. Stat. § 972.15
    (5)      and     (6),        which
    authorize "use" of the PSI for the Department of Corrections
    (DOC) and for parties involved in Chapter 980 proceedings.6                           It
    reasons      that   because      the   statute    authorizes     "use"     in   those
    instances, court permission must be received in order for those
    who are entitled "to have and keep a copy" of the PSI to "use"
    it.        However, the DOC and the parties to a subsequent civil
    proceeding are in a different position than counsel representing
    parties to the underlying criminal matter for which the PSI was
    created.        Unlike     the   attorneys,      who   under    § 972.15(4m)         are
    entitled "to have and keep a copy" of the PSI, those referenced
    in § 972.15(5) and (6) would not otherwise have access to the
    PSI absent that language, nor would they be parties to an appeal
    of    the    underlying     criminal     matter.       The     attorneys       in    the
    criminal matter, who are granted authority "to have and keep a
    copy" of the PSI in the criminal matter, have been granted that
    authority because they may need to use that PSI in the appeal.
    6
    Wisconsin Stat. § 972.15(5) authorizes the DOC to "use"
    the PSI for correctional programming, treatment planning, and
    similar purposes. The DOC may also authorize access to a PSI to
    third parties for research.   Under § 972.15(6), various parties
    can "use[]" the PSI in a Chapter 980 proceeding.      No further
    court permission is needed for them to "use" the PSI even though
    they had no standing in the criminal matter for which the PSI
    was created.
    14
    No.      2012AP544-W
    ¶27     Moreover, a practical example of how the statute is
    interpreted proves helpful.      Under § 972.15(1), "the court may
    order" a PSI even though the statute does not specifically say
    that the court may "use" the PSI for the purpose of sentencing a
    defendant.     Nonetheless, the circuit court properly "uses" the
    PSI when sentencing the defendant.
    ¶28   Furthermore, under 
    Wis. Stat. § 808.075
    , once a case
    is appealed, the circuit court's power is limited.                
    Wis. Stat. § 808.075
    (4)(g).     For   example,    it   does   not   retain    power   to
    redact portions of the PSI.7     The parties would have to petition
    the court of appeals under § 808.075(5) to remand the case to
    the circuit court.    If the petition for remand was granted, then
    the court of appeals would have to send the case record back to
    the circuit court.      See § 808.075(6).          Further, there is no
    guarantee that upon remand, the same circuit court judge will
    hear the motion to reference the PSI.         There is no quantifiable
    benefit if this procedure is required.
    ¶29     Our interpretation of 
    Wis. Stat. § 972.15
     is not in
    conflict with Parent, as that case was centered around access to
    the PSI, not use of the PSI.           We conclude that the rule of
    7
    The circuit court and trial counsel should exercise great
    caution when the case is before the circuit court to ensure that
    the PSI is properly redacted before it goes up on appeal. Under
    
    Wis. Stat. § 972.15
    (3), before sentencing, the circuit court
    judge already has the power to "conceal the identity of any
    person who provided information" in the PSI. Parties must also
    comply with various rules of confidentiality, including Wis.
    Stat. § (Rule) 809.81(8) (refer to individuals in confidential
    documents by first name and first initial of last name).
    15
    No.     2012AP544-W
    Parent is confined to no-merit appeals.8           In Parent, this court
    held that in a no-merit appeal, the defendant is entitled to
    view a copy of the PSI, subject to redaction of identifying
    information   of   informants   and     to   the   requirement     that    the
    defendant keep the information in the PSI confidential.                   
    298 Wis. 2d 63
    , ¶50.     Further, we held that the attorney general's
    office, which is typically not involved in no-merit appeals,
    must make its request to obtain a copy and disclose contents of
    the PSI to the circuit court.     
    Id.
    8
    The no-merit appeal procedure seeks to reconcile a
    defendant's right to appeal and right to effective assistance of
    counsel, with an attorney's duty to avoid making frivolous
    arguments.    State v. Parent, 
    2006 WI 132
    , ¶¶17-19, 
    298 Wis. 2d 63
    , 
    725 N.W.2d 915
    .   If a defendant wishes to appeal a
    conviction and counsel does not believe there is any merit to
    the defendant's arguments, counsel must follow the procedure set
    forth in Wis. Stat. § (Rule) 809.32 and State v. Tillman, 
    2005 WI App 71
    , 
    281 Wis. 2d 157
    , 
    696 N.W.2d 574
    :
    First, appointed counsel examines the record for
    potential appellate issues of arguable merit.      See
    Rule 809.32(1)(a) ("The no merit report shall identify
    anything in the record that might arguably support the
    appeal and discuss the reasons why each identified
    issue lacks merit.").    Next, the defendant has the
    opportunity to respond to the no merit report and
    raise additional issues. Rule 809.32(1)(e). Next, as
    contemplated by Anders, the appellate court not only
    examines the no merit report but also conducts its own
    scrutiny of the record to see if there are any
    potential   appellate  issues  with   arguable  merit.
    Finally, the court's no merit decision sets forth the
    potential appellate issues and explains in turn why
    each has no arguable merit.
    
    Id.,
     ¶17   (citing   Anders   v. California,       
    386 U.S. 738
    ,   744-45
    (1967)).
    16
    No.    2012AP544-W
    ¶30     In that case, Michael Parent (Parent) pled guilty to
    several charges, and the circuit court ordered a PSI.                      Id., ¶8.
    The circuit court sentenced Parent to a term of imprisonment
    consisting of 11 years of initial confinement and 11 years of
    extended supervision.              Id.     Parent's counsel filed a no-merit
    notice of appeal and requested a copy of Parent's PSI.                     Id., ¶9.
    The circuit court denied Parent access to his PSI, stating that
    Parent   was    trying        to   "draw    attention   to    himself"   and    that
    providing him with a copy of the PSI would "only encourage Mr.
    Parent   to    raise    issues      that    are   without    merit."     Id.,   ¶11.
    Parent appealed, and the court of appeals denied Parent's motion
    to   access    his     PSI.        Id.,    ¶12.    Parent's    appellate    counsel
    petitioned this court for a supervisory writ, which we granted.
    Id., ¶13.      We remanded to the court of appeals, and the court of
    appeals certified the case back to this court:
    [T]he court of appeals certified the case to this
    court to clarify the procedure and factors to be
    considered when deciding whether a defendant should
    receive a copy of a PSI report to facilitate his or
    her response to a no-merit report, and to decide
    whether motions filed by the State seeking access to a
    PSI report and disclosure of its contents in the
    State's brief should be filed in the court of appeals
    or in [the] circuit court.
    Id., ¶14.
    ¶31     At the time Parent's counsel requested a copy of the
    PSI, 
    Wis. Stat. § 972.15
    (4m) did not exist.                    Thus, the statute
    required Parent's counsel to obtain circuit court authorization
    to access Parent's PSI.              See 
    Wis. Stat. § 972.15
    (4) (2003-04).
    In the course of the litigation, the legislature added subsec.
    17
    No.     2012AP544-W
    (4m) to § 972.15, which rendered moot the question of whether
    Parent and Parent's counsel were entitled to view and retain
    respectively, a copy of the PSI.                  See 2005 Wis. Act 311, § 2.
    ¶32     When       reviewing     the        newly        created         
    Wis. Stat. § 972.15
    (4m), the court concluded that a defendant is entitled
    to view the PSI and the circuit court may not altogether deny
    access to the PSI.           Parent, 
    298 Wis. 2d 63
    , ¶34.                   This right is
    subject to the circuit court's discretion under § 972.15(3) to
    conceal the identity of any person who provided information in
    the PSI report and the requirement that the defendant keep the
    information in the PSI confidential.                   Id.        For the purposes of
    § 972.15(4m), Parent concluded that a defendant in a no-merit
    appeal       is    more    like   an    "unrepresented"            defendant           than     a
    represented        defendant.         Id.,    ¶41.         Under      § 972.15(4m),            an
    unrepresented defendant "is entitled to view the [PSI] but may
    not keep a copy of the report."               Id., ¶43.
    ¶33     The next question this court considered was whether
    the State's motion seeking access to and disclosure of the PSI
    should go to the circuit court or the court of appeals.                                   Id.,
    ¶47.     The framing of this issue presupposed that the attorney
    general did not already have access to the PSI, which is logical
    in a no-merit case where (1) subsec. (4m) was not in existence
    during the underlying             criminal case,           so   the   State       could       not
    "have and keep a copy" of the PSI, and (2) the State may not
    become involved unless and until the court of appeals determines
    that     the      defendant's     appeal      has     merit.          See       Wis.     Stat.
    § (Rule) 809.32 (procedure for no-merit reports); Tillman, 281
    18
    No.      2012AP544-W
    Wis. 2d 157, ¶17; Cleghorn v. State, 
    55 Wis. 2d 466
    , 472, 
    198 N.W.2d 577
     (1972) (stating that if the appeals court finds merit
    in the defendant's claim, it orders that the case "proceed with
    the appeal").         Parent determined that for the purposes of a no-
    merit appeal, the attorney general "should submit any requests
    to obtain a copy of the PSI report and to disclose its contents
    in the State's brief to the circuit court."                         
    298 Wis. 2d 63
    ,
    ¶49.
    ¶34    In Parent, neither party had access to the PSI.                        The
    question presented in Parent was how the parties to a no-merit
    appeal can access the PSI.              Id., ¶14.       In this case, there is no
    question      of     access;      the     plain        language    of     
    Wis. Stat. § 972.15
    (4m)         authorizes     the     defendant's        attorney      and     the
    district attorney to "have and keep a copy" of the PSI.                              The
    question      presented    in   this      case    is    whether    parties    who    are
    already authorized by § 972.15(4m) "to have and keep a copy" of
    the     PSI   must     obtain     court     permission        to   use    information
    contained     in   the PSI in       their       appellate     briefs.      Therefore,
    Parent is not controlling on the issue now before this court
    because it concerned access to the PSI in a no-merit appeal.                          We
    conclude that the rule of Parent is limited to no-merit appeals.
    ¶35   As a practical matter, even if counsel were required
    to engage in motion practice before the circuit court or the
    court    of   appeals     seeking   permission          to   reference    information
    contained in a PSI, that motion would provide little, if any,
    opportunity for the court to evaluate the confidentiality of the
    information or the sensitive contents contained in a PSI.                            The
    19
    No.     2012AP544-W
    motion itself is typically quite broad, and requests permission,
    as Buchanan's counsel did here, "to cite the portions of the PSI
    relevant to the defendant's appeal."                          The court's response is
    likewise      quite           broad,   as   it    was   here,    giving      permission      to
    "quote sparingly" from the PSI.                         By necessity, the attorney's
    motion and the court's response must lack detail, otherwise the
    sensitive         or     confidential       information        would   become       a   public
    record through the motion and the decision of the court.                                 Thus,
    requiring court approval provides little, if any, guarantee that
    information will be treated any differently than if no motion
    were required.
    2. Confidentiality
    ¶36        We conclude that parties who are entitled "to have and
    keep a copy" of a PSI pursuant to 
    Wis. Stat. § 972.15
    (4m) need
    not    ask        any    court's       permission       to    reference      a    PSI   in   an
    appellate brief.               Parties may reference information from the PSI
    that       does    not        reveal    confidential         information      and    that    is
    relevant      to        the    appeal.9      We    urge      counsel   to    be   abundantly
    cautious when deciding whether it is necessary to cite sensitive
    information and when choosing how to cite such content.
    9
    Our holding applies only to parties who are entitled "to
    have and keep a copy" of the PSI pursuant to 
    Wis. Stat. § 972.15
    (4m) and reserves for another day the procedure a pro se
    defendant should follow, as those facts are not before us.    Of
    note, however, is that a defendant is entitled to view the PSI,
    but is not entitled "to have and keep a copy." Any information
    from a PSI that a pro se defendant includes in an appellate
    brief will be from memory, which as a practical matter, likely
    limits the amount of detailed information the defendant could
    include.
    20
    No.      2012AP544-W
    ¶37       The SPD and the State acknowledge that their ability
    to use the PSI is subject to the requirement that the PSI be
    kept confidential, see 
    Wis. Stat. § 972.15
    (4) and (4m).                                        They
    argue that this requirement is met by compliance with Wis. Stat.
    § (Rule) 809.81(8)            (confidential            documents         "shall        refer    to
    individuals only by their first name and the first initial of
    their last name").
    ¶38       The court of appeals                  concluded       that      confidentiality
    for the purposes of 
    Wis. Stat. § 972.15
     is broader than using a
    person's first name and the first initial of their last name.
    Instead,       the    court      of     appeals       reasoned        that       the     drafting
    comments to § 972.15 suggest that confidentiality means limiting
    access    to    the    PSI    and     requiring        circuit       court      permission to
    access the PSI after sentencing.
    ¶39       We    agree     with      the     SPD        and    the      State       that   the
    confidentiality         requirement        of        
    Wis. Stat. § 972.15
            requires
    compliance with Wis. Stat. § (Rule) 809.81(8) ("Every notice of
    appeal or other document that is filed in the court and that is
    required by law to be confidential shall refer to individuals
    only by their first name and the first initial of their last
    name.").        See    also    Wis.      Stat.       § (Rule) 809.19(1)(g)               and   (2)
    (requiring      reference        to     individuals          by    first       name     and    last
    initial    in        appellate        briefs     when        record      is     confidential).
    Parties    should        be    mindful         that      a     PSI       may     also     contain
    information that must be kept confidential for other reasons,
    for example medical information, see 
    Wis. Stat. § 146.82
     ("All
    patient    health        care         records        shall        remain       confidential"),
    21
    No.        2012AP544-W
    information         from       child    welfare        and    termination         of    parental
    rights       (TPR)         proceedings,           see         
    Wis. Stat. §§ 48.78
    ,
    48.396(2)(dr),            and        information           from     juvenile       delinquency
    proceedings, see 
    Wis. Stat. §§ 938.78
    , 938.396(2g)(dr).                                     These
    examples are by no means exhaustive regarding the treatment or
    forms of confidential information that may be contained in a
    PSI.         In     addition,          because        of    the     sensitive      nature      of
    information contained in a PSI, counsel should be prudent when
    using any information from a PSI regardless of whether they are
    statutorily-required to so measure their actions.
    ¶40    Our conclusion that confidentiality under 
    Wis. Stat. § 972.15
     requires compliance with Wis. Stat. § (Rule) 809.81 is
    consistent         with    how       confidentiality          is    interpreted        in   other
    areas of the law, for example TPR and juvenile cases.                                       Under
    
    Wis. Stat. §§ 48.78
     and 938.78, there is a general rule, subject
    to     exceptions,         that        documents           pertaining      to     individuals
    receiving         care    or    in     custody    under       Chapters      48    or    938   are
    confidential.                  In    appellate         briefs,        attorneys         maintain
    confidentiality                 by       compliance                with      Wis.           Stat.
    § (Rule) 809.19(1):
    Section 809.19(1)(g) requires the appellant's
    brief to refer to 'an individual by first name and
    last initial rather than by his or her full name when
    the record is required by law to be confidential.'
    Confidential cases generally involve juveniles (e.g.
    cases    waiving   juveniles   into adult   court   or
    terminating    parental  rights).    See  
    Wis. Stat. §§ 48.78
    , 938.78.
    22
    No.     2012AP544-W
    Michael     S.   Heffernan,     Appellate    Practice    and      Procedure     in
    Wisconsin, Ch. 11, at 16 (5th ed. 2011).              Our interpretation of
    confidentiality in 
    Wis. Stat. § 972.15
    (4) and (4m) is consistent
    with the confidentiality rules for TPR and juvenile cases.
    ¶41    We disagree with the court of appeals' determination
    that a PSI is confidential because it is not a public record and
    access to the PSI is limited.           A PSI is not a public document.
    However, that alone does not end the analysis.                  The information
    contained in a PSI may be critical to adequately forward or
    respond to an issue on appeal.               Such a document may serve a
    legitimate purpose and be admissible in litigation, yet not be a
    public record.      While a PSI may not be a public record and may
    contain     confidential      and   sensitive     information,        that   alone
    cannot     render   it   unreachable    in      the   context     of    appellate
    litigation.      In fact, information in the PSI may be seminal to
    the appeal.      The court of appeals determined that the official
    23
    No.     2012AP544-W
    comments    to    the   statute       support     its   interpretation.10       We
    disagree.          Although       those       comments      mention       specific
    authorization     to    access    the    PSI,     the   comments   were   written
    before 
    Wis. Stat. § 972.15
    (4m) was in existence.                     The statute
    answers     the   question       of     access;    § 972.15(4m)      allows   the
    defendant's attorney and the State "to have and keep a copy" of
    the PSI.     We find further support for our interpretation——that
    confidentiality means redacting information rather than limiting
    access——from analogous case law prioritizing access to documents
    for    parties     to    the      case     over     confidentiality.          The
    confidentiality of a record does not always trump access to and
    use of the record.11
    10
    The official comment to 
    Wis. Stat. § 972.15
    (4) states:
    "The information in such reports is often unverified and would
    in many cases, even if true, cause irreparable harm to
    informants or the defendant.    The information may, of course,
    upon specific authorization of the court, be made available to
    any agencies, courts or individuals which have a legitimate need
    for it." See § 63, ch. 255, Laws of 1969. The same Committee
    Note stated that the confidentiality requirement of § 972.15 was
    consistent with ABA standards "that presentence reports should
    not be public records."   Id.; Am. Bar Ass'n Project on Minimum
    Standards for Criminal Justice, Standards Relating to Sentencing
    Alternatives and Procedures (Approved Draft, 1968), ABA Advisory
    Committee on Sentencing and Review, § 4.3, at 210-11 (stating
    that the PSI should not be a public record, but should be
    available to the parties).    There is a distinction between a
    document being a public record and a document being available
    for litigation.
    11
    For example, the court of appeals has held that 
    Wis. Stat. § 967.06
    , allowing a public defender to access "any
    transcript or court record," gave the public defender access to
    a juvenile court record despite the rule in 
    Wis. Stat. § 48.396
    ,
    which provided that the record in juvenile cases is closed to
    anyone without judicial permission.     State ex rel. S.M.O. v.
    Resheske, 
    110 Wis. 2d 447
    , 454, 
    329 N.W.2d 275
     (Ct. App. 1982).
    24
    No.     2012AP544-W
    ¶42     To   be   clear,    our    decision    does       not     grant    parties
    unfettered discretion to reference any and all portions of a
    PSI; the parties may reference information from a PSI only if it
    is relevant to an issue on appeal.                  See State v. Comstock, 
    168 Wis. 2d 915
    , 923, 
    485 N.W.2d 354
     (1992) ("[T]he dissent admits
    that     it    recites    numerous       facts    drawn     from    the      presentence
    investigation        report.        We     disapprove       of     this      practice.")
    (citation omitted); State v. McCallum, 
    208 Wis. 2d 463
    , 480 n.3,
    
    561 N.W.2d 707
     (1997) ("McCallum's motion to strike references
    to   the      defendant's   presentence         investigation       report       from   the
    State's brief is granted." (citing Comstock, 
    168 Wis. 2d at
    923-
    25)).      This test is narrower than the general test of relevancy
    under 
    Wis. Stat. § 904.01
     because information may be relevant to
    the circuit court proceedings but not relevant to an issue on
    appeal,       and   therefore     inappropriate      to     cite    in    an   appellate
    brief.
    ¶43     We caution practitioners to exercise sound discretion
    when citing information from a PSI.                    A PSI may contain very
    sensitive       information.       See    Wis.     Admin.    Code      §§ DOC     328.27,
    328.29 (Dec. 2006) (stating that PSI should include criminal
    record, correctional institutional record, victim's statement,
    family information, personal history, and identity of sources of
    information).         Indeed, with electronic access to filed briefs,
    counsel must be even more vigilant with respect to how best to
    cite sensitive information.               Clearly it is much more difficult
    to remove information from the public domain once it has been
    included in an appellate brief.                 Counsel and circuit courts must
    25
    No.    2012AP544-W
    be even more aware of the responsibility to redact a PSI at the
    trial court level before the case gets to the appellate level.
    The circuit      court   has the   significant      power    to   "conceal   the
    identity of any person who provided information" in the PSI.
    
    Wis. Stat. § 972.15
    (3).         Certainly, if appellate counsel, in the
    process    of    writing   an    appellate    brief,    is    unsure   whether
    information from a PSI can be included, he or she can ask the
    court of appeals for guidance or can file the brief under seal12
    until the court of appeals can decide whether the brief complies
    with rules of confidentiality.           Opposing counsel could also move
    to   strike     inappropriate   parts    of   the   appellate     brief.     See
    McCallum, 
    208 Wis. 2d at
    480 n.3.13
    12
    Court records are open for public inspection.   See 
    Wis. Stat. § 59.20
    (3) (Every "clerk of the circuit court . . . shall
    open to the examination of any person all books and papers
    required to be kept in his or her office"). "Public records may
    be sealed (1) if a statute authorizes the sealing of otherwise
    public records, (2) if disclosure infringes a constitutional
    right or (3) if the administration of justice requires it."
    City of Madison v. Appeals Comm. of the Madison Human Servs.
    Comm'n, 
    122 Wis. 2d 488
    , 491, 
    361 N.W.2d 734
     (Ct. App. 1984)
    (citing State ex rel. Bilder v. Twp. of Delavan, 
    112 Wis. 2d 539
    , 554-56, 
    334 N.W.2d 252
     (1983)).
    13
    The dissent's proposed procedure could provide further
    guidance to parties and lower courts.     The dissent's proposed
    procedure,   however,  originates    from  legislation   that  is
    currently before the Wisconsin Legislative Reference Bureau.
    The proposed procedure is not otherwise grounded on any current
    statute. The legislature has provided rules and procedures that
    are applicable to the dissemination of PSIs in 
    Wis. Stat. § 972.15
    , and it is within the province of the legislature to
    determine if procedural change is appropriate.    Apparently that
    opportunity may occur in the near future. The majority declines
    to usurp the role of the legislature by appearing to enact
    legislation through a court opinion.
    26
    No.   2012AP544-W
    IV. CONCLUSION
    ¶44    We conclude that the SPD has not met the requirements
    for issuance of a supervisory writ.           However, pursuant to our
    superintending and administrative authority, we conclude that in
    a merit appeal, parties who are entitled "to have and keep a
    copy" of a PSI pursuant to 
    Wis. Stat. § 972.15
    (4m) need not ask
    any court's permission to reference a PSI in an appellate brief.
    Parties may reference information from the PSI that does not
    reveal    confidential   information    and   that   is   relevant   to    the
    appeal.    We urge counsel to be abundantly cautious when deciding
    whether it is necessary to cite sensitive information and when
    choosing how to cite such content.
    By    the   Court.—Rights   declared;      relief     granted,       case
    proceeds accordingly at the court of appeals.
    27
    No.     2012AP544-W
    ¶45    ANN WALSH BRADLEY, J.                  (dissenting).      I agree with
    the majority that the requirements for a supervisory writ are
    not met.     I also agree with the majority that it is appropriate
    to employ our superintending and administrative powers here.
    ¶46    I   part   ways        with    the    majority,    however,     because   I
    conclude that we should employ those powers in a manner that
    establishes     a   simple     rule       that    provides    guidance     to   courts,
    parties,    and     counsel    and    that       protects    from   harm   those   who
    provide    information        in    the    presentence        investigation     report
    (PSI).     Because the majority's approach appears at odds with the
    words of the statute and provides neither adequate guidance nor
    protection, I respectfully dissent.
    I
    ¶47    Having determined that it will not grant a supervisory
    writ but will instead exercise the court's superintending and
    administrative powers, the majority turns to interpreting 
    Wis. Stat. § 972.15
    .        It correctly notes that a defendant has a due
    process right to be sentenced upon accurate information, a right
    to disclosure of all information in the PSI, and a right to
    challenge any statement in the PSI that the defendant believes
    to be inaccurate or incomplete.                  Majority op., ¶20.
    1
    No.        2012AP544-W
    ¶48   The majority concludes that parties1 are not required
    to get permission from any court before referencing a PSI in an
    appellate     brief.       It     opines   that   there      is   "no       quantifiable
    benefit" if parties are required to request permission of the
    circuit court to reference a PSI.                 Id., ¶¶25, 28.            It likewise
    eschews      any    benefit     from    requiring     the     parties        to     obtain
    permission from the court of appeals: "requiring court approval
    provides little, if any, guarantees that information will be
    treated any differently than if no motion were required."                              Id.,
    ¶35.
    ¶49   Instead of requiring permission, the majority directs
    that parties may "reference information from the PSI that does
    not reveal confidential information and that is relevant to the
    appeal."      Id., ¶36.             It provides examples of what it calls
    "confidential         information,"        listing          medical         information,
    information        from   child     welfare    and    termination           of    parental
    rights     proceedings,       and   information      from    juvenile       delinquency
    proceedings.       Id., ¶39.
    ¶50   Under the majority's interpretation, nothing more is
    required than what is already mandated by those other statutory
    provisions that govern "confidential information."                               Id., ¶36.
    1
    The term "parties" in the majority's analysis appears to
    refer to defense counsel and counsel for the State.            See
    majority op., ¶20.   However, it is the State and the defendant
    that normally are considered to be the parties in a criminal
    action——not defense counsel and counsel for the State.         The
    appearance that the majority means counsel when it uses the term
    "parties" arises from its reference to "have and keep."
    Wisconsin Stat. § 972.15(4m) allows the district attorney and
    the defendant's attorney to have and keep a copy of the PSI. A
    defendant is allowed only to view the PSI but not keep a copy.
    2
    No.     2012AP544-W
    In   the      event       that     there    is    uncertainty     as    to    whether    the
    information          complies       with    those     confidentiality        statutes,    it
    merely       suggests       that    counsel       "ask   the    court   of    appeals    for
    guidance."              Id., ¶43.      It additionally suggests that counsel
    should consider "fil[ing] the brief under seal" until the court
    of appeals can decide if the information fits its definition of
    "confidential information."                   Id.      Finally, the majority leaves
    the decision of whether to disclose "sensitive" information in a
    PSI to the "prudent" and "sound discretion" of counsel.                                 Id.,
    ¶¶39, 43.
    II
    ¶51       Our job is to interpret and apply the statutes as they
    are written by the legislature.                       We should not replace a clear
    legislative mandate with our own version of the statute.
    ¶52       The text of 
    Wis. Stat. § 972.15
    (4) (2009-10)2 states
    that        "after      sentencing     the       presentence     investigation       report
    shall        be    confidential."                Instead   of     following      a     clear
    legislative mandate, the majority turns the statutory language
    on its head and treats a PSI not as a confidential document but
    as a non-confidential document that may contain certain pieces
    of otherwise confidential information.                         See majority op., ¶¶19,
    29, 36, 39, 40, 43.
    ¶53       The    majority's        contradictory       interpretation     of    
    Wis. Stat. § 972.15
    (4) appears to conflict with this court's prior
    application of the statute.                   In State v. Comstock, 
    168 Wis. 2d 2
    All subsequent statutory references are to the 2009-10
    version of the Wisconsin Statutes, unless otherwise indicated.
    3
    No.     2012AP544-W
    915, 
    485 N.W.2d 354
     (1992), the majority of this court chided a
    dissenting opinion for inappropriately citing certain facts from
    a   PSI.        The    court      quoted      
    Wis. Stat. § 972.15
    (4)    and     its
    statement that a PSI is confidential.                       Id. at 923-25.           Nowhere
    in the Comstock court's discussion of a PSI did it imply that
    the PSI as a whole is not a confidential document.3
    ¶54    Furthermore, the majority provides inadequate guidance
    to courts, parties, and counsel.                   Although the majority provides
    a   limited         list   of    information         made    confidential       by     other
    statutes, it provides no guidance regarding the volumes of other
    information that may be included in a PSI.
    ¶55    Additionally, the majority's analysis appears narrowly
    tailored       to    apply      only    to    parties       who   are   represented       by
    counsel, although the statute covers non-represented defendants.
    The holding framed by the majority provides that "parties who
    are entitled 'to have and keep' a copy of a PSI pursuant to 
    Wis. Stat. § 972.15
    (4m)        need    not   ask     any    court's     permission       to
    reference      a     PSI   in   an     appellate     brief."        Majority    op.,     ¶3.
    3
    This court has treated an entire PSI as confidential on
    other occasions.   In addition to Comstock, the court discussed
    the meaning of the term "confidential" as it is used in 
    Wis. Stat. § 972.15
    (4) in State v. Parent, 
    2006 WI 132
    , ¶26, 
    298 Wis. 2d 63
    , 
    725 N.W.2d 915
    . In that case, the court determined that
    the defendant must keep "the information in the report"——not
    some information in the report——confidential in the context of a
    no merit appeal.    Id., ¶50.   Similarly, this court addressed
    whether   the   confidentiality   requirement  in   
    Wis. Stat. § 972.15
    (4) is extended to sentencing memoranda in State v.
    Greve, 
    2004 WI 69
    , 
    272 Wis. 2d 444
    , 
    681 N.W.2d 479
    . The court
    in Greve also appears to have treated the entire PSI as
    confidential. Id., ¶17.
    4
    No.     2012AP544-W
    Wisconsin Stat. § 972.15(4m) allows counsel to "have and keep a
    copy" of the PSI.
    ¶56    Defendants, however, may not "have and keep" a copy of
    the PSI.         They may only "view" it.                 
    Wis. Stat. § 972.15
    (4m);
    State v. Parent, 
    2006 WI 132
    , ¶50, 
    298 Wis. 2d 63
    , 
    725 N.W.2d 915
    .          Given    the   majority's     narrowly-framed       holding,         it    is
    unclear what a pro se defendant is to do on appeal.                         Is a pro se
    defendant        likewise        supposed       to    know     what         confidential
    information may or may not be used in an appellate brief?                                Is
    the decision           of whether to      use   sensitive      information         in   the
    brief left to the "prudent" and "sound discretion" of the pro se
    defendant?
    ¶57    Because the majority fails to set forth any standards
    for     determining          what     "sensitive"         information        should      be
    permissible to use in an appellate brief, counsel (and perhaps
    pro se defendants) have no principled manner in which they may
    evaluate whether information in a PSI should be used other than
    their "prudent" and "sound discretion."                     What happens if their
    "prudent"        and    "sound      discretion"      is    overshadowed       by    their
    zealous advocacy?            What are the consequences for the parties or
    counsel?
    ¶58    The majority's inadequate guidance on these questions
    may produce negative consequences for those who have provided
    information in the PSI and provide inadequate protection from
    harm.     A PSI commonly includes information that would not fall
    within the majority's list of "confidential" information.                               For
    example, the victim's statement often reveals intimate details
    5
    No.     2012AP544-W
    of the social, economic, physical, and psychological effects of
    the crime.     Furthermore, the family information contained in a
    PSI could set forth what would otherwise be considered private
    family matters, detailing the lives of individuals whose sole
    involvement    with   the   crime    is       that    they   are    related   to     the
    offender.
    ¶59     Such information does not appear to be protected from
    disclosure under the majority's approach.                     Majority op., ¶39.
    Individuals     may   be    held    up        to   ridicule    as    a     result     of
    inappropriate use of information in a PSI.                     Additionally, the
    disclosure of such information may put an individual's life or
    health in danger, creating safety issues.
    ¶60     At first blush it may appear that relevancy provides a
    meaningful    limitation,    but    the       broad    definition     of    relevancy
    provides inadequate protection.                Relevant evidence is evidence
    that has "any tendency to make the existence of any fact that is
    of consequence to the determination of the action more probable
    or less probable than it would be without the evidence."                            
    Wis. Stat. § 904.01
    ; State v. Payano, 
    2009 WI 86
    , ¶68, 
    320 Wis. 2d 348
    , 
    768 N.W.2d 832
    .4        The relevancy requirement offers no real
    safeguard for the information contained in a PSI that does not
    fall within the majority's list of "confidential" information.
    4
    The majority characterizes its relevancy test as a
    "narrower" inquiry than that which is set forth in 
    Wis. Stat. § 904.01
     because the issues in a case are often narrowed on
    appeal.   Majority op., ¶42.     Nevertheless, its standard for
    relevancy appears to be the same standard as the one defined in
    the relevancy statute, 
    Wis. Stat. § 904.01
    .
    6
    No.           2012AP544-W
    ¶61     The       majority's       inadequate         guidance      and       protection
    leads to a nebulous procedure.                      This court should establish a
    simple     procedure       that        clearly       provides      guidance            and    that
    adequately protects those who provide information in a PSI.
    III
    ¶62     Instead       of     the       majority's        approach       to        statutory
    construction,       I    would        interpret      the   statute      to     establish          a
    simple     procedure       that        provides       clear      guidance         to     courts,
    parties, and counsel and protects from harm those who provide
    information in the PSI.
    1. The entire PSI is confidential by statute.
    ¶63     As    I     see    it,     the     entire     PSI     is   confidential             by
    statute.       Wisconsin         Stat.      § 972.15(4)          provides      that          "after
    sentencing        the    presentence           investigation        report         shall        be
    confidential       and    shall       not     be    made   available     to       any        person
    except upon specific authorization of the court."                              It does not
    limit confidentiality of the PSI to items that fit under matters
    that are confidential as defined by other statutes.
    ¶64     Although           this     court       has    not     previously            defined
    "confidential" as it is used in the PSI statute, it has set
    forth general guidelines for what the term "confidential" means
    when it is used in a statute.                        See, e.g., Sands v. Whitnall
    School Dist., 
    2008 WI 89
    , ¶32, 
    312 Wis. 2d 1
    , 
    754 N.W.2d 439
    .
    Confidential data is data that is "meant to be kept secret."
    Id., ¶32 (quoting Custodian of Records for LTSB v. State, 
    2004 WI 65
    , ¶15, 
    272 Wis. 2d 208
    , 
    680 N.W.2d 792
    ).
    7
    No.       2012AP544-W
    ¶65    The     term   "confidential"         generally          contemplates      that
    confidential documents will be limited in the scope of their
    disclosure.         See Custodian of Records for LTSB, 
    272 Wis. 2d 208
    ,
    ¶15.       Similarly, because the statutory language provides that
    the PSI is confidential, the disclosure of its contents must be
    carefully circumscribed.
    2. To the extent that information in the PSI has already
    been made public in the circuit court at a sentencing or
    post sentencing hearing, the information in a transcript
    from that hearing may be used in an appellate brief.
    ¶66    Although       the   entire           PSI        is   confidential,           the
    confidentiality requirement set forth in 
    Wis. Stat. § 972.15
    (4)
    must sometimes yield to the defendant's due process rights.5                                One
    circumstance where the confidentiality requirement must yield is
    when the PSI has already been made public in the circuit court.
    ¶67    Any information in a PSI that is made public by the
    circuit      court    at a    sentencing       or    post       sentencing        hearing   is
    already      public    information   and       may        be    used    in   an    appellate
    brief.       For example, a circuit court may refer to information in
    a PSI when it is explaining on the record how the sentence's
    component parts promote the sentencing objectives.                                  State v.
    Gallion, 
    2004 WI 42
    , ¶¶47, 50, 
    270 Wis. 2d 535
    , 
    678 N.W.2d 197
    .
    5
    A defendant's due process rights include a right to be
    sentenced upon accurate information, a right to disclosure of
    the information in the PSI, and a right to challenge any
    statement in the PSI that the defendant believes to be
    inaccurate or incomplete.       Majority op., ¶20 (citations
    omitted).
    8
    No.   2012AP544-W
    The       transcript   from   the   hearing   containing    statements
    referencing the PSI may be used in an appellate brief.6
    6
    This is consistent with part of a proposal from the
    Wisconsin Judicial Council that would change the way PSIs are
    prepared, used, distributed, and kept as records. The Wisconsin
    Judicial Council's principal statutory responsibilities are to
    study and make recommendations relating to the pleading,
    practices, procedures, organization, jurisdiction, and methods
    of administration of Wisconsin courts. 
    Wis. Stat. § 758.13
    .
    The Wisconsin Judicial Council is a 21-member body
    representing a broad cross-section of interests.     A member of
    the Wisconsin Supreme Court sits on the Wisconsin Judicial
    Council.   Currently serving on the Judicial Council is Justice
    Patience Roggensack.    Other members of the Judicial Council
    include a court of appeals judge, four circuit court judges, one
    district attorney, three members of the state bar, two citizen
    members, and all of the following individuals or their
    designees: the Director of State Courts, the chairs of the
    Senate and Assembly standing committees with jurisdiction over
    judicial affairs, the Attorney General, the chief of the
    Legislative Reference Bureau, the deans of the law schools of
    the University of Wisconsin and Marquette University, the State
    Public Defender, and the president-elect of the state bar. Id.;
    Wisconsin                    Judicial                    Council,
    http://www.wicourts.gov/courts/committees/judicialcouncil/index.
    htm (last visited Apr. 1, 2013).
    In accordance with its statutory duties, the Judicial
    Council widely distributed for analysis its proposal that would
    change the procedures relating to PSIs.      See Minutes of the
    Meeting of the Wisconsin Judicial Council (Jan. 18, 2013),
    available                                                      at
    http://www.wicourts.gov/courts/committees/judicialcouncil/docs/m
    inutes0113.pdf (last visited Apr. 1, 2013) (discussing the
    circulation of a PSI proposal for fiscal estimates and approving
    a request to release copies of fiscal estimates before
    introduction of a PSI bill).    Among the entities solicited for
    comment was the Legislative Committee of the Wisconsin Judicial
    Conference, chaired by Chief Justice Shirley Abrahamson.      The
    proposal was distributed by Chief Justice Abrahamson to this
    court.
    9
    No.       2012AP544-W
    ¶68   However, because the PSI is confidential, 
    Wis. Stat. § 809.81
    (8) requires that parties and counsel shall refer to
    individuals named in the PSI "only by their first name and the
    first    initial   of   their    last   name."     Even    where    a   party     or
    counsel may use information in a PSI, the statute mandates that
    the party or counsel refer to only the first name and first
    initial of the last name of the individuals named in the PSI.
    3. Court permission must be obtained for any information not
    previously made public at the circuit court.
    ¶69      Sometimes a party or counsel may determine that it is
    necessary to use information in a PSI that is not a part of the
    public record.      Under those circumstances, the party or counsel
    should be      required to      get   court   permission   before       using    the
    information.
    4. As a practical matter, the location of the record should
    dictate which court to ask.
    ¶70       In determining which court to move for permission to
    use information in a PSI, parties and counsel should be guided
    by the practical reality of where the record is located.                        When
    the record is at the circuit court prior to the initiation of an
    appeal, the party or counsel should request permission to use
    information in the PSI from the circuit court.               Conversely, when
    the appeal is initiated and the record is already with the court
    All meetings of the Wisconsin Judicial Council and its
    committees are open to the public. Wisconsin Judicial Council,
    http://www.wicourts.gov/courts/committees/judicialcouncil/docs/a
    genda0213.pdf (last visited Apr. 1, 2013).
    10
    No.    2012AP544-W
    of appeals, parties or counsel should request permission to use
    information in the PSI from the court of appeals.
    ¶71       In   determining        whether        to    grant    permission        to   use
    information         in     a    PSI   under     the        statute,      courts    must      be
    constantly mindful of the due process rights of the defendant.
    (See, e.g., a defendant has a due process right to be sentenced
    upon accurate information.               State v. Tiepelman, 
    2006 WI 66
    , ¶9,
    
    291 Wis. 2d 179
    , 
    717 N.W.2d 1
    .)                     Courts should also consider the
    nature    of    the      information      that        would    be    exposed      to   public
    scrutiny.           Some       information     in      a    PSI     is    separately        made
    confidential by other statutes and those statutes may require
    special     procedures.7              Courts        must    employ       those    additional
    procedures before authorizing the citation of information that
    is made confidential by other statutes.
    ¶72       Additionally, courts should be wary about authorizing
    the citation of information that will hold an individual up to
    ridicule, endanger the safety of persons named in the PSI, or is
    not needed to advance the claims raised on appeal.                               Individuals
    who provide information in the PSI should be provided adequate
    protection from harm.
    ¶73        The above interpretation of the statute is a simple
    procedure that (1) provides guidance to courts, parties, and
    counsel; (2) protects those who provide information in a PSI;
    7
    See, e.g., 
    Wis. Stat. §§ 146.82
     (governing patient health
    care records), 48.78 (governing agency child welfare records),
    48.396   (governing   law   enforcement   officers' records   of
    children), 938.78 (governing agency records of individuals in
    the care or legal custody of the agency).
    11
    No.   2012AP544-W
    and   (3)   is   consistent   with    the   statutory    directive    of
    confidentiality.    Unfortunately, the majority fails in all three
    respects.   Accordingly, I respectfully dissent.
    ¶74   I am authorized to state that CHIEF JUSTICE SHIRLEY S.
    ABRAHAMSON and JUSTICE DAVID T. PROSSER, JR. join this dissent.
    12