People don’t lose faith in courts because papers are blacked out. They lose faith because no one tells them why.
A sealed file, a redacted page, a tight-lipped judge — it all feels like a wall.
But when the rules are explained, that wall turns into a window. Confusion shrinks. Suspicion softens.
The question changes from “What are they hid…” Continues…
Trust in the courts rarely comes from seeing every document; it comes from understanding the decisions behind what is shown and what is withheld.
When judges and court officials clearly explain the legal standards,
privacy protections, and safety concerns that govern disclosure, the system feels less like a mystery and more like a principled process.
People may still disagree with particular outcomes, but they no longer have to guess at the motives.
That shift matters. Instead of assuming secrecy is a cover for wrongdoing, the public can evaluate
whether the rules themselves are fair and consistently applied. Criticism becomes sharper, but also more productive,
aimed at improving procedures rather than attacking legitimacy. Over time, that steady, honest communication —
especially in the hardest, most sensitive cases — does more to sustain confidence than any one high-profile release ever could.