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Lewis and Clark County · Montana Supreme Court

Oral Argument · the Courtroom of the Montana Supreme Court, Joseph P. Mazurek Justice Building, in Helena

STERLING GLENN BROWN, Petitioner, v. MONTANA SEVENTH JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT, PRAIRIE COUNTY, HON. JESSICA T. FEHR, Presiding, Respondent

OP 26-0036 · Oral Argument

STERLING GLENN BROWN, Petitioner, v. MONTANA SEVENTH JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT, PRAIRIE COUNTY, HON. JESSICA T. FEHR, Presiding, Respondent. Oral Argument is set for Thursday, May 21, 2026, at 9:30 a.m. in the Courtroom of the Montana Supreme Court, Joseph P. Mazurek Justice Building, in Helena. After Brown was charged with deliberate homicide and arson, he was held in the Dawson County Correctional Facility for several months. At DCCF, Brown made numerous phone calls to his defense counsel on the facility’s inmate phone line, rather than on a separate nonrecorded line that was available for attorney-client calls. Approximately 68 of those calls were recorded, and portions of 20 calls were listened to by law enforcement officers and DCCF personnel. Two Prairie County law enforcement officers who were part of the investigative team for the alleged offenses listened to portions of the calls, but both officers testified they discontinued listening when they recognized the calls were attorney-client. At least one DCCF staff member knowingly listened to attorney-client calls but testified she did not share anything she heard with anyone else. DCCF staff also testified that some of Brown’s legal mail was opened because the envelopes were not marked as legal mail in accordance with DCCF’s policies, but staff only scanned the mail and did not discuss its contents. Brown moved to dismiss the case due to invasions of attorney-client privilege. After a four-day evidentiary hearing, the District Court denied Brown’s motion to dismiss. But it concluded that, even if none of the information heard in the calls or read in the legal mail was disseminated, the law enforcement officers were part of the investigative team and all individuals involved may have learned information that put Brown at a disadvantage. The court suppressed the recordings and the testimony of all individuals who listened to the calls or scanned the mail. Brown then petitioned the Montana Supreme Court for a writ of supervisory control, arguing the District Court’s remedy was insufficient given the seriousness of the violation of attorney-client privilege. Brown argues this Court should order his criminal case dismissed. About Contact us Employment Americans with Disabilities Act Public Privacy & Security MT.GOV

2026-05-21

09:30

Editorial Standards

Montana Blotter is designed to make public records and public meeting information easier to access. It is not a government office, and it does not replace official notice, clerk records, court files, or agency databases.

1. Primary Source Rule
We prefer direct links to official county, city, court, sheriff, police, and state judiciary pages. Where possible, each page should point readers back to the original public record, agenda, minutes page, or official document listing.

2. What We Standardize
Date and time formatting — location and body-name labeling — document labels such as agenda, packet, or minutes — searchable statewide filters and metadata.

3. What We Do Not Claim
We do not claim to be the official keeper of public records. We do not guarantee that a third-party government site is complete, current, or correctly maintained. We do not treat summaries or extracted text as a substitute for the official source file.

4. Update Cadence
Automated sources are checked on a recurring basis. If a source is stale, broken, or moved, the originating public body remains the authoritative reference until the source is repaired.

5. Provenance and Visibility
We aim to show where information came from, when it was last refreshed, and how users can verify it.

6. Redactions and Sensitive Material
We may review records for obvious sensitivity, legal restrictions, or redaction issues. The existence of a public record does not automatically mean every field or derivative presentation should be amplified without review.

7. Corrections
If a source link breaks, a meeting is mislabeled, a record is duplicated, or a page needs clarification, see the Corrections Policy for the reporting workflow.

8. Government and Clerk Communications
If you work for a Montana public body and need a source updated, corrected, or removed, contact us directly. We prefer exact URLs, dates, and a brief explanation of the change.

9. Contact
Montana Blotter — records@montanablotter.com

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Corrections Policy

We want corrections requests to be specific, easy to verify, and fast to act on. The more concrete the report, the faster it can be reviewed.

1. What To Report
Broken official source links — moved agenda or minutes pages — incorrect meeting date, body name, or location label — duplicate records or meetings — stale source pages — material factual errors in a summary or description.

2. What To Include
The exact Montana Blotter URL — the exact official source URL that should be used — a short description of what is wrong — if timing matters, the date and time the official source changed.

3. Where To Send It
Email records@montanablotter.com with subject line Correction Request or Source Update. If you represent a government office, say so in the message.

4. Review Standard
We review corrections against the official source when available. If a report cannot be verified, we may ask for a clarifying URL, screenshot, or exact document reference before changing the page.

5. Response Goal
Our goal is to review straightforward source and labeling issues within two business days. Complex disputes, legal issues, and record-sensitivity questions may take longer.

6. How Fixes Are Handled
Broken or moved source URLs are updated at the source-config level when possible. Mislabeled dates, titles, or locations are corrected in the public presentation. If a government source removes or replaces a document, the official source controls.

7. Limits
A correction request does not automatically guarantee removal. Montana Blotter may preserve accurate public-record references while updating labels, links, timestamps, or explanatory text.

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