Reply
READ THIS Before Posting! CornellSun.com Comment Guidelines:
PLEASE DO NOT USE THIS FORM TO SUBMIT CORRECTIONS!
Read below for info on how to do this! Comments that are written as
letters to the editor
or that just suggest corrections will not be published.
- Try to keep posts on topic. For example If the article is about a football game, do not post about the baseball game, or the lecture in Bailey Hall the other day.
- Use a clear subject that describes what your message is about.
- Be polite. Don't make personal attacks against the author or any other commenter.
- If you choose to supply a link, it must point to a "safe" site that is relevant to the topic at hand.
- Please note that off-topic, inflammatory, inappropriate, illegal, or offensive comments will simply be deleted rather than censored.
- Repeat offenders of this policy may have commenting privileges revoked indefinitely.
The Cornell Daily Sun reserves the right to decline publication of any comment that violates the above policies or that is excessively long. If you would like to suggest a correction or send a Letter to the Editor for print publication, please do so on our contact page.
You retain ownership of your post. However, by submitting a comment to the site, you agree to give The Sun a non-exclusive, irrevocable, transferrable and royalty-free license to republish your post online, in print, and in any other media.

A little self-righteous,
A little self-righteous, aren't we? Suppose this guy had instead been accused of a crime for which he was totally innocent (i.e. spurned girlfriend calls the police and claims she was threatened / assaulted / what have you.) Even if the charges are ultimately dismissed and expunged, the record of arrest will be permanent and easily accessible thanks to the digital archive. Is it fair to have to spend the rest of your life with a blight like that? Police blotters should not be included in the archive, given that the disposition of many of the charges might have been an acquittal / dismissal.