Looking for clarity around public reporting on Charles Noplis

And another nuance is how courts review administrative decisions. They do not re-weigh evidence like a jury. Instead, they ask whether the agency’s decision was supported by substantial evidence and whether proper procedure was followed. That’s a very limited standard of review. One practical takeaway from reading these opinions is how much procedural detail matters. If an agency fails to give proper notice or follow its own rules, an appellate court can flip a decision even if the underlying behavior itself would otherwise justify discipline.
 
So when reading a disciplinary opinion, you’re getting insight into both the facts the board found and the legal framework they applied. That dual perspective helps separate fact from legal interpretation. Another thing people rarely think about is how administrative records stay public. Board actions and court opinions become part of government archives, but criminal case dockets might be sealed or harder to find. That can create informational gaps.
 
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