SPRINGFIELD -- Springfield District Court Judge John Payne on Wednesday said he didn't understand how the name and address of a victim in an attempted sexual assault case was made public in court documents.

He said he had ordered that a police report on the incident, in a case against accused killer Stewart Weldon, be made public except for personal information protected under law. That information includes the victim's name.

But the woman's name, address and phone number was not redacted in documents made public last week.

The Republican / MassLive and The Boston Globe, which had gone to court in June seeking the release of the police report, did not publish the woman's name in their recent reporting on the documents.

Assistant District Attorney Max Bennett said he wanted to make sure the Springfield District Court Clerk's Office knows that the name and address of the woman should not be released, as it was in error last week. Payne agreed there should be assurances the information won't be released.

The woman said Weldon tried to drag her into his home in February.

Weldon was arraigned in connection with the incident on June 4, but the police report was immediately impounded and no details of the alleged attack were released.

Weldon, 41, is charged with murder in the deaths of of Kayla Escalante, 27, of Ludlow, and Springfield residents Ernestine Ryans, 47, and 34-year-old America Lyden. Their bodies were found in and around the 1333 Page Blvd. property where he lived with his mother.

He was arrested after a traffic stop on May 27, when a woman in his car -- the mother of his children -- told police he'd been holding her captive and brutalizing her for weeks.

A grand jury indicted Weldon on a total of 52 counts, including kidnapping and aggravated rape. The indictments list a total of 11 victims, including the woman who says he attacked her in February.