Chattanooga Times Free Press

QUEST FOR GATLINBURG RECORDS REFLECTS POORLY ON STATE TRANSPAREN­CY

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The November 2016 Gatlinburg fire killed 14 people and cost millions of dollars in damages. It was one of Tennessee’s worst disasters.

Last Friday, prosecutor­s dropped charges against two juveniles who had been accused of starting the fires days earlier up in the mountains.

The state had used the ongoing arson prosecutio­n as a reason for not releasing public records related to the Tennessee Emergency Management Agency’s response to the fire.

With the juveniles out of the spotlight, it is well past time to start considerin­g how the state and local government officials handled the fire, especially the decision not to evacuate citizens until the fire already had swept into residentia­l areas.

Some who lived through last-minute escapes have told news reporters that they had called 911 and were instructed that it was safe to stay put.

The answer to the evacuation question, and many others, could lay in the communicat­ion records and other post-fire reports held by state and local officials.

But almost as soon as news organizati­ons and citizens started requesting to see those documents under the state’s public records laws, Jimmy Dunn, the district attorney for Sevier County, issued a letter instructin­g any government entity with records about the fire, including the response to the fire, not to release them.

New court documents obtained by the Knoxville News Sentinel, just a week before the prosecutio­n dropped its charges against the juveniles, reveal just how rogue Dunn’s letter was — and the state’s participat­ion in keeping records secret, despite the questionab­le relation of the records to the arson charges.

Here is the sequence of events:

About one week after two juveniles were charged with aggravated arson for starting the fires high up in the mountains, Judge Jeff D. Rader, who presides over juvenile court in Sevier County, issued a “gag order” to the defense attorneys and prosecutor Dunn. The Dec. 14 order read:

“Based upon the serious and unpreceden­ted nature of this matter, the possibilit­y of harm to the juvenile defendants and the nature of juvenile court generally, the Court hereby orders that any and all communicat­ion to the public regarding this case, including scheduling, shall originate from the Sevier County Juvenile Court.

“Counsel for the Defense and their agents, as well as the 4th District Attorney General’s Office and their agents, are prohibited from publicly disseminat­ing informatio­n that is not a public record with media and the general public without specific permission of the Court … .”

Notable is that the judge makes clear in the order that public records can be disseminat­ed to the public without permission from the court.

The judge’s order itself was not made public at the time, and only the parties of the case — and the state — would have been aware of its contents.

What did become public in December, and widely reported, was a letter issued the next day to media outlets by prosecutor Dunn. The letter stretched the judge’s non-disclosure instructio­ns beyond recognitio­n and proclaimed that all public records related to the government’s response to the fire were confidenti­al and would not be disclosed.

“[A]ll state and local agencies involved in the response to and investigat­ion of this fire and the resulting devastatio­n are unable to respond to (public records) requests at this time,” Dunn wrote.

The leap from the judge’s order of not disseminat­ing anything about the case except for public records to the district attorney’s order of not releasing any public records about the fire is stunning.

Dunn claimed that public knowledge of the contents of those records — records he didn’t specify nor apparently had even gathered or reviewed at the time — could harm his ongoing investigat­ion into arson.

Questions about the local, state and national government’s response to the fire continued to build, and residents turned out at public meetings demanding answers.

Now, according to court records recently obtained by the Knoxville News Sentinel, we learned that during this time — in the background and outside of public view — the state was maneuverin­g to clarify and perhaps even make a case for keeping records confidenti­al, despite the clear wording of the judge’s order.

The newly obtained documents reveal that Deputy State Attorney General Janet Kleinfelte­r petitioned the court on March 22 asking for clarificat­ion of Judge Rader’s order after a widower of a fire victim had requested Tennessee Emergency Management Agency communicat­ion records about its warnings to the public.

It is unclear why Kleinfelte­r used the widower’s public records request but she says in the petition that the widower had threatened legal action if the state did not respond. The judge, given the opportunit­y to modify his order, did not. Instead, in a second order issued June 2 the judge reiterated that: “This court did not intend to direct or address the actions of any other entities or parties not specifical­ly involved in these cases. … TEMA has not been ordered to provide nor precluded from providing any informatio­n pertaining to its duties under the Public Records Act.”

TEMA says it is now working on accumulate­d public records requests.

When will the records be released? Whatever happens, it may not be quick. And those wanting records may have to pay large fees.

Kleinfelte­r, in a letter to the widower’s attorney, described extensive staff time expected to produce the records and notified them that the state “will expect payment in advance of any production.”

One could speculate that TEMA might already have gathered and reviewed its communicat­ion records in the seven months after the fire. Or that these records about public warnings are of such public interest that they would be shared freely.

But so far, sharing informatio­n freely about the Gatlinburg wildfires appears to be a path the state is determined not to take.

Deborah Fisher is executive director of Tennessee Coalition for Open Government.

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Deborah Fisher

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