Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

A disregard for public resources

Don’t appeal autopsy report ruling

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Clark County officials may be poised to take a lesson in chutzpah from the folks over at the Nevada Public Employees’ Retirement System. Like those who run the state pension plan, county commission­ers are on the verge of burning large bushels of taxpayer money in an audacious effort to keep those very same taxpayers from getting too nosy about public records.

Tuesday’s County Commission meeting includes an agenda item allowing county attorneys to appeal a recent court ruling which held that autopsy reports are available for inspection under the state open records law. The item notes that moving forward with this — to fight a court battle that seeks to prevent those who pay the bills from scrutinizi­ng government documents — will entail spending an undetermin­ed amount of taxpayer revenue on “court fees, possibly attorney fees and other related expenses.”

This is like a teenager living under parent’s roof suing to keep his mom and dad from entering his bedroom while also demanding that they pay his legal fees.

Alas, this is all too common in Nevada. PERS officials for years have shown a disregard for public resources by trying to convince the courts that taxpayers should enjoy only limited access to informatio­n about the generous government retirement program that they fund.

The agenda item is no doubt the work of Coroner John Fudenberg, who in April refused to release three autopsy reports to the Review-Journal. He cited privacy and other concerns. Months later, District Judge Jim Crockett rejected Mr. Fudenberg’s arguments and ruled that the reports were public under state law, which holds that all government records are public unless specifical­ly exempted from the statute.

That’s as it should be, of course. How can Mr. Fudenberg’s office be held accountabl­e if the results of its work are shielded from taxpayers? Autopsies are vital to determinin­g the truth in many deaths, particular­ly those involving crimes or suspicious circumstan­ces. Keeping them secret only makes it easier to cover up incompeten­ce, corruption or wrongdoing. What is Mr. Fudenberg have to conceal?

“Courts all across the country have found that autopsy reports are public records,” said Maggie McLetchie, an attorney for the Review-Journal. Indeed, why the county legal staff is indulging Mr. Fudenberg remains a mystery. But you can bet this ill-advised effort would be killed in its tracks if those involved were forced to support it with their own money rather than with an unlimited line of credit courtesy of the taxpayers.

The commission­ers on Tuesday should do their constituen­ts a favor on two fronts. They should reject the appeal as both a waste of taxpayer money and an affront to the vital concepts of government accountabi­lity and transparen­cy.

 ?? Steve Kelley Creators Syndicate ??
Steve Kelley Creators Syndicate

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