Las Vegas Review-Journal

Court: Officials can’t hide emails, texts from public

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In a survey by The Associated Press two years ago, Gov. Jerry Brown, Lt. Gov. Gavin Newsom and other top elected officials in California acknowledg­ed using personal email accounts to conduct government business.

Newsom’s office has previously said his personal emails are searched in response to Public Records Act requests.

The state Supreme Court ruling applies to those top officials as well as lower-level city, county and state officials and public employees. It does not apply to the state Legislatur­e, which has its own public records policy.

Many state courts and attorneys general have concluded that official communicat­ions on personal devices are subject to public disclosure.

At the federal level, an appeals court ruled last year that work-related emails from a private account used by the White House’s top science adviser were subject to dis- closure under federal open records laws.

Opponents have raised privacy concerns and said public officials sometimes need confidenti­ality to discuss unpopular views.

They have also argued that sifting through employees’ private accounts and devices in response to requests for records would be expensive and burdensome.

San Jose said in court documents that forcing employees to turn over their passwords to inspect communicat­ions on private devices would be akin to making them hand over their house keys.

Associate Justice Carol Corrigan said in the ruling that privacy concerns should be addressed on a caseby-case basis and officials could redact any personal informatio­n not related to public business.

She said employees could also search their own personal accounts in response to records requests.

“If communicat­ions sent through personal accounts were categorica­lly excluded from (the California Public Records Act), government officials could hide their most sensitive, and potentiall­y damning, discussion­s in such accounts,” the justice said.

The lawsuit before the high court was filed by Ted Smith, who in 2009 requested messages about developmen­t in downtown San Jose that were sent or received on private devices used by the mayor and City Council.

The city said it did not have access to any messages created on personal devices, so they were not public records.

Smith sued. A Superior Court judge ruled in his favor, but an appeals court overturned that decision in 2014.

The Supreme Court did not rule on the merits of Smith’s specific request, instead sending the case back to a lower court for that determinat­ion.

 ?? JAE C. HONG THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Filing informatio­n for a direct deposit of a refund is displayed on a mobile phone screen in Los Angeles. Government employees in California cannot hide from the public work-related emails and texts on personal devices and private accounts, the...
JAE C. HONG THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Filing informatio­n for a direct deposit of a refund is displayed on a mobile phone screen in Los Angeles. Government employees in California cannot hide from the public work-related emails and texts on personal devices and private accounts, the...

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