Las Vegas Review-Journal

High court again orders records released

Deadline past, coroner now ‘in contempt’

- By Arthur Kane

For the second time in two days, the Nevada Supreme Court on Wednesday denied Clark County’s attempts to withhold unredacted child autopsies, requiring that the records be released to the Review-journal.

The county had filed an emergency request late Tuesday, asking that the state high court revisit its initial ruling, which ordered that the records be released by District Judge Jim Crockett’s Wednesday deadline. But

on late Wednesday, the majority of a three-justice panel upheld the deadline, again ruling against the county.

No autopsies had been released by 6 p.m.

“The coroner is now in contempt of a court order,” Review-journal attorney Maggie Mcletchie said late Wednesday. “Just as the coroner acts as if it is above the reach of the public records act, it is acting as if it is above a binding court order.”

Clark County spokesman Erik Pappa declined to comment Wednesday.

In the county’s emergency request, attorneys argued that the same three-justice panel’s Tuesday decision “overlooks or misapprehe­nds” several factors of the case, writing that “irreparabl­e harm would occur to the decedents’ family members as they would be forced to re-live the trauma of the death of their loved one and be subjected to embarrassm­ent and stigmatiza­tion based on the disclosure of private health and medical informatio­n.”

The Review-journal has been pursuing the documents for about four years, one of the longest public records fights in the news organizati­on’s history. Throughout the legal battle, the county has never presented evidence that families were concerned about the records’ release.

“I certainly hope the court will consider imposing sanctions on Clark County for contempt,” Review-journal Executive Editor Glenn Cook said. “When a government that makes law gets away with ignoring the law and ignoring the courts, it must be held accountabl­e.”

In July 2017, the Review-journal filed a lawsuit against the coroner’s office seeking the release of the autopsies as part of an investigat­ion into county child protective services’ handling of cases in which children died. The county for years had taken the position that autopsy reports were confidenti­al even though the documents are not specifical­ly exempted by the Nevada Public Records Act.

In February, the Nevada Supreme Court ruled that autopsies are public records but sent the case back to Crockett to determine whether there was any private medical informatio­n that should be redacted.

Crockett offered to review more than 600 autopsies himself to see if there were valid privacy concerns — until he discovered that the coroner hadn’t bothered to redact most of the autopsies. At that point, he blasted the county for dragging its heels and violating the spirit of public records laws. He ordered the autopsies released by Dec. 30.

“Why the coroner’s office does not link arms with the Review-journal and provide records freely and voluntaril­y is unimaginab­le,” he said at the time. “Everything demonstrat­es the coroner’s office is bound and determined to circumvent and avoid the Nevada Public Records Act by stonewalli­ng and obfuscatin­g.”

Despite already spending about $80,000 in taxpayer money for the fight, the coroner decided to again appeal Crockett’s order to release the records, and Clark County commission­ers, except Commission­er Tick Segerblom, voted earlier this month to approve more funding for the effort.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States