Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Judge rules Louisiana public-records law applies to all

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BATON ROUGE — A judge Thursday spurned Attorney General Jeff Landry’s argument that Louisiana’s public-records law applies only to state residents, refusing to throw out a lawsuit filed against Landry by a woman who lives in Indiana.

But state district Judge William Morvant also wouldn’t heavily penalize the Republican attorney general for the lengthy time it took his office to turn over the records requested by Scarlett Martin, a researcher in Indianapol­is. Instead, Landry will have to pay Martin’s attorney fees. Her lawyer Chris Whittingto­n estimated that would cost the attorney general’s office about $25,000.

Martin sought records in September and October 2016 about Landry’s dealings with the oil industry, travel to conference­s and public appearance­s, vehicle purchases and contracts to hire outside law firms. She received thousands of pages in response to her requests, a number that Morvant said exceeded 16,000 documents — but only after she filed her lawsuit in March 2017.

Landry argued Martin didn’t have the right to sue because she doesn’t live in Louisiana, and asked Morvant to dismiss the entire case.

“The (state) constituti­on creates a right for the citizens of Louisiana, not the citizens of the world,” said Landry’s assistant attorney general Carey Jones.

Morvant disagreed, saying state legislator­s didn’t offer any such specificat­ion in Louisiana’s public-records law. He said the only people who have detailed limits on their records access under the law are inmates.

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