The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Georgia elections head sues feds over records

Raffensper­ger’s lawsuit alleges DOJ ignored his request.

- By Mark Niesse Mark.niesse@ajc.com

Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensper­ger sued the U.S. Department of Justice on Wednesday over its response to his request for documents he believes could show political motivation­s behind a federal lawsuit against the state’s voting law.

Raffensper­ger, a Republican running for reelection, said his lawsuit seeks to compel the government to turn over any communicat­ions, if they exist, between the Department of Justice and dozens of his political and legal opponents.

Raffensper­ger’s court action is the latest reaction to a major lawsuit filed by the Justice Department in June that is trying to strike down Georgia’s voting law, alleging it targeted Black voters by limiting absentee voting with additional voter ID requiremen­ts, shorter deadlines, fewer drop boxes, provisiona­l ballot rejections and a ban on handing out food or drinks to voters waiting in line.

“Considerin­g how blatantly political the Biden lawsuit against Georgia’s commonsens­e election law was from the beginning, it’s not surprising they would stonewall our request for basic transparen­cy,” Raffensper­ger said.

Raffensper­ger had filed a Freedom of Informatio­n Act request in August for communicat­ions between the Justice Department and 62 individual­s and organizati­ons, including Democrat Stacey Abrams, Fair Fight Action, the Black Voters Matter Trust Fund, the 6th District of the African Methodist Episcopal Church, the League of Women Voters of Georgia, Latino Community Fund Georgia and Delta Sigma Theta Sorority Inc., a politicall­y active Black sorority.

Many of the groups named in Raffensper­ger’s request spoke out against Senate Bill 202 when it passed earlier this year.

The Justice Department acknowledg­ed the records request but said it needed more time to respond given its scope and the need to consult with various government offices.

The federal government can take many months to produce public documents when it decides there are “unusual circumstan­ces” surroundin­g the request, as it did in Raffensper­ger’s case.

“In an effort to speed up our process, you may wish to narrow the scope of your request to limit the number of potentiall­y responsive records,” the Justice Department stated in a Sept. 29 letter. “We regret the necessity of this delay, but we assure you that your request will be processed as soon as possible.”

Raffensper­ger’s office recently settled a separate lawsuit over its responsive­ness to public records requests by American Oversight, a government watchdog organizati­on. American Oversight had alleged state election officials stalled or ignored requests for communicat­ions with the Republican National Committee, documents involving an absentee ballot fraud task force and informatio­n about coronaviru­s response.

Under the agreement, the secretary of state’s office was required to pay $35,000, produce readily available records within three business days, improve training and require prepayment only when retrieval costs exceed $500.

 ?? AJC 2020 ?? Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensper­ger filed a Freedom of Informatio­n Act request in August for communicat­ion between the DOJ and 62 individual­s and organizati­ons.
AJC 2020 Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensper­ger filed a Freedom of Informatio­n Act request in August for communicat­ion between the DOJ and 62 individual­s and organizati­ons.

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