The Columbus Dispatch

ROADBLOCKS

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“This practice essentiall­y says to a records requester, ‘File a request at your peril,’” said University of Kansas journalism professor Jonathan Peters, who wrote about the issue for the Columbia Journalism Review in 2015, before several more cases were filed. “These lawsuits are an absurd practice and noxious to open government.”

Government officials who have employed the tactic insist they are acting in good faith. They say it’s best to have courts determine whether records should be released when legal obligation­s are unclear — for instance, when the documents might be shielded by an exemption or privacy laws.

At least two recent cases have succeeded in blocking informatio­n while many others have only delayed the release.

State freedom-of-informatio­n laws generally allow requesters who believe they are wrongly denied records to file lawsuits seeking to force their release. If they succeed, government agencies can be ordered to pay the legal fees and court costs.

Suing the requesters flips the script: Even if agencies are ultimately required to make the records public, they typically will not have to pay the other side’s legal bills.

“You can lose even when you win,” said Mike Deshotels, an education watchdog who was sued by the Louisiana Department of Education after filing requests for school district enrollment data last year. “I’m stuck with my legal fees just for defending my right to try to get these records.”

The lawsuit argued that the This 2017 illustrati­on by Jack Ohman of The Sacramento Bee shows a lawyer confrontin­g a reporter over access to public records. More companies and government institutio­ns are suing citizens and reporters who demand public informatio­n.

data could not be released under state and federal privacy laws and initially asked the court to order Deshotels and another citizen requester to pay the department’s legal fees and court costs. The department released the data months later, after a judge ruled it should be made public.

Deshotels, a 72-yearold retired teachers union official who authors the Louisiana Educator blog, had spent $3,000 fighting the lawsuit by then. He said the data ultimately helped show a widening achievemen­t gap among the state’s poorest students, undercutti­ng claims of progress by education reformers.

The lawsuits have been denounced by some courts and policymake­rs. A New Jersey judge in 2015 said they were the “antithesis” of openrecord­s policies and dismissed a case filed by a township against a person who requested police department surveillan­ce video footage.

In Michigan, the state House voted 108-0 earlier this year in favor of a bill that would make it illegal for agencies to sue public records requesters. The proposal came in response to a county’s lawsuit against a local newspaper that had sought the personnel files of two employees running for sheriff. A judge dismissed the lawsuit, saying the county had to approve or deny the request.

The documents, ultimately released days before the election, showed that one of the candidates had been discipline­d for carrying on an affair while on-duty in 2011. That candidate lost.

The Michigan bill’s sponsor, Republican Rep. Klint Kesto, called the tactic “a backdoor channel to delay and put pressure on the requester” that circumvent­s the state’s Freedom of Informatio­n Act.

“Government shouldn’t file a lawsuit and go on offense. Either approve the

request or deny it,” he said. “This shouldn’t be happening anywhere in the country.”

As his bill remains pending in a state Senate committee, Michigan State University filed a lawsuit against ESPN after the sports network requested police reports related to a sexual-assault investigat­ion involving football players. That and a number of other cases are currently unfolding.

And in Portland, Oregon, the school district filed a lawsuit against parent Kim Sordyl, who is seeking records about employees on leave for alleged misconduct after the disclosure that one psychologi­st had been off for three years. Sordyl said she believes the informatio­n will expose costly missteps by district human-resources officials and lawyers, and the district attorney already has ordered the records to be released.

“They are going to great lengths to protect themselves and their own mismanagem­ent. This is retaliatio­n,” said Sordyl, who has hired an attorney. “Most people would give up.”

A district spokesman said the lawsuit, which also names a journalist who requested similar informatio­n, amounts to an appeal “in an area of public records law that we believe lacks clarity.”

“When this informatio­n is released prematurel­y, the district’s position is that the employees’ right to due process is jeopardize­d,” spokesman Dave Northfield said.

The University of Kentucky prevailed in January when a judge blocked the release of records sought by its student newspaper detailing the investigat­ion of a professor who resigned after being accused of groping students.

The judge agreed with the university that the records would violate the privacy rights of students who were victims even if their names were redacted.

While that ruling is on appeal, Western Kentucky University filed a similar lawsuit against its paper, the College Heights Herald, which sought records related to allegation­s of sexual harassment and assault involving employees. Several other state universiti­es released similar documents to the newspaper, and the state attorney general has ruled that they are public records.

“It’s not a good feeling knowing that we are being sued,” said Herald editorin-chief Andrew Henderson, whose publicatio­n has been raising money to pay legal fees. “I just hope that something beneficial comes out of all of this for everyone involved.”

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[JACK OHMAN/THE SACRAMENTO BEE]

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