Baltimore Sun

Judge: Baltimore County improperly withheld documents

- By Jeff Barker

A Baltimore County Circuit Court judge has ruled that the county improperly withheld documents following a public records request seeking informatio­n about retirement benefits obtained by a former county firefighte­r.

Judge Michael J. Finifter ordered Baltimore County to turn over records, including a settlement agreement between the county and former firefighte­r Philip Tirabassi, that the county maintained were private.

“The confidenti­ality provision is not basis for withholdin­g the settlement agreement,” the judge wrote in a Feb. 1 opinion that said the agreement was “wrongfully withheld.”

Finifter ruled that other documents, including correspond­ence between officials about Tirabassi’s case, should also be released but that other records were properly withheld because of privacy considerat­ions such as attorney-client privilege.

The suit was filed in 2021 by Fred Homan, a former county administra­tive officer who retired in 2018 after four decades in county government.

Homan alleged the county under County Executive

Johnny Olszewski Jr.’s administra­tion violated the Maryland Public Informatio­n Act by refusing to turn over thousands of emails and by charging unreasonab­le fees for public records.

The suit said the county “unlawfully and improperly granted additional retirement benefits” to Tirabassi, and that documents related to that case should be subject to public scrutiny.

The county said at the time that it and the firefighte­r “entered into an authorized confidenti­al agreement” as part of a legal settlement.

Tirabassi, according to the judge’s opinion, had previously been employed by Baltimore City and sought to transfer his retirement credits to the Baltimore County Employee Retirement System.

When his request was denied, Tirabassi appealed and “eventually entered into a monetary settlement agreement with Baltimore County to resolve his retirement claims,” the opinion said.

Homan said in his suit that the settlement terms and the reasoning supporting them “are a matter of public interest.”

“The less you want to show it to me, the more I need to see it,” said Rignal

W. Baldwin V, Homan’s attorney, in an interview Wednesday. “What’s the need for secrecy in county government?”

Baldwin said he still has not received emails that fall under the judge’s order and asked the court last week to seize them. Finifter has not ruled on his request.

The county said it is cooperatin­g.

“The County has reviewed the Court’s order, appreciate­s the Court’s decision affirming attorney-client protection­s for a considerab­le number of records, and is complying with the order to provide records consistent with the Court’s decision,” said county spokespers­on Erica Palmisano in a written statement.

According to Homan’s lawsuit, the county originally rejected Tirabassi’s request — first when then-budget director Keith Dorsey declined it in April 2019, saying Tirabassi had missed the window by many years.

Edward P. Blades, who succeeded Dorsey in the position, also later determined that Tirabassi was not eligible for a service transfer and denied the request, the suit said Tirabassi eventually took his case to the county’s Board of Appeals.

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