Las Vegas Review-Journal

Commission grants appeal in RJ case

Autopsy records release fight to go another round

- By Arthur Kane

Clark County Commission­ers approved another appeal Tuesday by the coroner’s office over the release of juvenile autopsies despite a district judge’s ruling that the records must be handed over by Dec. 30.

The Review-journal sued in 2017 to get access to juvenile autopsies as part of an investigat­ion into failures by child protection workers to remove children before they died of neglect or abuse.

District Judge Jim Crockett and the Nevada Supreme Court previously ruled that autopsies are public records and should be released.

Commission­er Tick Segerblom, the only commission­er to vote against another appeal Tuesday, urged his fellow commission­ers to stop wasting money.

“We’ve been through the courts, and they said turn them over,” he said. “I don’t think we should spend more money on this appeal.”

In February, the Nevada Supreme Court ruled that autopsies are public records but directed the district court to determine whether there is any private medical informatio­n that needs to be redacted.

Crockett offered to review the autopsies in chambers until he realized that the coroner’s office hadn’t redacted most of the autopsies the Review-journal requested. Crockett then blasted the coroner’s office for its “blatant and flagrant attempt to obstruct” and ordered the autopsies released by Dec. 30. He refused to grant a stay for an appeal.

Robert Warhola, a deputy district attorney, told commission­ers Tuesday that prosecutor­s believe that

Crockett did not apply the balancing test set up by the Supreme Court to determine what to redact from the records, and that is the focus of the appeal.

But Review-journal Executive Editor Glenn Cook said Tuesday that the continued fight shows that the county is concealing damaging records.

“Clark County is hiding one hell of a story,” he said. “There’s no other reason to engage in such an expensive, doomed appeal, even after a judge eviscerate­s all involved for flagrantly violating the Public Records Act. I am more convinced than ever that these records will expose devastatin­g failures of our most vulnerable children on a sickening scale.”

Cook also criticized the expenditur­e of money on an appeal when COVID-19 has dried up revenue for vital services.

“Taxpayers, take note: No matter how much you’re struggling, no matter the economic hardships you are enduring, and no matter how far tax collection­s plunge during this pan

demic, Clark County commission­ers will always, always find money to hide their greatest failures from you,” he said.

In February’s ruling, the court establishe­d a two-part test to determine what can be redacted from the autopsies. The government has to show that there is a “nontrivial” privacy interest, and the requester must prove that there is significan­t public interest advanced by the release of the documents.

Before the vote, Ben Lipman, vice president of legal affairs and general counsel for the Review-journal, urged commission­ers to end appeals, which have cost taxpayers $80,000 and will cost more after the county is forced to pay the news organizati­on’s legal fees.

“We think the time has come for all of this to end,” he said.

The Nevada Policy Research Institute, the Nevada Press Associatio­n and the Nevada Open Government Coalition urged the commission­ers to stop appeals in the case.

Last week, Crockett gave a lengthy speech in court about the importance of public servants acting in the public good and the coroner’s failure to abide by those principals.

“Even though the coroner’s office is … under no obligation to prevent the death of children, it has the ability to assist in that goal,” Crockett said last week in court. “Wouldn’t it want to? Rather than proactivel­y assisting or even just passively participat­ing in the efforts to assemble informatio­n that could in the future be instrument­al in protecting children and preventing them from being tortured, abused and murdered in the future, the coroner’s office has dragged its heels and been brought before the court kicking and screaming over objections that are frivolous, featherwei­ght and fallacious.”

The county must get a stay from the Nevada Supreme Court before Dec. 30 or face possible contempt charges for failing to release the records.

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Tick Segerblom

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