San Diego Union-Tribune

CONSUMER GROUP APPEALS LOSS IN RECORDS DISPUTE

Consumer Watchdog says public should have access to them

- BY JEFF MCDONALD jeff.mcdonald@sduniontri­bune.com

The Los Angeles advocacy group that unsuccessf­ully sued California Insurance Commission­er Ricardo Lara and the Department of Insurance over their refusal to turn over documents they said were exempt from public release has filed a formal appeal.

Consumer Watchdog, the nonprofit group whose 1980s-era work helped establish an independen­tly elected state insurance commission­er, argues the Superior Court judge who decided the case in January erred in his ruling.

“Our California Constituti­on guarantees the public’s access to government records,” Consumer Watchdog litigation director Jerry Flanagan said in a news release that announced the appeal this week.

“We hope the Court of Appeal will send a clear message that state agencies must not be allowed to ignore clear evidence of public records,” he added. “Access to informatio­n concerning the conduct of public business is a critical weapon in the fight against government corruption.”

The Department of Insurance did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment on the appeal. But a spokespers­on previously said the court properly found that officials complied with open-records laws and the department would keep doing so.

“The judge ruled the Department of Insurance adhered to California’s Public Records Act guaranteei­ng the public’s right to know,” spokespers­on Michael Soller said early this year.

“We will continue to respond to each and every public records request in accordance with the law and our core values of transparen­cy and public access,” he said.

Consumer Watchdog sued Lara and the state agency he oversees in 2020, after The San Diego UnionTribu­ne disclosed a series of political contributi­ons he had accepted from insurance industry executives.

The advocacy group sought calendars, notes, emails and other records pertaining to meetings Lara and other department officials held with insurers.

Department leaders provided some documents in response to the document request but resisted the public release of many others. In court papers, Consumer Watchdog accused officials of not having conducted a proper records search.

In its appellate brief, the organizati­on said the Los Angeles Superior Court judge who dismissed most of the initial claims had committed multiple errors in his ruling that must be corrected.

Most significan­tly, Consumer Watchdog alleged, the department failed to expand a records search relating to former state officials who previously released records showed had met with Lara while representi­ng a major workers’ compensati­on insurer called Applied Underwrite­rs.

“Despite those clear leads, the agency failed to update its search terms to determine whether any other responsive records associated with the four individual­s existed,” the filing says.

It says the trial court also wrongly ruled that the department conducted a reasonable search for records even though the search was conducted by a person with limited knowledge of the request.

The department should have assigned someone more familiar with the documents to look for the requested records, Consumer Watchdog said.

“To remedy these errors and ensure that the public continues to have access to all types of public records, Consumer Watchdog’s appeal requests that the Court of Appeal remand the case to the trial court with instructio­ns on the correct legal standard to apply,” the announceme­nt said.

After the Union-Tribune’s report, Lara issued a public apology and returned tens of thousands of dollars in political contributi­ons.

The newspaper later reported that Lara’s office had intervened in at least four cases in ways that benefited the commission­er’s campaign donors.

He was re-elected to a second four-year term in November.

The California Department of Insurance regulates more than $300 billion in insurance policies marketed to drivers, homeowners, employers and others.

 ?? RICH PEDRONCELL­I AP FILE ?? The group sought records related to meetings held by California Insurance Commission­er Ricardo Lara.
RICH PEDRONCELL­I AP FILE The group sought records related to meetings held by California Insurance Commission­er Ricardo Lara.

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