Cole County Judge Jon Beetem determined the attorney general’s office violated the Sunshine Law by taking steps to conceal emails between Hawley’s taxpayer-funded staff and his political consultants during his 2018 campaign for U.S. Senate.
The attorney general’s office must pay $12,000 in civil penalties — the maximum allowed under state law — plus attorney’s fees.
The emails in question were requested by the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee in late 2017. Hawley’s office told the DSCC at the time that it had “searched our records and found no responsive records.”
But a year after the request was denied, The Kansas City Star revealed Hawley and his staff had used private email rather than their government accounts to communicate with out-of-state political consultants who would go on to run Hawley’s U.S. Senate campaign.
Among those included in the private email discussions was Daniel Hartman, who was the attorney general’s office’s custodian of records.
The DSCC filed a lawsuit in early 2019.
On Monday, Beetem agreed that Hartman was aware communications responsive to the DSCC request existed and should have turned them over. It appears he didn’t, Beetem concluded, because it could have been politically damaging to Hawley during the 2018 Senate race.
“Then-Attorney General Hawley was actively running for U.S. Senate at the time of these requests, which were submitted by a national party committee supporting his opponent,” Beetem wrote. “The requested documents showed — at a minimum — questionable use of government resources.”
Further, Beetem wrote, the fact that public business was being conducted on private email accounts — in violation of the attorney general’s office’s own policy — is “itself evidence of a conscious design, intent or plan to conceal these potentially controversial records from public view.”
Private e-mails
But it wasn’t until February 2020 that the Missouri auditor’s office finished its review of the matter, concluding Hawley and his staff may have misused state resources but the widespread use of private email and text messaging in the office made it impossible to determine definitively.
When he was running for attorney general in 2016, Hawley criticized Hillary Clinton’s use of a private server for sending and receiving emails while she was Secretary of State.
Beetem also dismissed the argument made by the attorney general’s office that ruling in favor of plaintiffs could have widespread adverse consequences on state government.
“This ruling will not lead to a parade of horribles envisaged by the [attorney general’s office,]” Beetem wrote. “It does not require an agency to search every employee’s personal email when receiving a Sunshine Law request to avoid potential liability. Rather, this court holds a custodian of records must do his job.”
Chris Nuelle, spokesman for Hawley’s successor, Attorney General Eric Schmitt, said in an email: “We’re reviewing the decision, but will refrain from further comment.”
In a statement responding to Beetem’s ruling, Hawley’s campaign spokesman — Kyle Plotkin — said the “allegations are based on Democrat campaign attacks. They have been investigated multiple times, and no wrongdoing has been found, including by a Democrat state auditor.”
Mark Pedroli, an attorney on the case and founder of the Sunshine and Government Accountability, praised Beetem’s ruling as a “enormous victory not only for transparency and good government but also for access to critical government records during elections.”
“Attorney General Hawley’s office illegally concealed public documents immediately prior to a U.S. Senate election against Senator Claire McCaskill for the sole purpose of preventing damage to Hawley’s campaign and affecting the outcome of the election,” Pedroli said. “Concealing public records in order to prevent damage to your campaign is cheating, it deprives competing candidates of a level playing field, and it’s illegal.”
Directions from consultant
Among the records eventually made public was a January 2017 email string where Louisiana-based consultant Timmy Teepell told Hawley’s staff to “start compiling a punch list of what we need to do to roll out each of our agenda items this year.”
Teepell wrote that the staffers “should put together a weekly conference call for all of us to set aside time each week to focus attention on these projects.”
In another, from April 2017, Teepell sets tasks for attorney general staff to accomplish, such as developing a target list of key legislators, a job description for a press secretary and a list of accomplishments.
Another email included a document laying out plans for the attorney general’s office regarding a raid of more than a dozen Asian massage parlors in southwest Missouri that would take place a week later.
It detailed how the day should proceed, even going so far as to provide Hawley instructions on what he should wear when addressing the media.
“Josh should be wearing some sort of law enforcement garb,” the document said, “like a police jacket and hat.”
On the day of the raid, Hawley wore a badge and lanyard.
This is what you get when you vote for greasy ivy league silver spooner friutcakes like Josh Howdy Doody Hawley!
ReplyDelete"When he was running for attorney general in 2016, Hawley criticized Hillary Clinton’s use of a private server for sending and receiving emails while she was Secretary of State."
ReplyDeleteOf course he did, just like the rest of the Republicans have. They're hypocrisy knows no bounds.
One thing I'll give him credit for. It's not the usual excuse SW Missouri's family values republicans use when they visit their local Asian massage parlors!
ReplyDelete