Date: Fri 26-Jun-1998
Date: Fri 26-Jun-1998
Publication: Bee
Author: CURT
Quick Words:
edink-FOI-town-attorneys
Full Text:
ED INK: Lawyers As Doorkeepers?
Last week, when the state's highest court moved to protect attorney-client
privileges in a case involving Rocky Hill, it may also have opened the door
for some public officials to invoke new privileges of secrecy and
unaccountability that run against the grain of our democratic system of
governance.
In a unanimous decision June 17, the Connecticut Supreme Court ruled that
discussions between town officials and lawyers hired for town business are, in
most cases, confidential. The ruling upset a Freedom of Information Commission
decision that legal reports prepared as Rocky Hill town officials considered
the dismissal of that town's police chief should have been released to a local
resident who had requested to see them.
Most people would defend the rights of clients, public officials included, to
speak privately with their attorneys on matters directly related to court
cases or issues where bargaining and negotiation are required. In this
context, the court's ruling involving the specific case in Rocky Hill may have
been fair, reasonable, and in the best interests of that town. We are afraid,
however, that the ruling will be liberally interpreted by municipal officials
across the state who are motivated less by the public interest and more by
their own interest in exercising power away from public view, where they are
shielded from public criticism and the consequences of actions that may not
reflect the public will.
Our concern is that any board or commission faced with a controversial matter
will simply invite a town attorney to its meeting and close the door. Elected
officials may be tempted to absolve themselves in this way from being held
accountable for what they think or say as they conduct the town's affairs.
The strength of any government can be measured by its openness. People trust
their elected leaders when they can see what they are doing. Leaders who
develop a taste for secrecy and a fondness for confidential conversation of
public matters will always appear weak, worried, and suspect. We hope this
latest ruling by the state's Supreme Court does not tempt our public officials
to turn town lawyers into doorkeepers whose primary job is no longer
dispensing legal advice, but rather keeping the public at bay.