Mississippi Gets an "F" in Transparency
When I was researching my article on Mississippi medical examiner Dr. Steven Hayne, I made an open records request to Mississippi's state crime lab. My query was pretty simple: I asked for the number of autopsies Dr. Hayne performed on a specific date. I didn't ask for copies of the autopsy reports, or the names of the people he performed the autopsies on. That information is generally available in other states. But I didn't want to give Mississippi's Department of Public Safety the chance to turn me down. So I only asked for a number.
They turned me down anyway. Their reason? Even giving me a number would violate the privacy of the deceased persons on whom the autopsies were performed. Absurd, no?
So this bit of news from Editor & Publisher isn't terribly surprising:
Eddie Stephenson, an insurance agent in Hattiesburg, has tried to find out details about the February 4, 2005, death of his son, Matthew, who wrecked his vehicle while being chased by Lamar County deputies. Stephenson requested radio and dispatch logs and accident and investigative reports, but officials refused.
"I feel like my civil rights have been violated because they won't give me this information," Stephenson said.
He spent more than two years fighting for the logs and reports, even filing a lawsuit that was settled last year. Under the agreement, he cannot disclose details of the settlement.
A number of people have told me similar stories about the problems they've encountered while trying to obtain records of loved ones on whom Dr. Hayne has performed autopsies.
But Mississippi isn't alone.
Mississippi is one of 38 states that got an "F" in the 2007 study by the Better Government Association and the National Freedom of Information Coalition.
"These kinds of sunshine matters, unfortunately, generally are not high priority with an individual citizen until he or she is personally impacted," said Leonard Van Slyke, a Jackson attorney who represents news organizations in Freedom of Information lawsuits. "But when that day arrives, that person is generally appalled with the lack of recourse."
I ran into problems in this area, too:
Campaign finance records have been a constant source of complaints from government watchdogs who say Mississippi requires too little disclosure. A national study by the Pew Charitable Trusts, the Center for Governmental Studies, the UCLA School of Law and the California Voter Foundation gives Mississippi a failing grade because the state does not require candidates to file campaign finance forms that are in a searchable, electronic form.
And that's for statewide office. It's basically impossible to track down donations to the campaigns of county coroners.
And even these easily circumventable rules are relatively toothless. The fine for knowingly violating Mississippi's public records law is all of $100. Not much to pony up if you're a government official with something to hide.
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The last thing a crook wants is a paper trail.
I made an open records request to Mississippi's state crime lab
Good work!!!
Maybe we should all make an open records request to Mississippi's state crime lab...
Maybe we should all make an open records request to Mississippi's state crime lab...
Better plan: anybody who thinks of themselves as, or receives money for being, a journalist should be required to do one of these type requests a month, at least.
For jurisdictions with reporter-source privilege, it should be a requirement of invoking that.
But things are just wonderful at the crime lab these days!
Mississippi Gets an "F" in Transparency
What doesn't Mississippi get an "F" in?
Better plan: anybody who thinks of themselves as, or receives money for being, a journalist should be required to do one of these type requests a month, at least.
Required? Nay, nay. Replace it with encouraged, and I'm in agreement.
One of the professors at the journalism school of Wayne State University had his students make FOIA requests to the local munincipalities as part of the course of instruction. The results made it into the local rag, the Detroit Free Press or the Detroit News, I forget which. It was eye opening. Many government officials just don't comprehend that it is a requirement to handover documents, to anyone who asks, in a reasonable timeframe with reasonable costs. I'd like to see every journalism school across the nation do this. Send the 20 year old to the local cop shop, and request the police logs for a weekend, report on the response. Many, liberals and conservatives alike, don't seem to understand that "passing a law" doesn't, in and of itself, change a damned thing.
Strange. At the state office of the medical investigator here, anyone can request an autopsy report for a nominal fee, and next of kin get a free copy.
Strange. At the state office of the medical investigator here, anyone can request an autopsy report for a nominal fee, and next of kin get a free copy.
You must live in the 21st century, or at least the 20th. Mississippi is closing out the 19th as we speak.
Can anyone government worker in Mississippi even spell "transparency"?
Mississippi sucks. Everyone who lives there should follow Dan T's long standing advice. Move!