In Deadly Drug Raid Case, a Texas County Refuses to Release Information It Has Already Released
Contradictory responses to a request for autopsy reports illustrate how law enforcement agencies take advantage of a broad exception to the state's public records law.

The Texas Public Information Act, which generally requires public disclosure of government records, includes an exception for information that "would interfere with the detection, investigation, or prosecution of crime." That loophole, described in Section 552.108(a)(1) of the Texas Government Code, is very wide in practice, since law enforcement agencies typically get to decide when it applies. It allows them to cloak public relations concerns in the noble garb of justice seeking, as illustrated by the Houston Police Department's handling of the fallout from the disastrous January 28 drug raid, authorized by a no-knock warrant based on a fraudulent affidavit, that killed Dennis Tuttle and Rhogena Nicholas without discovering any evidence to support allegations that they were selling heroin.
On May 3, the Harris County Institute of Forensic Sciences sent me the autopsy reports for Tuttle and Nicholas. That was a month after I had requested the reports, and I was a bit surprised, since the Harris County Attorney's Office had claimed the documents were exempt from disclosure under Section 552.108(a)(1). I assumed that the Texas Attorney General's Office, which the Texas Public Information Act authorizes to decide when an exception applies, had come to a different conclusion.
Apparently I was wrong, because yesterday I received an email from the county attorney's office about the attorney general's "ruling on your Public Information request." The attached letter from the office of Attorney General Ken Paxton agrees that the county has the authority to withhold the autopsy reports under Section 552.108(a)(1). The letter is dated May 8, five days after I received the autopsy reports and two days after I uploaded them and wrote a post about them.
"Your request does not present a novel or complex issue," the letter informs Assistant County Attorney Deanne Lin. "You claim the submitted information may be withheld from public disclosure pursuant to section 552.108(a)(1) of the Government Code on behalf of a law enforcement agency with a law enforcement interest. Further, you inform this office the law enforcement agency objects to the disclosure of the information because it relates to an ongoing criminal case and release would interfere with the case. Thus, we conclude you may withhold the submitted information pursuant to section 552.108(a)(1)."
In other words, police or prosecutors need only assert that the disclosure of information would "interfere" with a case, and they can count on the attorney general to agree. And that's true even when the supposedly sensitive information has already been released by the agency that generated it, which apparently had no concerns about undermining an investigation.
Kelley Shannon, executive director of the Freedom of Information Foundation of Texas, says "law enforcement has wide discretion" to invoke Section 552.108(a)(1), which is a "really broad" exception. The attorney general's office is "supposed to look at what's being argued," she says, but "they don't do any fact finding" and typically side with police. "They pretty much rubber-stamp it," she says. "Usually they just trust law enforcement."
While concerns about compromising an investigation "may well be valid" in some cases, Shannon notes, "many times it's just, 'We don't want the information out.'" Houston Police Chief Art Acevedo has complained about leaks related to the deadly drug raid, including the revelation that it was based on a "controlled buy" that never happened. After a series of press conferences in January and February, the HPD has declined to answer questions about the operation, citing its ongoing criminal and internal affairs investigations. Acevedo clearly wants to control the narrative about this fiasco, which he praises himself for investigating, and it's in his interest to prevent further revelations until he is ready to frame the story in a way that minimizes embarrassment for him and the department. Whether it's in the interest of justice or police accountability is another matter.
While the Texas Public Information Act authorizes lawsuits to compel disclosure of records covered by the law, the attorney general has an obligation to apply the statute in good faith and in light of its goals. Here is how the law describes those:
Under the fundamental philosophy of the American constitutional form of representative government that adheres to the principle that government is the servant and not the master of the people, it is the policy of this state that each person is entitled, unless otherwise expressly provided by law, at all times to complete information about the affairs of government and the official acts of public officials and employees. The people, in delegating authority, do not give their public servants the right to decide what is good for the people to know and what is not good for them to know. The people insist on remaining informed so that they may retain control over the instruments they have created. The provisions of this chapter shall be liberally construed to implement this policy.
A policy of automatically deferring to the preferences of law enforcement agencies falls a bit short of that lofty language.
Editor's Note: As of February 29, 2024, commenting privileges on reason.com posts are limited to Reason Plus subscribers. Past commenters are grandfathered in for a temporary period. Subscribe here to preserve your ability to comment. Your Reason Plus subscription also gives you an ad-free version of reason.com, along with full access to the digital edition and archives of Reason magazine. We request that comments be civil and on-topic. We do not moderate or assume any responsibility for comments, which are owned by the readers who post them. Comments do not represent the views of reason.com or Reason Foundation. We reserve the right to delete any comment and ban commenters for any reason at any time. Comments may only be edited within 5 minutes of posting. Report abuses.
Please
to post comments
"Usually they just trust law enforcement."
LEOs are granted a virtual license to commit malfeasance under color of authority, which, by the way, is the same reason child molesters join the clergy or sign up to be Boy Scout leaders.
I find it strange that officers of the court can graduate from law school but can't understand the problem with this.
But seriously, what investigation? The only folks affected by withholding of information are dead.
You're assuming the information doesn't indicate culpability on the part of surviving LEOs.
The info certainly doesn't "indicate culpability" - it COULD, so the fuzz can suppress it until the Chief issues his finding that the murdering officers complicit in fabricating the warrant won't be charged. In 2022. After the current Chief retires.
Actually, I am assuming it does. The precedent that has been set of allowing the state to withhold evidence that could incriminate an agent of the state is an insult to liberty.
Surely, in any case where law enforcement officials deny FOIA requests due to the open investigation exception, that request must be automatically approved once the investigation is closed, right? Allowing independent auditing of investigations after the fact would keep the investigators honest, which only serves the people. Who could reasonably object?
That just creates an incentive to leave the investigations open forever. They already delay justice far longer than should be acceptable. Be careful about giving them more incentives to "exercise discretion".
I was the victim of crime on my property, the 911 call was made from my business phone, no names were mentioned other than the name of business and I was denied the transcript of the 911 call HPD because, apparently, there was information in the call that needed to be kept private. Um...
Couple of retired HPD that I know are certain this was a good bust. I told them "no arrest record, no heroin, no knock, no CI, no 9mm", and they said we don't care, it was a good bust.
The other thing they claimed is that the plainclothes cops showed up in a marked police car, which sounds utterly idiotic to me; but has anyone seen that in any reporting?
"A good bust"?!
Did they place the victims' corpses under arrest? They must have meant "A clean kill".
Funny, I haven't seen her bra size reported anywhere.
This Texas power is a lot like the 1933 Enabling Act whereby National Socialists managed to "deviate from" constitutional safeguards and "not require the consent of legislative authorities." The German and English are side by side on Wikipedia. Texas absorbed many German immigrants and was by some accounts 30% Germanic when WW2 was declared. Denazification may be in order "over here."
So they gave you the autopsy reports followed by a letter saying that your request for the reports has been denied.
I know there is a joke in there somewhere but it is so funny all by itself.