New Jersey Mayors Want the Power To Sue You For Asking Too Many Questions
A bill backed by the Conference of Mayors would let courts issue restraining orders when people “harass” officials with information requests.

Just asking questions? That might become illegal, sort of, in New Jersey. Powerful interest groups there are pushing a bill that would overhaul the state Open Public Records Act (OPRA), making it harder for the public to request government documents—and the legislature might vote on it today. One provision would allow state and local agencies to sue people who request too many documents at once.
The bill states that courts can issue a restraining order against requesters who intend to "harass" government agencies or "substantially interrupt the performance of government function." The order could limit "the number and scope of requests the requestor may make," or even eliminate the requester's right to obtain government records statewide.
New Jersey politicians have been salivating over this power. Last year, the Township of Irvington sued an elderly woman, claiming that her frequent requests for information "bullied and annoyed" municipal officials. After getting bad press, Irvington backed out of the lawsuit—but then it threatened to have First Amendment lawyer Adam Steinbaugh prosecuted when he dug around for more records on the case.
The League of Municipalities, the New Jersey Conference of Mayors, and the New Jersey Association of Counties all support the bill, arguing that they've been swamped with time- and resource-wasting records requests. William Caruso, legislative counsel for the mayors' group, even claimed that the bill doesn't go far enough in restricting the public's ability to demand information.
CJ Griffin, director of the Stein Public Interest Center and vice president of the Board of Trustees for the American Civil Liberties Union of New Jersey, has denounced the bill. "And so what if tons of people want tons of records? It's OUR government. Every OPRA request means someone is engaged and wants to know what's going on in their government," she wrote on social media. (Griffin is currently representing Reason on an OPRA-related matter.)
Other parts of the bill would allow requesters to pay for fast-track access to records, require requesters to be more specific when requesting government emails, and restrict the public's access to certain types of government metadata. Critics like Griffin say that the bill would benefit commercial requesters while shielding New Jersey's notoriously corrupt, mobbed-up politics from the public eye.
For example, records obtained under OPRA were important for blowing open the 2014 "Bridgegate" scandal, when then-Gov. Chris Christie's office purposely caused highway traffic in order to punish a political opponent. A former attorney for The Record, the local newspaper that first broke the scandal, has stated that the proposed bill would have made The Record's Bridgegate reporting impossible.
The bill also makes it harder to sue agencies that hide public records. As the law currently stands, people who win a public records lawsuit can force the agency to pay their lawyers' fees. (The federal Freedom of Information Act and almost all state records laws include the same mechanism.) Under the new bill, courts would only award legal fees if they found the agency to be acting in "bad faith."
Supporters of the bill say that the current fee-shifting system has to change because it forces taxpayers to pay for honest mistakes. But New Jersey Comptroller Kevin Walsh has implied that curtailing public records access would cost taxpayers more than it saves. The bill, Walsh wrote on social media, "will increase the likelihood of fraud, waste, and abuse. Some of our best tips come from concerned residents who have filed OPRA requests."
A witness testifying in favor of the bill accidentally demonstrated Walsh's point. During a state assembly hearing on Friday, a town clerk complained that Easthampton Township had to pay $13,000 in attorney fees after Libertarians for Transparent Government sued for government payroll records in 2018.
As it turns out, the lawsuit uncovered that a police officer had been paid $321,942.17 while suspended. The New Jersey Superior Court ordered the officer to pay back the money in 2020.
Griffin offered her own advice on social media for New Jerseyans concerned with saving money: "Tell agencies to stop violating OPRA! You can't sue or get fees if they follow the law!"
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I wonder if we will ever see these records all available online as a matter of course, with no need for requests and lawsuits.
Yeah, I know, never happen, pigs will fly, etc. But once websites become the norm instead of paper, it might be possible and even easier. Starting by the response to FOIA requests being a URL, and then people just start looking and finding what they want.
My county finally started allowing web renewals for business licenses, I think 2-3 years ago. Maybe in another 5 or 10, things will get better.
HAHAHAHAHAHA
Lies require secrets as secrets require lies.
Ask them no questions and they’ll tell you no lies.
Lies are coercion.
I've actually seen the opposite happening. You used to be able to get information on property lines and deeds from our County's website. Now you have to go through a private company and pay $750 per request.
Wow. I hope that doesn't come this way. That's just fucking evil.
Sorry to disagree with you Mr. Petti, but there are aspects of the law that need reform. It is not simply that people ask for “a lot of paperwork.“ Under the current law, I can ask for the same paperwork every week, and the municipality is required to provide the same documents over and over again, unless they have conclusive proof that the documents are already in my possession. I have also seen cases of disgruntled employees using this law for what are clearly harassment purposes. Public disclosure is fine, but there needs to be some balance.
It’s also worth noting that this law does not apply simply to the state and large cities. It applies with equal force to small towns who have had to hire people full-time to respond to public records requests, All at the expense of local taxpayers.
Harassment is already a crime. There is no need to sue violators for harassment under some new law. On the other hand, “I have also seen cases” of officious officials repeatedly citing restaurants for the same trumped-up violations after the courts have - repeatedly - dismissed the citations. What should we do about officials when the shoe is on the other foot?
Let them use their Immunity?
There are already laws to deal with that kind of bad-faith request. I agree that there needs to be balance but the current law is already skewed in favor of the government. This bill makes that skewing far worse.
Daddy, govern me harder.
There is an easy solution to the problem of officials being overwhelmed by too many requests for official records short of “suing” the people who make the requests: log them in in the order they were received and process them in that order. Set a reasonable limit to the number of pages to be provided at one time and bump the larger requests to the end of the line for further processing at a later date after providing the records within the limit each time. See? Barratry not required!
Too easy to scam. Consider the corrupt official interested in covering up his/her own misdeeds. You could, for example, Either directly or through a confederate, submit a raft of preemptory requests about things you had nothing to do with (and don't really care about) knowing that it would push that nosy reporter's 'dangerous' request to the bottom of the queue until the issue is either no longer interesting or you're past the risk of this election cycle.
What I don't get is people who claim to be pro individual liberty blindly trusting in the good will and honest intentions of politicians. How many examples of abuse of power do you need to see before you get it. Our enemy IS the State.
Brilliant! Why didn't I think of that?
If some mayors wouldn't do suspicious things then there wouldn't be any FOIA requests and associated attorney fees, public servants should remember that there are consequences to their actions. I'm against this law because of the potential for abuse of power.
Kill corrupt government officials. Immediately. Consistently. Continuously. I am all in favor of fair trials, but not for government people. If you can't keep things on the up-and-up in government, appearance of impropriety and all that, then don't take the job. Crooked politicians should be dragged out to the parking lot and shot in the head.
Every mayor that backed this should be voted out of office on the next go around.
Every mayor that backs that bill should be disposed of.
This is, however so typical of New Jersey, one of the most crooked and corrupt states in the nation. ( next to Arizona)
By the year 2050, America as we have known it will no longer exist. It will more closely resemble that of the old Soviet Union with government apparatchiks running everything and sending those who dare disobey of to gulags in Montana and Death Valley.
The communists have done their job well by infiltrating every college and university with neo- Marxists who then brain wash and indoctrinate young people into Marxism.
Are you at a lack? Neo-Marxism. Marxism treats it!"
Nothing surprises me about the People's Republic of NJ. Socialists inevitably corrupt themselves.
This is (D)ifferent, right? 🙂
Plenty of R counties in NJ - and Bridgegate occurred under a Republican governor.
Any time a closet fascist is asked tough questions, they will respond with "harassment!"
The fact is, crooks on both sides of the aisle would just love to keep embarrassing questions from being asked in order to hide their incompetence and/or corruption.
This is the kind of place auditors (freelance 1A journalists) end up making a big payday.
It's Eastampton, not Easthampton. No H.
Seriously, they spell it like an North Easterner would pronounce East Hampton? That's fucked up.
No, you may not ask too many questions. That could cause light to malfunction, you see, so that it takes a veeline to the nearest grievance.
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