ACLU Sues Maryland State Police for Withholding Public Records and Overcharging for Documents Related to "Driving While Black" Lawsuit (9/26/2007)
FOR
IMMEDIATE RELEASE CONTACT: media@aclu.org
TOWSON, MD – Charging
that the Maryland State Police (MSP) are
flouting the letter and spirit of the
Maryland Public Information Act
(MPIA), the American Civil Liberties Union
teamed with Venable, LLP to
file a lawsuit today against the MSP for improperly
withholding records
and imposing excessive costs for records it is producing.
The case was
filed in Baltimore County Circuit Court on behalf of the Maryland
State
Conference of NAACP Branches in order to force MSP to produce information
and documents relating to its compliance with a federal court order in
the
organizations’ "Driving While Black" litigation.
"It
raises red flags for the Maryland State Police to be so
strenuously resisting
some of the NAACP’s reasonable requests for
information about steps the
department has taken to ensure racial
profiling is not perpetuated or tolerated
on our highways," said ACLU
of Maryland Legal Director Deborah A. Jeon.
ACLU
senior staff attorney Reginald T. Shuford said, "In this time
of creeping
government secrecy, Marylanders should be especially
vigilant in preserving
their basic ‘right to know’ about important
issues of public trust."
The
lawsuit charges violations of the MPIA, stemming from an
information request
initially made by the NAACP in February 2007. The
MPIA requires that "a
custodian shall permit a person or governmental
unit to inspect any public
record at any reasonable time." However,
several portions of the NAACP’s request
were completely denied,
including requests for records related to the MSP's
internal
investigations of racial profiling complaints. The NAACP offered to
accept documents redacted where appropriate, but MSP still refused to
produce
the information.
For
those records it has agreed to produce, MSP tabulated the cost
of its production
at over $55,000 – an exorbitant sum. The MPIA
requires that any charge for
providing records be a "fee bearing
reasonable relationship to the recovery of
actual costs incurred by a
government unit." But the fee demanded by MSP for the
records it agreed
to provide is exponentially more than is required by other
state
agencies: MSP is demanding 75 cents per page, while other agencies only
require between 15 and 25 cents per page. In addition, MSP is assessing
"collection/gathering" costs of approximately $90 per hour – another
staggering
amount.
"The
Maryland Public Information Act is a vital tool to ensure that
our government
operates openly and can be held accountable if certain
practices violate the law
and perpetuate discriminatory, inefficient
practices," said Robert Wilkins, an
attorney from Venable LLP and an
original plaintiff in the "Driving While Black"
lawsuit. "Marylanders
have a basic right of access to records kept by their
government,
especially when they show whether government agencies are following
the
law in a race-neutral manner."
Attorneys on the case
are Jeon of the ACLU of Maryland, Shuford of
the national ACLU’s Racial Justice
Program, and Wilkins, Hector G.
Bladuell, Brian L. Schwalb, Seth A. Rosenthal,
and Daniel P. Moylan
from Venable LLP.
Click here to read the
legal complaint:
www.aclu.org/racialjustice/racialprofiling/31954lgl20070926.html
More
information on the ACLU Racial Justice Program's work on racial
profiling can be
found at:
www.aclu.org/racialjustice/racialprofiling/index.html
Background on the ACLU’s "Driving While Black" Lawsuit
In
1993, Robert Wilkins and members of his family filed a lawsuit in
the U.S.
District Court for the District of Maryland against the
Maryland State Police
charging that they were the victims of "racial
profiling," or the practice of
stopping motorists and making decisions
regarding searches on the basis of race
– an "offense" now better known
as "Driving While Black." Documents showed that
MSP illegally targeted
African-American motorists for stops and searches along
Maryland’s highways. In 1995,
the
parties entered into a settlement under which MSP, among other
things, agreed to
collect data on traffic stops and searches and take
measures to prevent racial
profiling. Two years later, the federal
court overseeing the case ruled that MSP
was continuing to target
non-white motorists for traffic stops and searches, in
violation of the
Wilkins agreement.
In
1998, based on accumulated evidence showing a continuing pattern
and practice of
discrimination by MSP troopers, the ACLU, on behalf of
the Maryland NAACP and
several individual plaintiffs, filed another
lawsuit in the U.S. District Court
for the District of Maryland
charging that MSP troopers were continuing to
engage in racial
profiling. The parties ultimately agreed to resolve some of the
litigation by entering into a consent decree that obligates MSP to take
a number
of steps to address concerns raised in the lawsuit, including
providing the
Maryland NAACP with quarterly reports containing detailed
information on the
number, nature, location and disposition of racial
profiling complaints.
In
February 2007, the Maryland NAACP submitted a request to MSP
under the MPIA to
inspect and copy all documents pertaining to twelve
categories of records in
MSP's possession, custody and/or control. The
request was designed to determine
whether MSP had complied, and was
continuing to comply, with its obligations
under the consent decree.
MSP has not complied with this request, necessitating
the filing of
today’s lawsuit.
|