Posted on 01/01/2013 3:08:13 PM PST by abb
After more than five years of resisting a lawsuit requesting inspection of public records, KNME-TV has been ordered into mediation where it will face claims for civil fines and attorney fees that could reach $200,000 and higher.
KNME-TV is the Public Broadcasting System (PBS) affiliate at the University of New Mexico.
The suit arose from KNME-TVs production for hire of a misleadingly labeled news documentary on the controversial Navajo water settlement. The program was called The Water Haulers and was commissioned and paid for by the Navajo Nation and the State Engineer of New Mexico. They wanted the program to assist their lobbying efforts in Congress to secure hundreds of millions of dollars to implement the water rights settlement. Our previous report showed that KNMEs clients exercised control over the content and script of the program. Any information or voices raising questions about or criticizing the proposed settlement or detracting from the message the Navajo Nation and State Engineer wanted to deliver to KNMEs viewers were removed from the final production.
A group of water users opposed to the water rights settlement sought to see the records behind the broadcast. They filed a request to inspect public documents. KNMEwhich is a state agency by virtue of its status within the University of New Mexicostonewalled. Only after suit was filed under the New Mexico Inspection of Public Records Act did KNME begin allowing inspection of some of its files.
Scene from The Water Haulers
But it has continued to withhold documents that may reveal the extent to which KNME compromised its journalistic integrity. Producer notes and internal communications between production staff are being kept secret on grounds the New Mexico Supreme Court is unlikely to recognize as valid exemptions from the laws general rule of disclosure.
KNME initially attempted to block the suit by raising a hyper-technical objection about a lawyer submitting a public records request on behalf of his client instead of a letter signed by the client itself. The Supreme Court unanimously rejected KNMEs objections and sent the case back to district court over a year ago. KNME did not relent, and has continued to withhold public records from public view.
Statutory fines of $100 a day have been accumulating, Under the Inspection of Public Records Act, KNME may also be have to pay five years of attorney fees to plaintiffs. Taxpayers have been picking up the tab for KNMEs lawyers who were engaged by the states Risk Management Division at rates up to $150 an hour.
Mediation Ordered
On November 26, 2012, Judge Nan Nash of the Second Judicial District Court in Albuquerque ordered all parties to the suit to participate in mediation by February 1, 2013, in an effort to settle the case. The parties have selected former District Court Judge Jay Harris as mediator.
The case had been briefly dismissed for lack of activity by the court clerk. But Judge Nash reinstated the matter at plaintiffs request. Plaintiffs argued that the though the court file did not show activity, the case had been active off-record as the parties went back and forth in an effort to arrange mediation. KNME and the other defendants, despite claiming they wanted to mediate and settle the case, urged Judge Nash to uphold the clerks dismissal. She rejected their arguments.
The correspondence between the parties attorneys, which was included in the court file as exhibits to briefs, reveals that KNME does not have insurance coverage for any civil fines it may have to pay. Those funds may have to come from KNMEs general revenues.
In addition to KNME, the University of New Mexico and Albuquerque Public Schools, among other public entities, are named as defendants. UNM and APS jointly operate KNME. Their attorney, who represents all the defendants, made it clear in the correspondence that only the public television station is withholding records from inspection.
KNMEs attorney stated in one e-mail between counsel that KNME is withholding documents on grounds they are drafts and producers notes allegedly protected under the First Amendment to the United States Constitution. KNME has been withholding the documents since 2007 on the claim that they are protected from disclosure because they would reveal the thought process of the stations producers.
KNMEs producers are state employees. None of the KNME staff who produced the fake documentary were employed as journalists by any independent news organization.
Two recent appellate decisions greatly undermine KNMEs claims.
In Republican Party of New Mexico v. New Mexico Taxation and Revenue Department, the Supreme Court ruled that no exceptions are recognized to the Inspection of Public Records Act but those explicitly articulated in the Act itself, or as required by constitutional law. The New Mexico State Constitution does not contain a thought process clause. The Supreme Court ruled that no general deliberative process exception exists to the Inspection of Public Records Act. Only the Governor may assert that privilege, and it must be very narrowly applied.
In Edenburn v. New Mexico Department of Health, released only last week, the New Mexico Court of Appeals reaffirmed that draft documents are not exempt from disclosure. The law firm on the losing side of that case represents KNME. Some of the same unsuccessful arguments it rejected in Edenburn have been raised to justify KNMEs closed files.
As our first report pointed out, while it has been fighting the lawsuit, KNME ironically has portrayed itself as a champion of open government by co-sponsoring with the New Mexico Foundation for Open Government training sessions for citizens seeking access to public records.
It should be noted that the New Mexico Foundation for Open Government filed a friend of the court brief against KNME when this matter was before the New Mexico Supreme Court.
Ping. Of interest.
More here.
http://newmexico.watchdog.org/16073/lawsuit-questions-knmes-journalistic-integrity/
Lawsuit Questions KNMEs Journalistic Integrity
By Jim Scarantino on September 9, 2012
KNME-TV describes itself as a trusted source for in-depth news and information. Yet for over five years the station has been resisting a public records request for documents that might show whether the PBS affiliate sold its journalistic integrity for a mere $30,000.
“journalistic integrity” does not exist.
At one time I used to believe what was presented as “news”, but then one time I was young, foolish and naive.
What’s needed is a class action lawsuit by a group of conservative writers that have had their truthful and sourced stories spiked or rewritten by editors/publishers to fit the lib agenda. There are MANY of us out there.
The suit would ask that MSM ‘news’ carry a disclaimer that the following reports are to be considered opinion or entertainment.
Never happen without about 10 million and a team of lawyers though.
PBS = Programming By Socialists
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KNME-TV is the Public Broadcasting System (PBS) affiliate at the University of New Mexico... a misleadingly labeled "news documentary" on the controversial Navajo water settlement... called "The Water Haulers"... commissioned and paid for by the Navajo Nation and the State Engineer of New Mexico... to assist their lobbying efforts in Congress to secure hundreds of millions of dollars to implement the water rights settlement... Any information or voices raising questions about or criticizing the proposed settlement or detracting from the message the Navajo Nation and State Engineer wanted to deliver to KNMEs viewers were removed from the final production.
Are the decision-makers who actually caused the situation going to be forced to pay the penalty, or will it just come from the taxpayers? Unless the guilty parties themselves have to pay a penalty, I don’t see the purpose.
New Mexico ping.
At one time I used to believe what was presented as news, but then one time I was young, foolish and naive.
Welcome to adulthood. I was almost 40 before I began to tumble to the con.
No one can know that they are objective. Any journalist who claims a virtue which he cannot know he has is the furthest thing from objective.
A few years ago my work required me to travel. In the evening I would watch local news report. I spotted something I did not understand at the time.
There were segments were the local anchor would interview someone. The problem was, I seen the same story in another area. Same questions, same answers. I then realized I was not seeing the two together. It was a taped interview and the local anchor was just reading from a script.
I read later that these stories were made by third parties and given to the local news stations to present as their own.
I don’t know who was producing them or if the practice still goes on (I stopped watching local news years ago) but it is not hard to guess that the stories were created to get one point of view presented to the public. In my mind the local stations were being dishonest by not letting the viewer know that they did not produce the story, and letting them know who did.
There are all kinds of ways to lie. Main Stream Media knows them all, and does it.
Heard that the radio did/does it frequently in interviews with singers and bands.
Check out how much government revenue via “legal ads” your local weekly paper gets, and then think again just how “independent” it is.
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