Another target for hillary! and her minions?
1 posted on
11/30/2003 11:57:12 PM PST by
kattracks
To: kattracks
A large chunk of Dean's records as governor are locked in a remote state warehouse, the result of an aggressive legal strategy designed in part to protect Dean from political attacks.
I don't understand how they can legally do that...wouldn't the records be public domain?
To: kattracks
Sounds like the Clintons all over again.
4 posted on
12/01/2003 2:16:01 AM PST by
patj
To: kattracks
It takes a lawsuit.
To: kattracks
What did Dean know, and when did he know it ?
6 posted on
12/01/2003 2:52:29 AM PST by
ChadGore
(Kakkate Koi!)
To: kattracks
Another target for hillary! and her minions? Speaking of Hillary--Hasn't she got secrets from her own past hidden away somewhere? Like her thesis from Wellesley?
7 posted on
12/01/2003 2:56:22 AM PST by
wai-ming
To: kattracks
When they get power: LIBERALS = Fascists
8 posted on
12/01/2003 3:11:15 AM PST by
Smocker
To: kattracks
The media snoops are always filing law suits against politicians on behalf on freedom of information. Where are they now?
Oops, I forget.....Dean is a DemoRat.
Leni
11 posted on
12/01/2003 3:44:14 AM PST by
MinuteGal
(Start saving your pesos for "FReeps Ahoy 3" in spring. Give each other a cruise for Christmas!)
To: kattracks
...pages of documents being locked up for 10 years at a state archive in Middlesex, said Greg Sanford, the state archivist. ...
HMmmmm.....
A Metrosexual's records are stored in MIDDLESEX???
HMmmmm.....
12 posted on
12/01/2003 3:56:08 AM PST by
Elsie
(Don't believe every prophecy you hear: especially *** ones........)
To: kattracks
We didn't want anything embarrassing appearing in the papers at a critical time." This is the line that got to me.....what's in there that's so embarrassing????? If this were a Republican the press would be going crazy demanding access!
To: kattracks
I can see Bubba seeing this report and going "DOH! Why didn't I think of that... but then again, I would have had to seal 20 years of records, including how many Bimbos..."
To: kattracks
Politics: Whats in Howard Deans Secret Vermont Files?
By Michael Isikoff
NEWSWEEK
Dec. 8 issue As investigative reporters and oppo researchers flock to Vermont to dig into Howard Deans past, they have run into a roadblock. A large chunk of Deans records as governor are locked in a remote state warehousethe result of an aggressive legal strategy designed in part to protect Dean from political attacks.
DEANWHO HAS BLASTED the Bush administration for excessive secrecycandidly acknowledged that politics was a major reason for locking up his own files when he left office last January. He told Vermont Public Radio he was putting a 10-year seal on many of his official papersfour years longer than previous Vermont governorsbecause of future political considerations... We didnt want anything embarrassing appearing in the papers at a critical time. Most of the records are open, said Dean spokeswoman Tricia Enright, adding there is absolutely not a smoking gun in those for which Dean has claimed executive privilege. Still, Deans efforts to keep official papers secret appear unusually extensive. Late last year, NEWSWEEK has learned, Deans chief counsel sent a directive to all state agencies ordering them to cull their files and remove all correspondence that bore Deans nameand ship them to the governors office to be reviewed for privilege claims. This removed a significant number of records from state files, said Michael McShane, an assistant Vermont attorney general.
The battle over Deans records began last year when three Vermont newspapers took him to court after being denied access to his official schedule. Reporters were trying to track Deans out-of-state political trips. State lawyers argued that release of the schedule could jeopardize his safety and that the governors office was not a public agency covered by state open-records lawtwo notions rejected by the Vermont Supreme Court. (The court ultimately ruled that those portions of the schedule related to his political trips had to be released, but those relating to state policy could be redacted.) Then last January, Deans chief counsel David Rocchio negotiated a sweeping agreement that resulted in about 140 boxes of Dean records containing several hundred thousand pages of documents being locked up for 10 years at a state archive in Middlesex, said Greg Sanford, the state archivist. The sealed papers include Deans correspondence with advisers on, among other matters, Vermonts civil unions law and a state agency that critics charged was used to grant tax credits to Deans favored firms. Rocchio said the sealing agreement was driven by legitimate policy concerns, but also by, he later acknowledged, political factors. All you have to do is look at what [Deans opponents] are doing with the existing records, he said. Theyre distorting his record.
To: kattracks; All
Into the memory hole the records go...
18 posted on
12/01/2003 1:25:07 PM PST by
finnman69
(cum puella incedit minore medio corpore sub quo manifestus globus, inflammare animos)
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