There are those who will label this post as sour grapes.
That’s okay. You can call it Tinker Bell, Rambo or anything you choose. I don’t care because it won’t change the fact that the Louisiana Supreme Court is dominated by gutless hypocrites.
There’s a guy in New Orleans who will agree with me even if no one else does.
His name is Ashton R. O’Dwyer, Jr. and he is an attorney. Or at least he was.
You see, like me, he sounded off to and about the wrong people—judges, to be precise—but unlike me, he was in a vulnerable position in that he was a partner at the prestigious New Orleans law firm Lemle & Kelleher. As such, anything he said about the judiciary could be—and was—met with instant retaliation.
O’Dwyer’s sin was that he had the idea to file a class action lawsuit against the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers over its lack of adequate preparedness for Hurricane Katrina. For good measure, in case it should be determined that the Corps was immune from litigation, he also named the State of Louisiana as a defendant for its pitiful oversight of the various politically inept and corrupt levee boards.
But other attorneys who were politically connected to the presiding judge wanted to be the plaintiff attorney. The judge eventually disqualified O’Dwyer and the rival attorney filed his suit. The only problem is the other attorney also represented the state so he could not, because of the obvious conflict of interests, file against the state.
It was little consolation to O’Dwyer that the Corps of Engineers was, as feared, determined to be immune from being sued which left the other attorney with no case. O’Dwyer was furious and went slightly ballistic.
He was eventually terminated by Lemle & Kelleher and things escalated quickly. Jailed on a questionable charge of making threats, he was held for mental evaluation. It was his second stint in jail. The first came because he refused to leave his St. Charles Avenue home during Katrina—even though a network news crew was allowed to remain in a house next door during the storm.
The courts were far from finished teaching him a lesson. Subjected to monitoring of his emails for years, suspended from the practice of law after being fired, he was later disbarred altogether. http://www.tulanelink.com/stories/o’dwyer_11a.htm
Today, O’Dwyer is not only fired, suspended and disbarred, but also bankrupt—all because he refused to hold his tongue. And today, he still won’t shut up.
http://www.nola.com/opinions/index.ssf/2010/12/disbarred_attorney_not_as_craz.html
After all, what else can they do to him?
Fast forward to November 7, 2016.
Among the writ applications denied by the Louisiana Supreme Court was Case No. 2016-C -1263 (TOM ASWELL v. THE DIVISION OF ADMINISTRATION, OF THE STATE OF LOUISIANA AND KRISTY NICHOLS, INDIVIDUALLY AND AS THE COMMISSIONER OF ADMINISTRATION). http://www.lasc.org/news_releases/2016/2016-065.asp
I filed my writ after the First Circuit Court of Appeal in an equally cowardly act, struck down the penalties against Nichols while acknowledging that the state was negligent in complying to our public records request in a timely manner.
As a refresher, here’s what happened. With the Division of Administration under Nichols already dragging its feet with several pending requests we had submitted, we decided to conduct a test to see if we were being targeted via slow compliance.
In October 2014, we submitted a detailed request for information pertaining to a complicated third party administrator contract between the Office of Group Benefits and a California bill processing firm. On the same day, we had a friendly legislator (who asked not to be named) submit an identical request through the House Legislative Services Office.
The House member received the requested information the very next day. Again, that was in October 2014. In January 2015, I still had not received the documents so I filed suit. Kristy Nichols then had a CD containing the information delivered to my attorney, J. Arthur Smith, III, the day after the suit was filed.
By our calculations, with state law providing penalties of $100 per day for failure to comply to the state’s public records law (remember: Bobby Jindal was touting the state for its “gold standard of transparency), the Division of Administration owed us about $40,000, including that request as well as others that were still outstanding.
District Court Judge Mike Caldwell, in his infinite wisdom, awarded us something on the order of $1200 and Kristy appealed. The First Circuit gutted even that award and we applied for writs to the Supreme Court.
Among those on the Louisiana Supreme Court who would have granted my writ were Jeannette Knoll of the Third District, Jeff Hughes of the Fifth District and John Weimer of the Sixth District. For that, I thank them.
The brain-dead justices who declined to do the right thing, who distorted the state’s public records law to their own satisfaction and who showed they possess no moral compass insofar as the public’s right to know is concerned were Chief Justice Bernette Johnson of the Seventh District, Greg Guidry of the First District, Scott Crichton of the Second District, and Marcus Clark of the Fourth District. For that, I thumb my nose at them.
Let’s recap: I’m not an attorney, I’m retired, and for the moment, the First Amendment, which guarantees my freedom of speech, is still firmly intact. Moreover, since Supreme Court justices are elected, that makes them politicians first, and judges second, which means their title of justices takes on about as much significance as a justice of the peace as far as I’m concerned. They are no more or any less human than anyone else who toils at an occupation. They are mortals endowed with no greater wisdom than my grandfather who had a sixth-grade education. (In fact, truth be known, he was probably light years ahead of most lawyers in terms of moral wisdom.)
In short, the Supreme Court jusrtices can’t do a damned thing to me for calling them imbecilic morons.
Now, lest you think this diatribe is about me, be assured it most definitely is not. It also is not about LouisianaVoice. Nor is it about $1200 in penalties—or even $40,000. The $1200 awarded by Judge Caldwell will neither make me nor break me.
This boneheaded decision, from district court all the way up to the Supreme Court’s decision to deny writs, is about something much larger than me, LouisianaVoice or $1200.
This is about the public’s right to request—and obtain—information about what its government is doing, how it is spending the taxpayers’ dollars, and how its government is meeting—or failing to meet—its responsibility to the public it is supposed to be serving. This rant also raises the obvious question: what purpose do laws serve if they are not enforced? Indeed, what use are judges (other than to look wise when photographed in their robes for their official portraits—at taxpayer expense, of course) when they selectively ignore the law?
With the manner in which our litigation was mangled by the judiciary, governmental agencies and those who run them—from the governor down to the mayors of Shongaloo and Paincourtville—may now take their cue from Case No. 2016-C -1263 (TOM ASWELL v. THE DIVISION OF ADMINISTRATION, OF THE STATE OF LOUISIANA AND KRISTY NICHOLS, INDIVIDUALLY AND AS THE COMMISSIONER OF ADMINISTRATION) and provide as much—or as little—as they choose in the way of public records without fear of financial penalties.
The only recourse we have at this point is to find another friendly legislator to write—and a friendly governor to support—new legislation tightening and re-defining the public records laws and the public’s right to know what its elected and appointed officials are doing in the name of representation of constituents.
We have the friendly governor, we believe, as evidenced by John Bel Edwards’s office prompt response to the public records requests we have submitted to him and to the Division of Administration.
So now, like Diogenes, we are seeking an honest man in the form of a legislator who will take on a difficult, if not impossible task.
And this is what we have to look forward to on the federal level now. You are a warrior, Tom, and we are going to need an army of warriors in the coming years!
Thank you for your service….
Sorry it played out this way, Tom. I gave up on State District Courts after seeing similar fates for me and many others.
I just submitted a public records request to the Louisiana Supreme Court itself. They called the day they got the request (Monday) and said, “Come on down.” I’m seeking to get copies of all the 100+ letters of recommendation for Larry Bankston’s law license reinstatement. It’s going to cost me over $100, but at least they say I can get them without a big fuss.
I’m going to publicize them all. I know of a closing attorney who wrote him a letter. I’ll never use nor refer anyone to him ever again for darn sure. I’m finding acts such as that (publicizing and publically humiliating) have a higher return on investment and are more satisfying. Unfortunately, State District Courts are money pits and, even more unfortunately, to quote Donald Trump, are a “rigged system.” That’s why it’s very unlikely you’ll ever see me filing again.
I think there is plenty of evidence that new legislation is not the answer. The existing law on this subject seems about as clear as it can be made to me, as are many others. The intent is absolutely clear. Civil laws are not worth the effort to write them if they are to be increasingly ignored and then unenforced by the courts.
The obvious answer is for our system to become less corrupt. The only way that will happen is if people hold those responsible for the current state of affairs accountable. You are certainly doing all you can, but you are one person crying out in a wilderness of rampant apathy and insider deal-making.
If the people of this country and state can be fed up enough to elect deal-maker Donald Trump POTUS in desperate hope for change in our system, it is certainly possible for more of them to pay enough attention to what is going on to vote intelligently and/or offer themselves up for public offices for which they are qualified. Is that too much to ask? I’m afraid I know the answer.
Excellent points, Stephen, and at least we have small examples of hope. I genuinely believe Clay Higgins is going to clobber Scott Angelle in the runoff despite being heavily outspent and going against the Jindal machine backing Angelle. At some point, people get fed up, and I believe Angelle is just about to be the next example of that anger on full display!
Robert, I just don’t see that happening.
I am thankful for Tom and his journalism. Miracles happen, look at the Saints, 2 blocked kicks in a row. The fearful, the ignorant, the abject prejudiced, elect Trump. I believe I will win the powerball and become a republican. love always ron Thompson