Kentucky Attorney General: Kim Davis has broken the law again
Rowan
County Clerk Kim Davis, with Republican presidential candidate Mike
Huckabee, left, at her side, speaks after being released from the Carter
County Detention Center, Tuesday, Sept. 8, 2015, in Grayson, Ky. Davis,
the Kentucky county clerk who was jailed for refusing to issue marriage
licenses to gay couples, was released Tuesday after five days behind
bars. AP Photo/Timothy D. Easley
Rowan County Clerk Kim Davis violated the act by refusing to produce documents related to the gay marriage battle, the attorney general’s office said in an opinion.
Liberty Counsel refused, saying the documents are preliminary and private. Liberty Counsel represented Davis after she was sued for refusing to issue marriage licenses.
The Open Records Act provides for costs and attorney’s fees to be awarded in some cases as well as up to $25 per day for each day the person is denied access to the record. Liberty Counsel can appeal the attorney general’s opinion.
The group has not decided whether to challenge the ruling, said Mat Staver, Liberty Counsel founder and chairman. Liberty Counsel has provided its services for free, charging nothing to Davis or Rowan County, Staver said.
“There’s nothing to reveal here,” Staver said.
The attorney general’s office asked to privately review the documents so it could decide whether the exemptions cited are relevant but said Liberty Counsel refused to produce most of the documents even for a private review.
“An agency cannot benefit from intentionally frustrating the attorney general’s review of an open records request. Such result would subvert the General Assembly’s intent behind providing review by the attorney general,” Assistant Attorney General Matt Jones wrote in the office’s opinion.
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