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23-ORD-311

November 20, 2023

In re: Richard Jones/Kentucky State Police

Summary: The Kentucky State Police (“KSP”) subverted the intent of
the Open Records Act (“the Act”), within the meaning of KRS 61.880(4),
by delaying access to requested records beyond five business days from
receipt of the request.

Open Records Decision

On October 16, 2023, Richard Jones (“Appellant”) submitted four requests to
KSP for copies of the emails of three KSP employees and one Justice and Public Safety
Cabinet (“Cabinet”) employee discussing the recent appointment of a Public Safety
Telecommunications Manager for KSP Post 5. The Appellant specified the subject
matter of his request included emails “that may involve [the Appellant] and any other
conversations . . . conducted with anyone about this position and the recent job
appointment,” including “conversations with the interview pannel [sic].” He also
narrowed the scope of his request to responsive emails sent or received by KSP
employees since June 1, 2023, and those received from the Cabinet employee since
September 12, 2023.1 In a timely response, KSP stated it had “asked the
Commonwealth Office of Technology (‘COT’) to run searches” for the emails but had
“not received the results of those searches by COT yet.” Citing KRS 61.872(5), KSP
claimed it needed “additional time in which to receive the search results from COT,
review those results to determine responsiveness, and then perform necessary
redactions, if any, prior to disclosure.” KSP stated it “anticipate[d] being able to
gather these records and finish the necessary review and redaction process on or
before November 29, 2023.” This appeal followed.

1
The Cabinet is a public agency separate from KSP, and therefore, KSP is not the official custodian
of records belonging to the Cabinet. Nevertheless, while KSP is unable to search the Cabinet
employee’s email account, it could search the email accounts of its own employees who received emails
from the Cabinet employee.Under KRS 61.880(4), a person may petition the Attorney General to review
an agency’s action if the “person feels the intent of [the Act] is being subverted by an
agency short of denial of inspection, including . . . delay past the five (5) day period
described in” KRS 61.880(1). That statute requires a public agency to grant or deny
a request for records within five business days of receiving it, unless the agency
properly invokes KRS 61.872(5) to delay inspection of records that are “in active use,
in storage or not otherwise available.” When a public agency delays inspection of
records under KRS 61.872(5), it must also give “a detailed explanation of the cause”
for the delay and notify the requester of the “earliest date on which [records] will be
available for inspection.”

Here, KSP invoked KRS 61.872(5) but provided only a speculative date when
it “anticipate[d]” the records would be available. Moreover, KSP did not claim the
records were in active use, in storage, or not otherwise available. Although KSP
explained it was waiting for COT to search for the records, it has not established why
it was necessary to outsource this search to COT. When a public agency receives a
request for emails, it must make a good-faith search for the responsive emails in its
possession. See, e.g., 18-ORD-219. A good-faith search for emails is conducted by
searching the email accounts of the agency employees identified in the request. See,
e.g., 20-ORD-094. Presumably, the three KSP employees still have access to their own
email accounts and are capable of performing the search themselves, and the
members of the KSP interview committee are capable of searching their own email
accounts for relevant communications with the Cabinet employee. It is reasonable to
expect agency employees to perform this search themselves. See, e.g., 23-ORD-304.

At all times, a public agency must substantiate the need for any delay and that
it is acting in good faith. See KRS 61.880(2)(c) (placing the burden on the public
agency to substantiate its actions); see also 21-ORD-211; 21-ORD-045. Here, KSP
faults COT for the delay but does not explain why it needs COT to perform the search
on its behalf. COT is not the custodian of electronic records belonging to other state
agencies. See 19-ORD-091. Because KSP has not provided a “detailed explanation”
for the necessity to outsource its search to a different agency, KSP has not met its
burden of establishing that the records were “in active use, storage or not otherwise
available” or that delaying access to the records by more than a month was necessary
in this case. Because it has not substantiated the reasonableness of its delay, the
Office finds KSP subverted the intent of the Act, within the meaning of
KRS 61.880(4), by delaying access to records past the five-day period described in
KRS 61.880(1).

A party aggrieved by this decision may appeal it by initiating an action in the
appropriate circuit court pursuant to KRS 61.880(5) and KRS 61.882 within 30 days
from the date of this decision. Pursuant to KRS 61.880(3), the Attorney General shallbe notified of any action in circuit court, but shall not be named as a party in that
action or in any subsequent proceedings. The Attorney General will accept notice of
the complaint emailed to OAGAppeals@ky.gov.

Daniel Cameron

Attorney General

s/ James M. Herrick

James M. Herrick

Assistant Attorney General

#479

Distribution:

Mr. Richard Jones
Samantha A. Bevins, Esq.
Ms. Stephanie Dawson
Ms. Abbey Hub

Disclaimer:
The Sunshine Law Library is not exhaustive and may contain errors from source documents or the import process. Nothing on this website should be taken as legal advice. It is always best to consult with primary sources and appropriate counsel before taking any action.
Requested By:
Richard Jones
Agency:
Kentucky State Police
Forward Citations:
Neighbors

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