Ally in Vermont Keeps Dean's Records a Secret
NewsMax.com Wires
Wednesday, Dec. 24, 2003
More: Dean continues the lie he was caught in; he said he would unseal his records.
WASHINGTON Vermont's attorney general says the state
should dismiss a lawsuit seeking to open the gubernatorial records
of Democrat presidential candidate Howard Dean on grounds the
former governor's papers are not subject to the state's public
records law.
The move by Attorney General William Sorrell, a longtime ally of Dean, came Tuesday in response to a lawsuit by Judicial Watch, a group
that wants to unseal the documents. Dean's rivals for the
Democrat presidential nomination have used the issue of the
sealed papers to criticize his calls for openness in government.
'What Are They Hiding?'
"He's hiding behind executive privilege, which is exactly what
Bush and Cheney are doing," said Steve Murphy, campaign manager for U.S. Rep. Dick Gephardt. "I don't know how you expect to beat them when you're using the same arguments. It also begs the question of what are they hiding?"
Stephanie Cutter, a spokeswoman for rival candidate Sen. John Kerry,
questioned Dean's intentions.
"At first, Dean said he would open his records when George W.
Bush did. Turns out Bush's records were open," Cutter said. "Then
he said he would let a judge decide, but now he's hiding behind an
attorney general he himself appointed. It really makes you wonder
what he's hiding."
U.S. Sen. Joe Lieberman, another Dean rival, said this
month that closing the records countered Dean's efforts to present
himself as a straight talker.
"That's not the way to build public trust, especially after
three years of secret-keeping and information-blocking by George W.
Bush," Lieberman said.
After promising to release his records if Bush did, followed by the news that Bush's records were available, Dean said he would let the courts decide which documents to release.
At issue are 145 boxes of papers that Dean ordered sealed for 10
years when he left office in January. He also gave the state 190
boxes that were immediately available to the public.
"Judicial Watch, Inc., is not presently entitled to inspect the
gubernatorial papers that were sealed by Governor Dean" under the
terms of an agreement between Dean and the secretary of state,
Sorrell said in his filing.
"We think we've got a strong case here," he said earlier
Tuesday. "The Vermont Supreme Court has repeatedly acknowledged
the validity of executive privilege."
Two of Dean's predecessors used executive privilege to seal
roughly the same percentage of their documents as well, but not for
as long a period of time.
The state argued that 10 years was chosen "as a reasonable but
brief period" compared to states such as New Jersey, where the papers
of former Gov. Thomas Kean were sealed for 20 years, and
Maryland, where records were sealed for 30 years.
Sorrell, a former aide to then-Gov. Dean, said that Vermont governors
routinely sealed some documents upon leaving office, and that Dean
did not have total control over the records.
"If Howard Dean were to say tomorrow, 'I'd like to see them
opened,' that's not to say they'd all be opened," Sorrell said. He
said that the documents would still need to be reviewed, and
papers such as medical records removed.
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