Table of Contents
FIREsues UCLA for withholding public records about Mnuchin campus appearance for over a year
LOS ANGELES, March 28, 2019 — The Foundation for Individual Rights in Education sued the University of California, Los Angeles yesterday for failing to fulfill a public records request filed over a year ago.
In the 391 days since FIREsubmitted a request for records related to a campus speaking appearance by U.S. Secretary of the Treasury Steven Mnuchin, the public university unilaterally granted itself five extensions, obstructing FIREand the public’s reasonable access to information.
“UCLA has shirked its responsibility under California law to disclose public information and is withholding administrative records about one of the largest public colleges in the state and a high-ranking member of the federal government,” said FIREDirector of Litigation Marieke Tuthill Beck-Coon. “A university whose motto is ‘let there be light’ shouldn’t keep the public in the dark.”
On Feb. 28, 2018, The Wall Street Journal that Mnuchin “retracted his permission” for UCLA to release a video of his speaking appearance at a campus forum two days earlier. During the appearance, several protesters were escorted from the facility, leading to five arrests.
Seeking to learn more, FIREissued a public records request to UCLA on March 2 for a copy of the video and any communications about its release, as well as any agreements between Mnuchin’s office and UCLA about the secretary’s appearance. UCLA publicly posted the to its website on March 9, but has failed to release any of the other requested documents. Instead, UCLA responded to FIREwith a succession of emails repeatedly awarding itself extensions, most recently to April 30 — which will be 424 days since FIREfirst made its request.
“UCLA can’t be allowed to defeat public records law by unilaterally putting off its response deadline forever,” said Adam Steinbaugh, director of ֭’s Individual Rights Defense Program, who submitted the request on ֭’s behalf. “This is a serious abuse of the public trust. UCLA — and public colleges across the country — must recognize that following the law isn’t a choice.”
The requires that public institutions like universities make copies of public records “promptly available.” ֭’s lawsuit alleges the university failed to properly respond to its request, obstructed the production of the records, and failed to provide an estimated date of availability, all of which violate the CPRA’s requirements.
FIRE submitted its suit yesterday to the Los Angeles County Superior Court and is represented by Los Angeles attorney Kelly Aviles as well as Steinbaugh.
UCLA, like many public institutions, has a checkered history with fulfilling public records requests. , UCLA’s independent student newspaper, on its website listing unfulfilled requests to the university, at least eight of which have gone unfulfilled for more than four years.
FIRE filed a similar lawsuit last year against New Jersey’s Essex County College after it failed to respond to a public records request seeking information about the firing of a professor. The college similarly stalled for months by awarding itself repeated extensions. It eventually provided the requested documents within days of ֭’s lawsuit being filed.
The Foundation for Individual Rights in Education (FIRE) is a nonpartisan, nonprofit organization dedicated to defending and sustaining the individual rights of students and faculty members at America’s colleges and universities. These rights include freedom of speech, freedom of association, due process, legal equality, religious liberty, and sanctity of conscience — the essential qualities of liberty.
CONTACT:
Daniel Burnett, Assistant Director of Communications, ֭: 215-717-3473; media@thefire.org
Recent Articles
FIRE’s award-winning Newsdesk covers the free speech news you need to stay informed.
Ayaan Hirsi Ali will not submit
Podcast
Ayaan Hirsi Ali grew up in a culture of conformity. She was beaten and mutilated. She was told who she must marry. Eventually, she rebelled. "You don't speak up at first," she told us. "First you leave and you find a place of safety. It's...