May 6, 2002
Ms. Kelly Ripley
Records Management Coordinator
Irving Police Department
P.O. Box 152288
Irving, Texas 75015-2288
OR2002-2378
Dear Ms. Ripley:
You ask whether certain information is subject to required public disclosure under
chapter 552 of the Government Code. Your request was assigned ID# 162442.
The Irving Police Department (the "department") received a request for offense/incident
report 01-030960. You claim that the requested information is excepted from disclosure
under section 552.108 of the Government Code. We have considered the exception you
claim and reviewed the submitted information.
We must address the department's obligations under section 552.301 of the Government
Code. Subsections 552.301(a) and (b) provide:
(a) A governmental body that receives a written request for information that
it wishes to withhold from public disclosure and that it considers to be within
one of the [act's] exceptions . . . must ask for a decision from the attorney
general about whether the information is within that exception if there has not
been a previous determination about whether the information falls within one
of the exceptions.
(b) The governmental body must ask for the attorney general's decision and
state the exceptions that apply within a reasonable time but not later than the
10th business day after the date of receiving the written request.
You indicate that the department received the requestor's initial written request for this
information on January 11, 2002. In response to the initial request, the department
improperly withheld the information without asking for a decision from this office as
required by law. See Gov't Code § 552.301. The department failed to submit this request
for a ruling until February 28, 2002. Consequently, the department failed to request a
decision within the ten business day period mandated by section 552.301(a) of the
Government Code. Because the request for a decision was not timely submitted, the
requested information is presumed to be public information. Gov't Code § 552.302.
Pursuant to section 552.302 of the Government Code, a governmental body's failure to
comply with section 552.301 results in the legal presumption that the requested information
is public and must be released unless the governmental body demonstrates a compelling
reason to withhold the information from disclosure. See Gov't Code § 552.302; Hancock v. State Bd. of Ins., 797 S.W.2d 379, 381-82 (Tex. App.--Austin 1990, no writ)
(governmental body must make compelling demonstration to overcome presumption of
openness pursuant to statutory predecessor to Gov't Code § 552.302); Open Records
Decision No. 319 (1982). You do not demonstrate a compelling reason to withhold
information under section 552.108. See Open Records Decision No. 586 (1991) (need of
another governmental body to withhold information from disclosure provides compelling
reason under section 552.108). As you raise no other specific compelling reasons to
overcome the presumption that the information is public, we conclude that the requested
offense report must be released to the requestor.
This letter ruling is limited to the particular records at issue in this request and limited to
the facts as presented to us; therefore, this ruling must not be relied upon as a previous
determination regarding any other records or any other circumstances.
This ruling triggers important deadlines regarding the rights and responsibilities of the
governmental body and of the requestor. For example, governmental bodies are prohibited
from asking the attorney general to reconsider this ruling. Gov't Code § 552.301(f). If the
governmental body wants to challenge this ruling, the governmental body must appeal by
filing suit in Travis County within 30 calendar days. Id. § 552.324(b). In order to get the full
benefit of such an appeal, the governmental body must file suit within 10 calendar days. Id.
§ 552.353(b)(3), (c). If the governmental body does not appeal this ruling and the
governmental body does not comply with it, then both the requestor and the attorney
general have the right to file suit against the governmental body to enforce this ruling.
Id. § 552.321(a).
If this ruling requires the governmental body to release all or part of the requested
information, the governmental body is responsible for taking the next step. Based on the
statute, the attorney general expects that, within 10 calendar days of this ruling, the
governmental body will do one of the following three things: 1) release the public
records; 2) notify the requestor of the exact day, time, and place that copies of the records
will be provided or that the records can be inspected; or 3) notify the requestor of the
governmental body's intent to challenge this letter ruling in court. If the governmental body
fails to do one of these three things within 10 calendar days of this ruling, then the requestor
should report that failure to the attorney general's Open Government Hotline, toll free,
at 877/673-6839. The requestor may also file a complaint with the district or county
attorney. Id. § 552.3215(e).
If this ruling requires or permits the governmental body to withhold all or some of the
requested information, the requestor can appeal that decision by suing the governmental
body. Id. § 552.321(a); Texas Department of Public Safety v. Gilbreath, 842 S.W.2d 408,411 (Tex. App.--Austin 1992, no writ).
Please remember that under the Act the release of information triggers certain procedures for
costs and charges to the requestor. If records are released in compliance with this ruling, be
sure that all charges for the information are at or below the legal amounts. Questions or
complaints about over-charging must be directed to Hadassah Schloss at the Texas Building
and Procurement Commission at 512/475-2497.
If the governmental body, the requestor, or any other person has questions or comments
about this ruling, they may contact our office. We note that a third party may challenge
this ruling by filing suit seeking to withhold information from a requestor. Gov't Code
§ 552.325. Although there is no statutory deadline for contacting us, the attorney general
prefers to receive any comments within 10 calendar days of the date of this ruling.
Sincerely,
David R. Saldivar
Assistant Attorney General
Open Records Division
DRS/sdk
Ref: ID# 162442
Enc: Submitted documents
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