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Archive for the 'Phoenix New Times' Tag

County’s latest tussle with Thomas could backfire

October 28th, 2009, 2:13 pm by Le Templar
Maricopa County Attorney Andrew Thomas (left) and County Manager David R. Smith

Maricopa County Attorney Andrew Thomas (left) and County Manager David R. Smith

We got some unusual insight this week into just how nasty the fighting has become within the upper echelons of Maricopa County government. The county’s top administrator now is hinting that some of the county’s top attorneys have violated a basic ethical standard of the legal profession — always protect the client’s confidentiality. In turn, those attorneys are now risking official sanction to a shine a light on the questioning of their ethics, which they also see as a fundamental attack on their right to free speech.

Two central players in this week’s escalation of the courthouse power struggle are County Attorney Andrew Thomas and County Manager David Smith. As an appointed official who answers to the Board of Supervisors, Smith isn’t as well-known as Thomas. But Smith wields far-reaching influence with his day-to-day control of the county’s $2 billion budget.

As outlined in state law, Thomas’ office normally serves as the “law firm” for the county. The county attorney provides legal advise to the Board of Supervisors and the county manager, and represents the county in court whenever it is sued. But business has been anything but normal ever since Thomas obtained a criminal indictment of one of those supervisors, Don Stapley.

A short time later, the Board of Supervisors said it couldn’t trust Thomas to protect its interests first. So the board essentially fired Thomas as the county’s legal adviser and created it’s own “law firm” called the Office of General Litigation Services. Thomas has tried to stop the board from stripping this authority (his office still prosecutes criminals), but so far the courts have sided with the supervisors.

Despite the current separation, Thomas and his staff had an attorney-client relationship with David Smith and other county administrators. The guidelines that govern this relationship is the first rule of ethics for all lawyers adopted by the state Supreme Court. One key point of that rule: a lawyer almost never can unilaterally decide to talk about private conversations with a client, even after the lawyer and client no longer work together.

On Monday, Smith invoked that ethics rule when he sent a letter to Thomas, six of his top assistants and the county attorney’s public information officer. As Tribune writer Gary Grado reported, Smith asked if Thomas and the others ever shared any confidential information about county business by email with several local media outlets including the Tribune. Smith also wanted to know if the lawyers had ever written about county officials under their own names or anonymously for a political blog called Sonoran Alliance and for two other conservative groups.

Smith, a lawyer himself, isn’t explaining what prompted him to send the letter. But his written questions strongly imply he already has some evidence that he believes point to an ethical breach by Thomas and his top assistants. The evidence apparently wasn’t enough to file a formal complaint with the Arizona State Bar. So Smith must have decided to deliberately provoke Thomas and see what happened.

The response was loud and furious. Barnett Lotstein, a special assistant to Thomas who often speaks publicly for the office, also received Smith’s letter. Lotstein said the county manager is trying to intimidate him from speaking out in defense of the county attorney.

“David Smith isn’t a king,” Lotstein told me. “Perhaps he has forgotten that. Maybe it’s time someone remind him.”

Thomas’ PIO Michael Scerbo forwarded Smith’s letter to Valley journalists, a deliberate move because Scerbo was the only non-attorney to receive the demand for information. Scerbo said he finds the letter alarming because his whole job is to communicate with the media. In theory, Smith could disrupt the county attorney’s ability to speak freely with the public if Thomas has to worry that even if his spokesperson’s conversations are going to be monitored by a powerful critic.

However, Scerbo’s employment by the county attorney means he’s also not supposed to disclose confidential facts of county business. Cari Gerchick, a spokeswoman for the Board of Supervisors’ own “law firm,” drew an analogy to a doctor’s office, where everyone including the nurses and filing clerks legally can’t disclose information about patients, even though those employees aren’t physicians.

Gerchick said Scerbo’s release of Smith’s letter actually was a violation of the ethics rules, because Smith made it clear he was asking for information under the protection of attorney-client confidentiality.

But perhaps the county attorney learned something about the power of transparency when two executives from Phoenix New Times were arrested after they revealed a secret subpoena from a county special prosecutor seeking information about everyone who had visited that publication’s web site. Public backlash to the outrageous overreach of that subpoena prompted Thomas to drop the arrest charges and to cancel the special prosecutor’s investigation.

Any legitimate doubts about Thomas’ legal ethics would have serious implications, as he is likely to campaign for state attorney general next year. But if Smith and the Board of Supervisors want to go after Thomas or his assistants, they better have something more substantial than the public disclosure of a demand letter.

EspressoPundit seeks to become a journalist

May 1st, 2009, 1:45 pm by Le Templar
Greg Patterson from www.espressopundit.com

Greg Patterson from www.espressopundit.com

If you are an Arizona political junkie, or just like to read about state politics online, then you’re familiar with the blog writing of Greg Patterson. For those who aren’t, Patterson is a former state lawmaker and current utility regulation lobbyist from Phoenix who, like many conservative Republicans, has a sharp dislike for traditional American journalism.  He was a pioneer among independent Arizona political bloggers and (among other topics) he has spent the last four years slapping around newspaper and broadcast journalists. He also occasionally breaks — or maybe I should say creates — legitimate stories about real controversies.

Patterson has tried to distinguish his views of individual journalists (he says he likes most of us working types) from his criticism of the process of journalism, which he clearly detests. But he has angered almost every journalist in the state with his practically gleeful running commentary on the financial woes of the newspaper industry.

So the buzzing in the journalism community went into overdrive when Patterson posted an item today asking if readers would pay subscriptions to make it worth his while to operate something more formal than a personal blog. Here’s a key quote:

“…I generally avoid providing the day-to-day updates and analysis that hardcore public affairs professionals require. That’s because that type of analysis can be time consuming to write and it has a limited appeal.”

Hmm, Patterson wants to get paid to write about what politicians are saying and doing? I think it’s time for Patterson to admit he’s secretly jealous of what we journalists do for a living. After, you can be cruelest to those you love the most, right?

I know some of my peers would point out that Patterson’s political biases and party loyalty clash with any traditional definition of credible, independent reporting. But as an opinion journalist myself, I certainly can’t complain about anyone who wants to make a living, or just a little money, for sharing their views with the public.

In fact, I hope Patterson does make an attempt to launch a for-profit news and opinion operation. He can join the ever-growing crowd in the 21st century version of American mainstream media.

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