Latest featured videos from DaytonDailyNews.com

Blogs

Blogs

E-mail this page
Dann wants public records | Ohio politics
 

Home > Blogs > Ohio politics > Archives > 2008 > July > 30 > Entry

Dann wants public records

When Democrat Marc Dann started his career as a state official, he often used the Open Records laws to pry information from the hands of opponents. Then as attorney general, he delivered records to the media that sometimes damned his administration.

Now out of office, Dann is once again using the Open Records law.

Dann sent a records request to the Attorney General’s office asking for his personal schedules, e-mails and expense records that have been given to others through records requests. He also wants the names and contact information of anyone who asked for public records about him. And he’s looking for copies of talking points and speeches he delivered, news stories about him or the office accomplishments, and drafts of the office annual report that was being prepared before May 15.

Ted Hart, spokesman for Attorney General Nancy Hardin Rogers, said it’s a lot of records.

“It’ll take a little bit of time (to fulfill the records request) but it’s not as large as some of the ones we’ve received,” Hart said. The office already gave Dann the news stories and a spreadsheet of all the records requests, he said.

Dann and former members of his administration are the subject of investigations by the Ohio Ethics Commission, state Inspector General, Ohio Highway Patrol, state Auditor, and others.

Dann resigned in May after admitting he had an affair with his scheduler, that he was ill-prepared to be attorney general, and that his behavior may have sent a message to his friends about how they could treat colleagues in the office.

Dann said in a recent e-mail to the Dayton Daily News that he is spending time with his family and working to rebuild his law office.

He said he has not been notified of any disciplinary investigation of him by the Ohio Supreme Court or the local bar association. Such investigations - conducted when there are complaints of ethics or professional standards violations - are confidential until probable cause is found.

Permalink | Comments (0) | Post your comment |

Comments
Post a comment



Remember me?




*HTML not allowed in comments. Your e-mail address is required.

 

Copyright © 2011 Cox Media Group Ohio, Dayton, Ohio, USA. All rights reserved.

By using this site, you accept the terms of our Visitors Agreement and Privacy Policy. You may wish to note our other business policies.