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Request By:

Honorable Rosemary F. Center
Wolfe County Attorney
Campton, Kentucky 41301

Opinion

Opinion By: Steven L. Beshear, Attorney General; By: Cicely D. Jaracz, Assistant Attorney General

You have requested this office to issue an opinion pertaining to the Open Records law. Specifically, you indicate that an election contest suit was filed in Wolfe Circuit Court following the November, 1982 school board election. Simultaneously an FBI investigation was begun with regard to the absentee ballots cast during that election, and the Justice Department subpoenaed the absentee ballots and applications. These have since been released by the Justice Department and returned to the clerk's office. Now the attorneys representing the parties in the election contest suit wish to inspect the absentee ballots and applications as the election contest suit partially relates to these items.

Your specific question is whether the absentee ballots and applications are public records subject to the Open Records law.

KRS 117.085 et seq. promulgates the rules concerning absentee voting. KRS 117.085(3) and 117.087(6) direct the county clerk to retain applications, absentee ballots, detachable flaps and outer envelopes for thirty (30) days. Ballots are then to be burned by the county board of elections. If a contest proceeding is instituted during the thirty (30)-day period, the ballots are not to be burned but instead disposed of as directed by the court in which the proceeding was instituted.

Furthermore, KRS 120.165(3) provides that "all voting machines, ballots, stub books, and other papers concerning which there is any ground for contest" may be removed to the court in which the action is pending. This would in this instance include applications.

Due to the fact that the present election contest suit is pending in Wolfe Circuit Court, the ballots and applications are in the custody of the circuit clerk per KRS 117.085, 117.087, and 120.165(3). They are therefore "public records" in the possession of a "public agency" pursuant to KRS 61.870 and open to public inspection while in the clerk's custody. See OAG 77-727 (copy enclosed).

However, KRS 30A.080(3) specifically restricts the removal of public records from the circuit clerk's office. It provides:

"No clerk shall permit the records or papers of his office to be taken out of his office except in case of invasion or insurrection, or other catastrophe, or pursuant to rule or order of court, and then he shall cause them to be returned as soon as the necessity for removal ceases to exist." (Emphasis added.)

Applications and absentee ballots are therefore public records open to public inspection while in the custody of the clerk. However, removal may only be gained by court order.

LLM Summary
The decision addresses whether absentee ballots and applications are public records subject to the Open Records law. It concludes that these items are public records and open to public inspection while in the custody of the clerk, as per KRS 61.870 and supported by OAG 77-727. However, it also notes that removal of these records from the clerk's office is restricted and can only be done by court order, according to KRS 30A.080(3).
Disclaimer:
The Sunshine Law Library is not exhaustive and may contain errors from source documents or the import process. Nothing on this website should be taken as legal advice. It is always best to consult with primary sources and appropriate counsel before taking any action.
Type:
Open Records Decision
Lexis Citation:
1983 Ky. AG LEXIS 20
Cites:
Forward Citations:
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