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22-ORD-262

December 12, 2022

In re: Sebastian Kitchen/Office of Attorney General

Summary: The Office of Attorney General (“the Office”) did not violate
the Open Records Act (“the Act”) when its response to a request to
inspect records complied with KRS 61.880(1).

Open Records Decision

Sebastian Kitchen (“the Appellant”) submitted a request to the Office seeking
“a copy of any and all records, from December 17, 2019 to present, including
correspondence, memoranda, including emails sent or received by [a specific
employee], to, from, or referencing” the Attorney General and 29 other private
individuals, entities, or topics. In addition, the Appellant sought all emails the same
employee had exchanged with the Attorney General and other Executive Staff
employees.

In a timely response, the Office advised it possessed no records responsive to
27 of the enumerated entities or topics, but it did provide 21 records responsive to
other topics requested.1 In response to the second part of the Appellant’s request, for
emails between the Office’s employees, the Office stated it withheld 5662 emails
under KRS 61.878(1)(i) and (j). The Office further explained its denial by categorizing
the emails the subject employee had exchanged with each Executive Staff employee,
stating the number of emails in each category, citing the relevant statutory

1
The Office initially responded within five business days and invoked KRS 61.872(5) because the
requested records were “otherwise unavailable.” The Office explained the cause of the delay and
provided the Appellant the earliest date on which records would be available. The Appellant does not
challenge the Office’s initial response, which properly invoked KRS 61.872(5).
2
On appeal the Office states two emails and one calendar invitation were duplicates, and therefore,
the Office has actually withheld 563 records.exemption, and providing a brief explanation of the type of information contained
within each category of emails.

Specifically, the Office withheld 14 emails between the Attorney General and
the employee because they constituted “preliminary drafts, notes, and discussions
related to public events attended by the Attorney General, ORD decisions and drafts,
and constituent outreach.” The Office further specified it withheld 14 emails
containing calendar invitations, itineraries, and schedules under KRS 61.878(1)(i)
and (j) and the authority of Courier-Journal v. Jones, 895 S.W.2d 6 (Ky. App. 1995).3

The Office withheld 68 emails exchanged between the employee and the former
Deputy Attorney General. The Office described these emails as “containing
preliminary drafts, notes, and discussions related to litigation, legislation,
constituent outreach, job applicants, and scheduling office meetings related to
pending matters.”4 Additionally, it withheld 32 emails between these employees
containing calendar invitations, itineraries, and schedules under KRS 61.878(1)(i)
and (j), and Jones.

The Office continued, explaining that 168 emails exchanged between the
employee and the Attorney General’s Chief of Staff were withheld because they
contained “preliminary drafts, notes, and discussions related to constituent outreach,
office reports and meetings, trainings, litigation, and administrative human resource
matters.”5 Additionally, it withheld 66 emails containing calendar invitations,
itineraries, and schedules under KRS 61.878(1)(i) and (j), and Jones.

The Office further explained it withheld 113 emails exchanged between the
employee and the current Communications Director because they were “preliminary
drafts, notes, and discussions related to the Office’s public communications,
constituent outreach and multiple constituent voicemails from private individuals,
events, ordinance resolutions, and press releases.” As before, the Office withheld an
additional eight emails between these employees that contained calendar invitations,
itineraries, and schedules. The Office similarly withheld 59 emails between the

3 In Jones, the Court of Appeals held calendar invitations of a constitutional officer, in that case the
Governor, were preliminary records not subject to inspection even after the meetings were concluded.
The Appellant does not appear to challenge the Office’s denial of calendar invitations under KRS
61.878(1)(i) and (j). To the extent he does, however, such records are exempt under the binding
authority of Jones. See 895 S.W.2d at 10 (“We view the Governor’s appointment schedule as nothing
more than a draft of what may or may never take place; a notation for inter or intra office use, so the
daily affairs of the chief executive can be conducted with some semblance of orderliness; and all of
which should be free from media interference”).
4
The Office also stated in the alternative that some of these records were exempt under KRE 503
and the attorney-client privilege.
5
As before, the Office stated in the alternative that some of these records were exempt under KRE
503 and the attorney-client privilege.employee and the former Communications Director because they contained
“preliminary drafts, notes, and discussions related to the Office’s public
communications, press interviews and releases, constituent outreach, and public
events.”

Finally, the Office withheld 21 emails exchanged between the employee and
one of his predecessors in the constituent services department because the emails
were “preliminary drafts, notes, and discussions related to press conferences and
constituent outreach.” The Appellant then initiated this appeal, claiming the Office’s
response was inadequate under KRS 61.880(1).

If an agency denies a request to inspect records, its written response must
“include a statement of the specific exception authorizing the withholding of the
record and a brief explanation of how the exception applies to the record withheld.”
KRS 61.880(1). Although KRS 61.880(1) requires the explanation in support of denial
to be “brief,” the response cannot be “limited and perfunctory.” Edmondson v. Alig,
926 S.W.2d 856, 858 (Ky. App. 1996). In Edmondson, the agency’s response to a
request stated only that “the information you seek is exempt under KRS
61.878(1)(a)(k)(l) [sic].” Id. The agency failed to explain how any of the three
exemptions applied to the records withheld, and for that reason, the court held, it
violated KRS 61.880(1). Id.

Kentucky courts have refined the level of detail a “brief explanation” in support
of a denial KRS 61.880(1) requires. As stated by the Supreme Court of Kentucky, an
agency is not “obliged in all cases to justify non-disclosure on a line-by-line or
document-by-document basis.” City of Ft. Thomas v. Cincinnati Enquirer, 406 S.W.3d
842, 851 (Ky. 2013). Rather, “with respect to voluminous [open records] requests . . .
it is enough if the agency identifies the particular kinds of records it holds and
explains how [an exemption applies to] the release of each assertedly [sic] exempt
category.” Id. (discussing the “law enforcement exception” under KRS 61.878(1)(h)).
Of course, “if the agency adopts this generic approach it must itself identify and
review its responsive records, release any that are not exempt, and assign the
remainder to meaningful categories. A category is meaningful if it allows the court to
trace a rational link between the nature of the document and the alleged” exemption.
Id. (quotation omitted). The Court also has acknowledged the Act must be “workable.”
Ky. New Era, Inc. v. City of Hopkinsville, 415 S.W.3d 76, 89 (Ky. 2013). As a result,
when certain types of information that are routinely kept in public records are
routinely exempt, an agency “need not undertake an ad hoc analysis of the
exemption’s application to such information in each instance, but may apply a
categorical rule.” Id.

The takeaway from these decisions is that—at least with respect to voluminous
requests—an agency must break up responsive records into meaningful categoriesand explain how the exemptions cited for each category of records applies. Here, the
Office separated a voluminous request into meaningful categories, i.e., all responsive
emails exchanged between the subject employee and each other member of the
Executive Staff. For each category, the Office gave brief explanations of the contents
of the records, such as “discussions related to litigation, legislation, constituent
outreach, job applicants, and scheduling office meetings related to pending matters”
or “discussions related to constituent outreach, office reports and meetings, trainings,
litigation, and administrative human resource matters” or other types of essential
Office functions. The Office further stated that records containing these types of
communications are exempt under KRS 61.878(1)(i) and (j).

Long ago this Office recognized:

Not every paper in the office of a public agency is a public record subject
to public inspection. Many papers are simply work papers which are
exempted because they are preliminary drafts and notes. KRS
61.878(1)[(i)]. Yellow pads can be filled with outlines, notes, drafts and
doodlings which are unceremoniously thrown in the wastebasket or
which may in certain cases be kept in a desk drawer for future reference.
Such preliminary drafts and notes and preliminary memoranda are part
of the tools which a public employee or officer uses in hammering out
official action within the function of his office. They are expressly
exempted by the Open Records Law and may be destroyed or kept at
will and are not subject to public inspection.”

OAG 78-626 (emphasis added).6 More recently, the Office reaffirmed the purpose of
the preliminary exceptions are “[t]o preserve the integrity of a public agency’s
internal decision making process by promoting full and frank discussion between and
among public employees and officials and by equipping them with the tools needed in
hammering out official action.” 14-ORD-014; see also 22-ORD-176 n.6 (finding it
would be unreasonably burdensome to sort through and redact 16,000 Microsoft
Teams messages that all were exempt as notes under KRS 61.878(1)(i)).

Here, the Office categorized each batch of responsive emails and explained the
contents of each category, such as matters related to litigation, constituent services,

6
The Appellant argues that, even if the Office’s response provided sufficient detail to support its
denial under KRS 61.880(1), the Office must separate the preliminary material from the
nonpreliminary material, and make the latter subject to inspection. This would require the Office to
redact every single email of everything except the names of the recipients and the dates and times the
emails were sent or received. But as stated in OAG 78-628, these types of internal and routine
discussions amongst government employees “may be destroyed or kept at will and are not subject to
public inspection.” It would be untenable to interpret the Act as requiring an agency to redact
everything from thousands and thousands of exempt notes except their dates and times. See, e.g., 22-
ORD-176 n.6.drafts of decisions, and other “official actions” that were in the process of being
“hammer[ed] out.” 14-ORD-014. All of these communications were exchanged to
facilitate the performance of the Attorney General’s various duties. Moreover, on
appeal, the Office dedicated 24 pages of its 35-page response to explain in granular
detail the contents of each email withheld. Although maybe the Office could7 have
provided those 24 pages of explanation initially, its original six-page response
categorizing the emails and briefly explaining their contents was certainly not
“limited and perfunctory.” Edmonson, 926 S.W.2d at 858 (a single, short sentence
citing three exemptions violated KRS 61.880(1)). Accordingly, the Office did not
violate the Act.

A party aggrieved by this decision may appeal it by initiating action in the
appropriate circuit court pursuant to KRS 61.880(5) and KRS 61.882 within 30 days
from the date of this decision. Pursuant to KRS 61.880(3), the Attorney General shall
be notified of any action in circuit court. The Attorney General will accept notice of
the complaint e-mailed to OAGAppeals@ky.gov.

Daniel Cameron

Attorney General

s/ Marc Manley

Marc Manley

Assistant Attorney General

#420

Distributed to:

Sebastian Kitchen
Jacob Ford

7
The Office notes that, since May 2022, the Appellant has submitted 32 requests that are equally
broad and burdensome. The Office has never denied any such request as unreasonably burdensome.
And here, the Office’s initial response was six pages explaining why 566 emails were exempt as
preliminary. The Act did not require the Office to provide its 24 pages of granular detail in lieu of its
initial six-page “brief explanation.” KRS 61.880(1).

LLM Summary
The decision in 22-ORD-262 concludes that the Office of the Attorney General did not violate the Open Records Act when it withheld certain emails under exemptions KRS 61.878(1)(i) and (j). The Office provided a categorized and detailed explanation for the withholding of records, which was deemed sufficient under the requirements of KRS 61.880(1). The decision references previous opinions and decisions to support its conclusions regarding the exemptions and the adequacy of the Office's response.
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.
Requested By:
Sebastian Kitchen
Agency:
Office of Attorney General
Forward Citations:
Neighbors

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