Republicans Have an Ineptitude Problem
New Memo Shows Trump White House Might Issue Another Directive to Pay Civilian...
Ex-Biden Staffer Charged With Murder. Here's What Happened.
What Exactly Is the Purpose of NATO in the Year 2026?
Plainclothes Miracle
Jim Acosta Whines That Trump Is 'Winning' His War on the Press
America at 250: Rediscovering Exceptionalism in Rail and Space
The Sudden Political Star of Trump II: Marco Rubio
Barabbas or Bust
Prayer to Remove the Veil of Evil Darkness Over Iran
Good Friday, Resurrection Sunday and the Search for Peace in a Troubled World
Why the Bernie-AOC AI Strategy Is a Gift to Big Tech
Why Not Boots on the Ground in Iran
The Passion Is Not About Death — It’s About a Wedding
Todd Blanche: ActBlue Allegations a 'Priority' of New DOJ
Tipsheet

Here’s Why the LA Times Is Suing Mayor Karen Bass

Here’s Why the LA Times Is Suing Mayor Karen Bass
AP Photo/Mark Schiefelbein

On Thursday, the Los Angeles Times announced that it filed a lawsuit against the city of LA, accusing officials of unlawfully withholding and deleting Mayor Karen Bass’ text messages and other public records that were exchanged during the wildfires in January. 

Advertisement

The Times announced this on their website (via LA Times):

The city has already turned over many of the exchanges between Mayor Karen Bass and other officials sought by Times reporters. But officials have argued they are not compelled to do so under state public records laws.

The Times disagreed. Empowering public officials to scrub their records or to decide which are subject to the law sets a dangerous precedent, Thursday’s suit argued.

To recap, Bass was across the ocean in Ghana at the time the wildfires broke out and ravaged the Los Angeles area. She did this despite the fact that there was a warning about wildfires. 

Her text messages from this time have since been deleted because she has them on auto-delete after 30 days, the Times noted. However, the city’s administrative code says that texts must be retained for two years.

Political reporter Julia Wick and investigative reporter Matt Hamilton sought the text messages and were initially told that they did not exist. Later, they were told the messages were deleted.

Advertisement

“It’s bigger than these text messages,” Kelly Aviles, outside counsel for The Times, said. “The city seems to believe they can destroy whatever they want whenever they want, and that they don’t have a duty to the public to retain public records.”

The mayor’s office offered the LA Times a statement. 

“The Mayor’s office has responded to hundreds of public records requests since she was elected and we will continue to do so,” said David Michaelson, counsel to the mayor. “The Mayor’s office released responsive texts to a PRA request from the Times last week and the Office will continue to respond to public record requests.”

Every single day, here at Townhall, we will stand up and FIGHT, FIGHT, FIGHT against the radical left and deliver the conservative reporting our readers deserve.

Help us continue to the truth about the Trump administration and its major wins. Join Townhall VIP  and use promo code FIGHT to get 60% off your membership.

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement