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Court orders Nessel to release Whitmer plot exhibits

Michigan Attorney General Dana Nessel walks to her seat before the State of the State address on Jan. 25 at the state Capitol in Lansing, Mich.
Al Goldis
/
AP
Michigan Attorney General Dana Nessel on Jan. 25, 2023 at the state Capitol

The Michigan Attorney General’s office won’t appeal a ruling that it violated Michigan’s Freedom of Information Act

The Michigan Attorney General’s office won’t appeal a ruling that it violated Michigan’s Freedom of Information Act. The state attorney general’s office has agreed it will share copies of evidence used in court against defendants charged with plotting to kidnap Governor Gretchen Whitmer with a freelance journalist.

The state lost in the Michigan Court of Claims and an appeal was expected. But the press secretary for Attorney General Dana Nessel said the state will drop its challenge and comply with the Wednesday order from the judge.

“The Department intends to comply with yesterday’s court order and turn over the documents and exhibits with all deliberate speed,” said Nessel Press Secretary Danny Wimmer in an email.

The journalist who filed the request expressed skepticism.

“Yeah. I’m not holding my breath and I’ll believe it when I see it,” said Eric VanDussen, who first filed the request in September of last year.

He said the promise to provide the records “with all deliberate speed” is vague and he may seek a court order for a swift timeline to comply with the decision.

“My question would be, what does ‘deliberate speed’ mean? Are they playing word games here?” he said in an interview with Michigan Public Radio. “…If they’re going to do it with ‘deliberate speed,’ we all know how the digital world works and they could have already emailed them to my attorney.”

VanDussen argued – and the Court of Claims agreed – that the records are public because they were presented in open court. VanDussen said he also wants court costs and may seek punitive damages.

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