Progressive Group Sues Schuette for Emails

The group Progress Michigan says it has two dozen messages in hand already that it acquired through other channels.

Rick Pluta/MPRN

A left-leaning group has filed a lawsuit to find out how often Michigan Attorney General Bill Schuette and his aides used private email accounts to discuss public business.

The group Progress Michigan filed the lawsuit in the Michigan Court of Claims. That’s after the Republican attorney general refused a request for private emails, saying the messages don’t exist. But Progress Michigan says it has two dozen such messages in hand that it acquired through other channels. 

“For the attorney general to come back and say they don’t exist and don’t possess them is simply not true,” says Progress Michigan attorney Mark Brewer.

Brewer says the attorney general should turn over private emails used for public business, or explain why they weren’t saved.

Sam Inglot of Progress Michigan says public officials can’t use private accounts to skirt the Freedom of Information Act.

“If they’re going to do that, they’ve essentially created a public document,” he says.

The lawsuit asks the court of Claims to say private emails used by public officials to conduct public business should be subject to open records laws.

Schuette’s press secretary says the lawsuit is being reviewed.

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