NV Supreme Court rules that public officials' personal devices not exempt from public records law
The Nevada Supreme Court has ruled that personal devices, such as cell phones or data stored on a server, used by public officials are subject to disclosure rules under the states public records law.
In a unanimous decision published Thursday, the states highest court reversed a decision by Washoe County District Court Judge Steven Kosach denying a records request for any communications made by public officials on official business on their own private devices, even if the device is not provided or owned by the government agency.
We conclude that the (Nevada Public Records Act) does not categorically exempt public records maintained on private devices or servers from disclosure, Judge Michael Cherry wrote in the order. To withhold a public record from disclosure, the government entity must present, with particularity, the grounds on which a given public record is exempt.
The case was originally brought by the Comstock Residents Association against the Lyon County Board of Commissioners over an industrial zoning decision made in 2013. As part of the case, the association made a public records requests for communications over the zoning change made on both private and public devices.
Read more: https://thenevadaindependent.com/article/nevada-supreme-court-rules-that-public-officials-personal-devices-not-exempt-from-public-records-law