Court Opinion

ID: 2808311
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2015-06-15 15:04:04.555597+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T12:10:20.753728
License: Public Domain

In the Supreme Court of Georgia

                                           Decided: June 15, 2015

    S15A0103. EVANS v. GEORGIA BUREAU OF INVESTIGATION.

      HINES, Presiding Justice.

      Christopher A. Evans appeals from the order of the Superior Court of

DeKalb County denying his petition for a writ of mandamus. For the reasons

that follow, we affirm.

      Evans served as Director of Operations for the Georgia Electronic Design

Center at the Georgia Institute of Technology. On September 24, 2010, the

Georgia Bureau of Investigation (“GBI”) obtained two arrest warrants for

Evans, based on allegations that he was part of a racketeering enterprise; arrest

warrants were also obtained for two other persons as part of the same suspected

racketeering activity. The investigation of the alleged racketeering enterprise,

and all three of the persons suspected to be involved, treated the alleged activity

as a single undertaking; one case number was assigned to the combined

investigation of Evans and the other two individuals, and one investigatory file

maintained. On January 19, 2012, the two arrest warrants against Evans were
dismissed, and no indictment had been sought against him as of the time his

petition for a writ of mandamus was denied.

       On July 23, 2013, Evans submitted a request to the GBI under the Open

Records Act, OCGA § 50-18-70 et seq., for materials from its investigative file

that pertained to him. The GBI declined to produce the materials, citing an

exemption for pending investigations. See OCGA § 50-18-72 (a) (4).1 Evans

then sought a writ of mandamus to compel the GBI to produce these materials.

      After a hearing, the trial court found that Evans was not entitled to the

materials he seeks because the Open Records Act exempts from disclosure

records of “law enforcement, prosecution, or regulatory agencies in any pending

investigation . . . [A]n investigation or prosecution shall no longer be deemed

      1
          At the time of the trial court’s order, OCGA § 50-18-72 (a) read in pertinent part:

      (a) Public disclosure shall not be required for records that are:

                ...

                (4) Records of law enforcement, prosecution, or regulatory agencies
                in any pending investigation or prosecution of criminal or unlawful
                activity, other than initial police arrest reports and initial incident
                reports; provided, however, that an investigation or prosecution shall
                no longer be deemed to be pending when all direct litigation
                involving such investigation and prosecution has become final or
                otherwise terminated; and provided, further, that this paragraph shall
                not apply to records in the possession of an agency that is the subject
                of the pending investigation or prosecution;
                ....

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to be pending when all direct litigation involving such investigation and

prosecution has become final or otherwise terminated.” OCGA § 50-18-72 (a)

(4). And, the trial court noted, while the warrants had been dismissed against

Evans, the warrants against the other two individuals had not been dismissed

and remained pending, thus disclosure was not mandated.

      Evans notes that under the Open Records Act there is a presumption that

public records are to be made available for public inspection, and that the

statutory exceptions to that presumption are to be interpreted narrowly. See

OCGA § 50-18-70 (a).2 However, “[a]though exemptions from disclosure under

      2
          OCGA § 50-18-70 reads:

      (a) The General Assembly finds and declares that the strong public policy of this state
      is in favor of open government; that open government is essential to a free, open, and
      democratic society; and that public access to public records should be encouraged to
      foster confidence in government and so that the public can evaluate the expenditure
      of public funds and the efficient and proper functioning of its institutions. The
      General Assembly further finds and declares that there is a strong presumption that
      public records should be made available for public inspection without delay. This
      article shall be broadly construed to allow the inspection of governmental records.
      The exceptions set forth in this article, together with any other exception located
      elsewhere in the Code, shall be interpreted narrowly to exclude only those portions
      of records addressed by such exception.

      (b) As used in this article, the term:

              (1) “Agency” shall have the same meaning as in Code Section
              50-14-1 and shall additionally include any association, corporation,
              or other similar organization that has a membership or ownership
              body composed primarily of counties, municipal corporations, or
              school districts of this state, their officers, or any combination thereof

                                                  3
the Open Records Act are narrowly construed, the Act obviously should not be

construed in derogation of its express terms.”                 Unified Gov’t v. Athens

Newspapers, LLC, 284 Ga. 192, 195 (1) (633 SE2d 248) (2008) (Citation and

punctuation omitted.) Again, the Act contains an express exemption from

disclosure for “[r]ecords of law enforcement, prosecution, or regulatory agencies

in any pending investigation or prosecution of criminal or unlawful activity . .

. .” OCGA § 50-18-72 (a) (4). And, it is uncontroverted that the GBI is a law

enforcement agency within the meaning of OCGA § 50-18-72 (a).

      Evans argues that in order for the GBI to assert the “pending

investigation” exemption, it must meet the burden to show that at least one of

the three persons whose alleged activity is addressed in the file is faced with a

prosecution that “is imminent and of a finite duration.” Parker v. Lee, 259 Ga.

195, 198 (5) (378 SE2d 678) (1989). However, Parker, and the principle upon

            and derives more than 33 1/3 percent of its general operating budget
            from payments from such political subdivisions.

            (2) “Public record” means all documents, papers, letters, maps,
            books, tapes, photographs, computer based or generated information,
            data, data fields, or similar material prepared and maintained or
            received by an agency or by a private person or entity in the
            performance of a service or function for or on behalf of an agency or
            when such documents have been transferred to a private person or
            entity by an agency for storage or future governmental use.

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which Evans relies, concerns OCGA § 50-18-72 (a) (4)’s “pending prosecution”

exemption, not the “pending investigation” exemption, a distinction this Court

made clear in Unified Gov’t, supra. And, in clarifying that distinction, this Court

stated that in applying the “pending investigation” exemption, it was not

possible to “simply adopt[] the judicial definition of the ‘pending prosecution’

exemption in Parker.”       Id.   Rather, under the “pending investigation”

exemption,

      a seemingly inactive investigation which has not yet resulted in a
      prosecution logically “remains undecided,” and is therefore
      “pending,” until it “is concluded and the file closed.” Only at that
      point has an investigation, in the absence of any prosecution,
      reached a decision with a high level of finality, even though it could
      possibly be reopened thereafter.

Id. at 196.

      And, there is no evidence that the racketeering investigation is concluded

or that the file from which Evans requested information can be considered

closed. Even assuming that the dismissal of the racketeering arrest warrants

against Evans establishes that he is not the subject of a pending investigation,

the evidence presented in the trial court was that the two other individuals

arrested at the same time as Evans are suspected of being engaged in a

                                         5
racketeering scheme with him, and those investigations are still ongoing.

Although Evans contends that the records that prompted his arrest can be

separated from those of the other two individuals alleged to be involved in

racketeering, and that any evidence about them can be redacted from the records

supplied to him, such was not the evidence presented in the trial court, and

       [t]he focus of subsection (a) (4) . . . is not upon the specific type of
       information contained in law enforcement and prosecution records.
       That subsection broadly exempts from disclosure the entirety of
       such records to the extent they are part of a “pending investigation
       or prosecution” and cannot otherwise be characterized as the initial
       arrest . . . or incident report. [Cit.]

Id. at 195 (Emphasis supplied.) The trial court did not err in concluding that,

under the circumstances presented, the pending investigation exemption of

OCGA § 50-18-72 (a) (4) removed from mandatory disclosure the materials that

Evans requested.3

       Judgment affirmed. All the Justices concur.

       3
         The GBI asserts that the pending investigation exemption does not act in this case so as to
create a bar to the disclosure of the requested records that is of indefinite duration. Rather, it
contends that the five-year statute of limitation for prosecution of racketeering charges, see OCGA
§ 16-14-8, would serve as the outside limit of the period of time that the investigation could be
considered pending. However, no such issue is before us; the trial court’s ruling was procured less
than five years after the last act of racketeering alleged in the arrest warrants that appear in the
record.

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