The Virginia Coalition for Open Government




Fredericksburg FOI Case: Trial PDF Print

0001

 1   VIRGINIA:

 2   IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE CITY OF FREDERICKSBURG

 3  

 4   - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - X

 5   Gordon Shelton, et al, Petitioners, :   CH. No.

 6   -vs-                                :  CH-2-428

 7   Bill Beck, individually, as well    :

     As in his capacity as Mayor of the

 8   City of Fredericksburg, Va., et al, :

 9                          Respondents. :

10   - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - X

11  

12                        VOLUME I

13  

14             EXCERPT of the trial in the above-

15   entitled matter, when heard on December 13, 2002,

16   at 9:00 a.m., before the Honorable John W. Scott,

17   Jr., Judge.

18  

19  

20  

21  

0002

 1                 WHEN THERE WERE PRESENT

 2         ON BEHALF OF THE RESPECTIVE PARTIES:

 3  

 4   ON BEHALF OF PETITIONERS:  Gordon Shelton,

 5   Anthony Jenkins; Patrick Timpone:

 6  

 7        Mr. David Z. Kaufman, Esquire

 8        KAUFMAN LAW OFFICE

 9        10625 Jones Street, Suite 201A

10        Fairfax, Virginia  22030

11        (703)764-9080

12  

13        Mr. Michael Barnsback, Esquire

14        DIMURO, GINSBURG & MOOK, P.C.

15        908 King Street, Suite 200

16        Alexandria, Virginia  22314

17        (703) 684-4333

18  

19  

20  

21  

0003

 1   ON BEHALF OF RESPONDENTS:  Bill Beck, Scott Howson,

 2   Dr. Thomas Fortune, and Matthew Kelly:

 3  

 4        Mr. Howard Stahl, Esquire

 5        Mr. John F. O'Connor, Esquire

 6        STEPTOE & JOHNSON, L.L.P.

 7        1330 Connecticut Avenue, N.W.

 8        Washington, D. C. 20036

 9        (202-249-8095)

10  

11  

12        ON BEHALF OF RESPONDENT WILLIAM WITHERS, JR:

13        Mr. William M. Sokol, Esquire

14        SOKOL & JONES

15        904 Princess Anne Street, Suite 101

16        Fredericksburg, Virginia  22401

17        (540)899-8077

18  

19        The parties respectively.

20  

21  

0004

 1                     C O N T E N T S

     - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

 2  

 3             Witness:                            Page

 4  

 5             Mayor Bill Beck

 6   Direct Examination by Mr. Barnsback            100

 7   Cross Examination by Mr. Stahl                 131

 8   Redirect Examination by Mr. Barnsback          140

 9  

10             Vice-Mayor Scott Howson

11   Direct Examination by Mr. Barnsback            145

12   Cross Examination by Mr. Stahl                 163

13   Redirect Examination by Mr. Barnsback          181

14  

15             Councilman Matthew Kelly

16   Direct Examination by Mr. Barnsback            193

17  

18             Sharon D. Nelson

19   Voir Dire Examination by Mr. Kaufman           218

20  

21                        (cont'd)

0005

 1             WITNESS:                            PAGE

 2  

 3             Mayor Bill Beck, recalled

 4   Direct Examination by Mr. Kaufman              233

 5   Cross Examination by Mr. Stahl                 262

 6   Redirect Examination by Mr. Kaufman            274

 7  

 8             Vice-mayor Scott Howson, recalled

 9   Direct Examination by Mr. Kaufman              281

10   Cross Examination by Mr. Stahl                 293

11  

12             Petitioners Rest                     296

13  

14             Councilman Matthew Kelly

15   Direct Examination by Mr. O'Connor             298

16  

17  

18  

19  

20  

21  

0006

 1                    E X H I B I T S

     - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

 2                                                 Page

 3   Petitioners' Exhibit One

     (Fitzgerald e-mail)                            145

 4  

 5   Petitioners' Exhibit Two

     (Pates' letter)                                249

 6  

 7   Petitioners' Exhibit Three

     (1-page document)                              281

 8  

 9   Petitioners' Exhibit Four

     (document/Electronic Communication)            288

10  

11   Respondents' Exhibit One

     (2-page email from Scott Howson)               167

12  

13  

14  

15  

16  

17  

18  

19  

20  

21  

0007

 1                       THE COURT:  One moment,

 2             gentlemen.

 3                            We are going to begin

 4             this morning's proceeding by considering

 5             the motion to dismiss filed by Mr.

 6             Withers.  So, initially the hearing will

 7             involve only Shelton vs. Withers.

 8                            Mr. Sokol, we have read

 9             your pleading.  Would you like to

10             present any additional argument or

11             testimony in reference to your motion?

12                       MR. SOKOL:  Yes, Your Honor.

13             May I?

14                            Since there is no lectern

15             in the courtroom, I would prefer to be

16             facing Your Honor, if I could.

17                            If Your Honor please, we

18             have no testimony to offer in the

19             support of the motion to dismiss.  We

20             take the position that e-mails exhibited

21             stand for the case either going up or

0008

 1             going down, and I'm not going to present

 2             any argument this morning with respect

 3             to the issue whether or not there was a

 4             meeting.  We take the position there was

 5             no meeting, that there was no assembl-

 6             age; that there has been no violation by

 7             any party under the Virginia Freedom of

 8             Information Act.  I'm going to leave

 9             that to the responsibility of the other

10             respondents, but I would like to address

11             in support of the motion to dismiss

12             whether or not Mr. Withers was a parti-

13             cipant in anything, and in support

14             thereof I would just refer to the three

15             counts contained -- the three surviving

16             counts.  Mr. Withers is not included in

17             the count on an alleged Charlotte Street

18             meeting, but just making reference to

19             the three counts there that are called

20             e-mail counts I take it what we are

21             talking about is e-mail and the exchange

0009

 1             of e-mail.

 2                            Count number 11; the

 3             so-called meeting on Committee Assign-

 4             ments.  Paragraph numbered 99, I think

 5             there are two key words there, Your

 6             Honor.  One word is exchanged.  It says

 7             during the certain period a series of

 8             e-mails were exchanged between the

 9             defendants.  The simple definition of

10             exchange in any dictionary is give and

11             receive.

12                            The evidence shows by the

13             exhibits presented that, after much

14             discovery, all parties, the City through

15             its staff, presenting this book of

16             exhibits.  It must be this -- well, this

17             large. (Mr. Sokol demonstrating).  It is

18             not an exhibit that contains any e-mail

19             with respect to Committee Assignments

20             sent by Mr. Withers.  So on that basis

21             alone, the count fails because the

0010

 1             petitioner cannot prove, no matter what

 2             kind of testimonial evidence he may

 3             think he can produce or they may pro-

 4             duce, there is an absolute absence of

 5             any proof of an exchange; an exchange

 6             inclusive of the rendition or the send-

 7             ing of an e-mail by Mr. Withers with

 8             respect to Committee Assignments.

 9                            The word discuss,

10             paragraph number nine; e-mails exchanged

11             between the defendants discussing.  I

12             think the plain definition of discussing

13             is an affirmative participation.  I have

14             something to say germane to the subject

15             that you wish to discuss.  The proof is

16             that e-mails were sent somewhere, sent

17             to Mr. Withers.  When Mr. Withers

18             received them is problematic; when he

19             may or may not have read them is

20             problematic.  What is not problematic is

21             that he didn't discuss anything with

0011

 1             anybody.  He didn't even say by e-mail,

 2             thanks for the e-mail that informs me.

 3             He said nothing.  There is no e-mail in

 4             this file this wide where Mr. Withers

 5             discussed any matter involving Committee

 6             Assignments.

 7                            There is a rather

 8             delicious irony here, and that is the

 9             Committee Assignments that Mr. Withers

10             would have liked -- I believe it is the

11             RADCO and the Jail -- he didn't get.

12             That's one other.

13                            And the only piece of

14             evidence -- and it is not evidence, it

15             is a point of information -- that

16             apparently there was a telephone call

17             from Mr. Withers to Mr. Beck, although

18             it is not shown in the e-mails, where he

19             said so-and-so can't -- he didn't even

20             say so-and-so.  He said to be on the

21             Library Board you must be a resident of

0012

 1             the jurisdiction, which is a point of

 2             information and maybe of some utility, I

 3             take it it is, to the recipient.  But

 4             for this, which is not an e-mail, which

 5             is not a meeting, the Petitioners would

 6             charge him with a willful violation of

 7             FOIA subject to a fine of a willful act?

 8             This doesn't even involve any subject

 9             matter other than a point of informa-

10             tion, and it is not an e-mail and it's

11             only to one person.

12                            So this count, there is

13             nothing by way of any of the proof that

14             has been offered through these exhibits,

15             which would place Mr. Withers anywhere

16             in the vicinity of harm's way by way of

17             a willful violation of anything.

18                            I think there is also a

19             third word; the word used in Your

20             Honor's opinion you issued in ruling on

21             the demurrers, when you said it comes to

0013

 1             how the e-mails are used.  Well, use

 2             implies something affirmative, using

 3             something to engage in a course of

 4             activity or conduct.  There is no proof

 5             that Mr. Withers used any e-mails at any

 6             time.

 7                            And, Your Honor, I could

 8             make the same argument, and I will with-

 9             out being so wordy, on the counts on C-V

10             Zoning.  Was there an exchange?  Nothing

11             in this box sent by Mr. Withers.  Was

12             there a discussion?  Nothing in this box

13             where Mr. Withers engaged in a discus-

14             sion.  It is problematic whether or not

15             Mr. Withers even received and considered

16             information because he did nothing and

17             there was no reason for him to do

18             anything.

19                            People were sending him

20             things, along with others, and there is

21             no evidence that anything was done that

0014

 1             had any influence over any matter

 2             relative to Mr. Withers.

 3                            By way of proffer on my

 4             part, Mr. Withers was looking to City

 5             Staff for assistance, not from any

 6             outside source.

 7                            Now the last of these 17

 8             counts that were initially filed where

 9             Mr. Withers was made a defendant, the

10             last has to do with historic preserva-

11             tion.  And, Your Honor, once again there

12             is no exchange, there is no sending,

13             there is no discussion, there is no

14             participation.  Through all this raft of

15             material, through all the sometimes

16             seemingly interminable depositions, all

17             this distilled, with respect to Mr.

18             Withers, is that he is a public

19             official, that he and his wife have a

20             personal computer; and I take it

21             intrinsic to a personal computer is an

0015

 1             e-mail capacity, and that is it, Your

 2             Honor.  That is it.  As to be charged

 3             with a willful violation, and I will get

 4             into that later I expect, but looking at

 5             these three counts there is nothing,

 6             nothing beyond the e-mails, which would

 7             support the allegations as set forth in

 8             these three counts.

 9                            And I ask, therefore, the

10             motion to dismiss -- and I think one

11             reason Your Honor, if I may presume to

12             say, waited these several months to act

13             was because Mr. Kaufman made a represen-

14             tation that the discovery might produce

15             something or he thought that it would,

16             that would bring Mr. Withers into the

17             arena of a participant in anything.

18                       THE COURT:  That's correct,

19             Mr. Sokol.

20                       MR. SOKOL:  And Mr. Kaufman

21             came forward with other e-mails that he

0016

 1             supplemented.  Those e-mails did not

 2             have any fingerprints of Mr. Withers on

 3             them whatsoever under the three words

 4             that I used:  Exchange, discussion, or

 5             use.  And I, therefore, ask mercifully

 6             at this point that the motion to dismiss

 7             be granted and he no longer be a party

 8             respondent.

 9                       THE COURT:  Mr. Kaufman.

10                       MR. KAUFMAN:  I'm impressed

11             with Mr. Sokol's rhetoric, but there are

12             a few facts that are missing from his

13             presentation.

14                            In the first place, and

15             we know this from Mr. Withers' deposi-

16             tion, is that at some point during the

17             orientation he was provided the FOIA

18             packet that they are required by law to

19             be given.  And he doesn't really

20             remember a whole lot about it, but he

21             does remember he is not suppose to get

0017

 1             together with three or more people and

 2             discuss business.  And I forget exactly

 3             whether he said get together or meet

 4             with, but something to that effect.

 5                            Second, Mr. Withers said

 6             in his deposition he checks his e-mail

 7             about twice a week; and when his wife

 8             goes on much more frequently, when she

 9             sees he has gotten something she tells

10             him about it and then he goes and checks

11             for himself.  So he should know, and

12             under FOIA he is suppose to know that

13             you are not suppose to get together and

14             talk with people about City business

15             privately.

16                            Now as for Count 1, the

17             first of the counts, Committee Assign-

18             ments, specifically there is an e-mail

19             sequence, it's nine or ten e-mails,

20             beginning around the 2nd of July -- 2nd

21             or 3rd, I don't remember exactly -- and

0018

 1             ending on the 8th, involving who is

 2             going to be on the Library Board.

 3                       THE COURT:  I guess that has

 4             to do with the discussion in reference

 5             to Mr. Cameron?

 6                       MR. KAUFMAN:  Yes, sir.

 7                       THE COURT:  All right.

 8                       MR. KAUFMAN:  And there was a

 9             lot of discussion on that and actually

10             people were posting -- in the e-mails

11             they were saying who their vote was for

12             and so on and so forth, like that.  And

13             in the course of that discussion Mr.

14             Withers is getting a lot of these, and

15             right at the end of that discussion

16             Mr. Beck posts a message, Billy call me,

17             meaning Mr. Withers.  And there is a

18             jurisdictional problem for Mr. Cameron,

19             he doesn't live in the right area, and

20             that ended it.  And Mr. Withers said,

21             well, Mr. Cameron didn't get the job.

0019

 1             He was, clearly, reading what he was

 2             getting and he acted on it.  He used the

 3             information; he provided them with

 4             information.  Now, admittedly, he didn't

 5             provide it by e-mail but he sure, lord,

 6             was reading those e-mails because he

 7             acted on it.

 8                            Now, we contend, at least

 9             in part, that just as one can sit at a

10             City Council meeting and not say any-

11             thing, one can sit at an exchange of

12             e-mails reading everything avidly,

13             digesting information, and using the

14             information without ever having to send

15             an e-mail, we contend; and, therefore,

16             we would oppose Mr. Withers being dis-

17             missed as to the Committee Assignment

18             count because he clearly participated.

19             He read it, he absorbed it; he acted on

20             it in some manner.  And Mr. Cameron, who

21             had three votes in the exchange right up

0020

 1             front, was never offered the position.

 2             That's participation.

 3                            As for the C-V Zoning

 4             count, Mr. Withers admitted in his depo-

 5             sition, while he wasn't super interested

 6             in it, he did read everything and he did

 7             review -- I think that we will produce

 8             it separately, but there was a letter

 9             that was finally sent on the 7th --

10             dated the 6th of August and sent on the

11             7th of August by Mr. Kelly, and that

12             draft of that letter was circulated

13             around.

14                       THE COURT:  You're talking

15             about the letter sent to Virginia Tech?

16                       MR. KAUFMAN:  Mr. Chandler.

17                       THE COURT:  Yes; at Virginia

18             Tech.

19                       MR. KAUFMAN:  That's right.

20             And Mr. Withers admitted in his depo-

21             sition that he had read it and he had

0021

 1             reviewed it.  He found it interesting

 2             and presumably informative, but he

 3             didn't comment on it because, as he

 4             said, it was not something that really

 5             had him motivated to comment or anything

 6             like that.  And he said the C-V Zoning

 7             issue is still before the Council.

 8             Well, if he read the stuff and it

 9             informed him, he participated in the

10             meeting.  You're participating in this

11             hearing, Your Honor.  You're not saying

12             anything; you're making me talk.

13                       THE COURT:  We will talk about

14             that momentarily.

15                       MR. KAUFMAN:  But, nonethe-

16             less, one can sit in a meeting and not

17             say a whole lot and still learn stuff

18             and participate in the meeting by

19             learning.

20                            There is also some

21             internal evidence in another e-mail

0022

 1             where there is a P.S. appended at the

 2             bottom by -- I think it was Mr. Kelly,

 3             suggesting, you know, that Tom, Billy --

 4             Tom, presumably, being Mr. Fortune and

 5             Billy presumably being Mr. Withers --

 6             you know, that the Celebrate Virginia

 7             letter is about to go out and give me

 8             your comments right away.  Clearly,

 9             people knew that he was going to read

10             these things and be informed.

11                            By the way, as a side

12             note -- I almost forgot -- there is a

13             separate aside in the Committee e-mails

14             in which Mr. Beck sends a private e-mail

15             to Mr. Withers saying essentially, hey,

16             review who we want on these committees

17             here and give me a call before the

18             meeting.  Now, that was, I think, July

19             7th; and, of course, the Council meeting

20             when everything was done was on the 9th.

21                            But back to Celebrate

0023

 1             Virginia, that's an ongoing process

 2             about which Mr. Withers informed himself

 3             and helped formulate the questions to be

 4             asked.

 5                            Did he help formulate

 6             them by taking an action?  No.  He read

 7             them and was informed by what people

 8             were saying and how they were framing

 9             the questions, and once the answers came

10             back he was informed of the answers, you

11             know, but the important part is the

12             framing of the questions.  It is well

13             known that a lot of times the answer

14             will depend on what the question is and

15             what the premises are.  And oh, by the

16             way, Mr. Withers did admit in his

17             deposition that he had seen Mr. Kelly's

18             forwarding of Mr. Pates' private

19             response about the e-mail letter and

20             Mr. Pates' comments and suggestions for

21             them, you know, before it went out.  So,

0024

 1             silent acquiescence?  Going and sitting

 2             and not saying anything but absorbing

 3             and learning, that is a participation.

 4             One can't simply sit there and be alone

 5             and yet be informed and not be said to

 6             participate.

 7                            As for the third of the

 8             e-mail counts there, the one on the

 9             historic preservation committee, all

10             that work was done in about a ten-day

11             period prior to August 13.  August 13th

12             the Historic Preservation Committee was

13             announced.  The preceding e-mails dis-

14             cussed the Historic Preservation

15             Committee.  They even named names as

16             representatives for who would be on it,

17             and Mr. Withers knew about that.  He had

18             seen these e-mails and he says in his

19             deposition, you know, I wasn't all that

20             involved in that but Matt Kelly was real

21             involved and these other guys were

0025

 1             really involved.  If they want to have a

 2             Historic Preservation committee, I will

 3             support them, okay, and he knew it

 4             before going in because he had gotten

 5             all this stuff and he knew what was

 6             going on.

 7                            And, in fact, the

 8             Historic Preservation Committee was, in

 9             fact, created with the same people on it

10             who were proposed in that e-mail that

11             was circulated to the five beforehand.

12             He participated.  He knew it was coming.

13             And when it came, he was prepared to

14             support it.  He participated.  He used

15             the knowledge.  He read it, he used it;

16             he voted on it, and it is there.

17                            So, Mr. Withers is

18             involved.  I know he didn't want to be

19             necessarily, but he was involved.  He

20             didn't protest.  He didn't say, wait a

21             minute, we need to do this in open

0026

 1             session.  All this discussion preceded

 2             and he should have known about the FOIA

 3             and FOIA requirements.  He was provided

 4             that no later than June 17, and he was

 5             required to read it and become familiar

 6             with it by the very terms of the statute

 7             and he didn't.  Willful blindness?

 8             Whatever.

 9                            But we are going to prove

10             these things, and Mr. Withers should not

11             be dismissed from those three counts.

12                       THE COURT:  For purposes of

13             this motion, we accept your proffer as

14             being fact.

15                       MR. KAUFMAN:  Thank you, Your

16             Honor.

17                       THE COURT:  Mr. Sokol, any

18             response?

19                       MR. SOKOL:  Yes, Your Honor.

20                            Mr. Withers, as Your

21             Honor knows, was elected for the first

0027

 1             time, began service July 1; he gets

 2             something from his Mayor.  He has a

 3             brain and it comes in his e-mail.  Is he

 4             not going to read it sometime?  By

 5             Mr. Kaufman's reckoning and by his

 6             lights, if Mr. Withers was in a theater

 7             and someone yelled fire and Mr. Withers

 8             understood what fire meant and fled the

 9             church, he somehow becomes a participant

10             in starting the fire.  My brain cannot

11             fathom the series of premises that

12             permits Mr. Kaufman to reach the

13             conclusion he has.

14                            He has not addressed

15             anything, apparently giving it no

16             respect whatsoever, the arguments that I

17             presented in support of the motion with

18             respect to an exchange, with respect to

19             a discussion, with respect to use.  He

20             is entirely averting, disregarding, and

21             instead says that by reason of the fact

0028

 1             Mr. Withers has an e-mail capacity like

 2             I suppose all computer users have, and

 3             that he informed Mr. Beck that a member

 4             of the Library Committee must be a

 5             resident of the jurisdiction, that that

 6             violated Virginia's Freedom of Informa-

 7             tion Act.

 8                            I would be interested in

 9             knowing what the formulators of the

10             committee that put together the Act in

11             Virginia or any other jurisdiction would

12             think about this kind of interpretation

13             as a willful violation by means of,

14             what, a telephone conversation to one

15             other person.  You know, why leave Beck

16             in the dark if he knows something about

17             the eligibility?  It was an entirely an

18             exercise in telling Mr. Beck what the

19             requirements were.  It was an act of

20             responsibility.  The public would expect

21             Mr. Withers to do this if he knew it.

0029

 1             It's not public business; it's informa-

 2             tion.  It is appropriate information.

 3             It doesn't present the gravamen for this

 4             petition.

 5                            Mr. Kelly sent something

 6             and he asked for certain things;

 7             respond, do this, what do you think?

 8             That was on the C-V, I think, the

 9             rezoning.  What does the evidence show

10             by way of the e-mail?  Mr. Withers did

11             nothing.  He didn't respond.  But by his

12             silence, Mr. Kaufman and his Petitioners

13             would find responsibility under the Act.

14             And after a while, frankly, Your Honor,

15             I kind of lost the drift of what Mr.

16             Kaufman was saying.

17                            I ask that you grant the

18             motion.  Thank you.

19                       THE COURT:  The Court has

20             reviewed every single e-mail that was

21             generated after July 1, 2002.

0030

 1                            The Court being familiar

 
< Prev   Next >
Page loaded in 0.031 seconds.