Alton D. BROWN, Petitioner v. PENNSYLVANIA DEPARTMENT OF STATE, Respondent.
Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania.
Decided Sept. 2, 2015.
123 A.3d 801
Submitted on Briefs May 29, 2015.
H.B. 47, 184th Gen. Assem., 1999 Reg. Sess. (Pa.2000).
Id. at 912. Allowing any level of attendance, however minimal or unsatisfactory, to meet the requirements of Section 9718.1 would entirely frustrate this announced legislative purpose. Only where the rehabilitative goal of the program has been achieved can there be any hope of preventing future abuse of children, and absent successful participation in the plan of therapy, there can be little prospect of rehabilitation.
Accordingly, because he has failed to show a clear right to relief as a matter of law, Stodghill‘s motion for judgment on the pleadings is denied.
ORDER
AND NOW, this 27th day of August, 2015, Petitioner‘s Motion for Disposition is DENIED.
Further, Petitioner‘s Petition for Accelerated Disposition is DENIED as moot.
Alton D. BROWN, Petitioner
v.
Thomas A. Blackburn, Senior Counsel-In-Charge, Harrisburg, for respondent.
BEFORE: BERNARD L. MCGINLEY, Judge, MARY HANNAH LEAVITT, Judge, and ROCHELLE S. FRIEDMAN, Senior Judge.
OPINION BY Senior Judge ROCHELLE S. FRIEDMAN.
Alton D. Brown petitions for review, pro se, of the November 7, 2014, final determination of the Office of Open Records (OOR), which dismissed Brown‘s appeal from the Pennsylvania Department of State‘s (Department) open records officer‘s (Records Officer) decision to deny Brown‘s request for information under the Right-to-Know Law (RTKL).1 We affirm.
Brown filed complaints against two medical professionals licensed by the State Board of Medicine and the State Board of Osteopathic Medicine. On September 25, 2014, the Records Officer received Brown‘s letter requesting:
The Department[‘s] letters to the licensee[s] that disclose the final outcome [of] the investigations of my complaints with the [State Board of Medicine and the State Board of Osteopathic Medicine], complaint Nos: 13-53-12408 and 13-49-12410. I note that this information is allowed pursuant to
[40 P.S.] § 1303.907(a) .2
(Brown‘s Req., 9/25/14, at 1.) In a letter dated September 30, 2014, the Records Officer denied Brown‘s request on the ground that the letters were exempt from disclosure pursuant to section 708(b)(17) of the RTKL,
On October 17, 2014, Brown appealed the Records Officer‘s denial to the OOR, and the OOR invited Brown and the Department to supplement the record. The Department submitted a response to Brown‘s appeal and two sworn affidavits from Bernadette Paul, the deputy chief counsel of the Department‘s prosecution division. In both affidavits, Paul stated that “[t]he Department‘s Bureau of Enforcement and Investigation (BEI) conducts investigations on behalf of the Department‘s Bureau of Professional and Occupational Affairs (BPOA) and its 29 professional licensing boards,” including the State Board of Osteopathic Medicine and the State Board of Medicine. (Paul Aff., 10/20/14, at 1.)4 Paul further stated that the BEI had investigated a complaint against an osteopathic physician and a complaint against a medical doctor and that:
[T]he assigned prosecuting attorney ultimately closed this matter without filing any formal disciplinary charges. No fine or civil penalty, suspension, modification or revocation of a license was imposed. Providing access to the records from this investigation would disclose the institution, progress or result of the investigation by, among other things, showing what avenues of investigation were pursued or not.
(Id.)
On November 7, 2014, the OOR issued a final determination denying Brown‘s appeal. The OOR determined that the Department had proven that the
First, Brown argues that the Department did not meet its burden of proving that the letters that Brown requested were exempt under section 708(b)(17)(vi)(A) of the RTKL as agency records related to a noncriminal investigation. Specifically, Brown argues that the Department‘s affidavits do not constitute sufficient evidence because they are conclusory. We disagree.
Commonwealth agencies “shall provide public records in accordance with [the RTKL].”
A record ... of a Commonwealth or local agency that: (1) is not exempt under section 708; (2) is not exempt from being disclosed under any other Federal or State law or regulation or judicial order or decree; or (3) is not protected by a privilege.
An agency bears the burden of proving, by a preponderance of the evidence, that a record is exempt from disclosure under one of the enumerated exceptions.
Here, Brown requested letters disclosing the results of the Department‘s noncriminal investigations of two licensees. These records are, by the very terms of Brown‘s request, exempt from disclosure under
An agency may exercise its discretion to make any otherwise exempt record accessible ... if all of the following apply:
(1) Disclosure of the record is not prohibited under any of the following:
(i) Federal or State law or regulation.
(ii) Judicial order or decree.
(2) The record is not protected by a privilege.
(3) The agency head determines that the public interest favoring access outweighs any individual, agency or public interest that may favor restriction of access.
Finally, Brown argues that the exception in
“The RTKL distinguishes between the public nature of records and access to records.” Department of Labor and Industry v. Heltzel, 90 A.3d 823, 831 (Pa.Cmwlth.2014) (en banc).
[T]he “nature” of a document implicates the innate or intrinsic characteristics of a record, its essence, without regard to surrounding circumstances.
Once “established” by [another] statute as “public,” a record is no longer subjected to the traditional public record
Here,
Accordingly, we affirm.
ORDER
AND NOW, this 2nd day of September, 2015, we hereby affirm the November 7, 2014, final determination of the Office of Open Records.
ROCHELLE S. FRIEDMAN
Senior Judge
Notes
A record of an agency relating to a noncriminal investigation, including:
(i) Complaints submitted to an agency.
(ii) Investigative materials, notes, correspondence and reports.
...
(vi) A record that, if disclosed, would do any of the following:
(A) Reveal the institution, progress or result of an agency investigation, except the imposition of a fine or civil penalty, the suspension, modification or revocation of a license, permit, registration, certification or similar authorization issued by an agency or an executed settlement agreement unless the agreement is determined to be confidential by a court.
All documents, materials or information utilized solely for an investigation undertaken by the State Board of Medicine or State Board of Osteopathic Medicine or concerning a complaint filed with the State Board of Medicine or State Board of Osteopathic Medicine shall be confidential and privileged. ... This subsection shall not apply to letters to a licensee that disclose the final outcome of an investigation or to final adjudications or orders issued by the licensure board.
