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Colorado Ethics Watch uses high impact legal actions to hold public officials and organizations accountable for unethical activities that undermine the integrity of state and local government.
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“The fact that they only gave money when he was doing these final rules, that more than ever really raises flags. There’s something fishy going on.”
Rep. Mark Ferrandino, commenting on campaign contributions from payday lending companies to Attorney General John Suthers as Suthers writes regulations to implement a new payday lending law, as reported in the Grand Junction Daily Sentinel, August 13, 2010

Judge rules state ethics panel can’t conceal documents from public view

No evidence found of 'chilling effect' if submissions to commission are released

By Ernest Luning, The Colorado Independent,
May 15, 2009
A judge on Thursday ordered Colorado’s top ethics panel to turn over records it went to court to keep secret, including letters from lawmakers and government employees asking for guidance on ethical questions.

The Independent Ethics Commission argued on Tuesday that releasing records to Colorado Ethics Watch, a nonprofit watchdog group, would cause “substantial injury to the public interest” by discouraging public officials and others subject to state ethics laws from seeking advice. The commission asked for a blanket ruling that submissions to the commission should be kept confidential.

In an unusually swift decision handed down just two days after hearing arguments, Denver District Court Judge Norman Haglund ruled the ethics commission improperly withheld documents sought by Ethics Watch in a Colorado Open Records Act request last summer. The judge also ordered the ethics commission to pay attorneys’ fees to Ethics Watch.

“Finally the commission that was established to hold officials accountable for violations of law is itself being held accountable,” said Ethics Watch director Chantell Taylor in a statement after the judge ruled. “Nothing in the Colorado Constitution or statute allows the [Independent Ethics Commission] to operate in secret. To the contrary, the IEC should serve as the model for honest and open government.”

For the full story, please visit http://coloradoindependent.com/28985/judge-rules-state-ethics-panel-cant-co...

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