Anyone ever wonder what her old email stood for DRCTBD this will make you think, I was told by her at one time the DRCTBD were her initials.
Under the name Dawn Bostic DOB 11/1967 SS# 311-82-XXXX
Previous Addresses:
317 REDDING RD, LOUISVILLE KY 40218-3709
834 N 13TH ST, MAYFIELD KY 42066-1108
722 W LEE ST, MAYFIELD KY 42066-1555
Under the name Dawn M Bostic DOB 11/1967 SS# 311-82-XXXX
Previous Addresses:
1312 KILMER, LEXINGTON KY
1715 EDGELAND AVE, LOUISVILLE KY 40204-1525 *
3106 TAYLORSVILLE RD, LOUISVILLE KY 40205-3134 *
110 DAVENTRY LN APT 312, LOUISVILLE KY 40223-2848
8500 STAGHORN DR, LOUISVILLE KY 40242-3416*
Under the name Dawn M Cherry DOB 11/1967 SS# 311-82-XXXX
Previous Addresses:
1715 EDGELAND AVE, LOUISVILLE KY 40204-1525 *
3106 TAYLORSVILLE, LOUISVILLE KY 40205-3134 *
251 LODGEVIEW RD, SCOTTSVILLE KY 42164
Under the name Dawn Taylor Cherry DOB 11/1967 SS# 311-82-XXXX
Previous Addresses:
1715 EDGELAND AVE, LOUISVILLE KY 40204-1525 *
Under the name Dawn M Taylor DOB 11/1967 SS# 311-82-XXXX
Previous Addresses:
1715 EDGELAND AVE, LOUISVILLE KY 40204-1525*
3106 TAYLORSVILLE RD, LOUISVILLE KY 40205-3134*
610 MAYLAWN AVE, LOUISVILLE KY 40217-1934
6313 PRESTON HWY, LOUISVILLE KY 40219-1815
110 DAVENTRY LN APT 312, LOUISVILLE KY 40223-2848*
8500 STAGHORN DR, LOUISVILLE KY 40242-3416*
This is where things get interesting - note the change in Social Security Number (and names of course).
Under the name Dawn Taylor DOB 11/1967 SS# 306-92-XXXX
Previous Addresses:
415 LAURIAN WAY NW, KENNESAW GA 30144-5151
4321 HIGHBORNE DR NE, MARIETTA GA 30066-2430
Under the name Regina Chavez DOB (unknown) SS# 306-92-XXXX
Previous Addresses:
7175 HARRODSBURG RD, NICHOLASVILLE KY 40356-8983
524 HICKORY HILL DR B, NICHOLASVILLE KY 40356-1748
**I personally made contact with Regina Chavez by doing a reverse lookup in the White pages with one of the listed addresses in Nicholasville. She, Regina Chavez, confirmed that 306-92-XXXX was her Social Security# but she did not feel that her current financial situation would allow her to follow up this possible identity theft with legal counsel.
Under the name Dawn R Taylor DOB 11/1967 SS# 306-92-XXXX
Previous Addresses:
1704 REED CT, WOODSTOCK GA 30189-5444
1047 RIVERBEND CLUB DR NW, ATLANTA GA 30339
7349 CARDIGAN CIR NE, ATLANTA GA 30328-1956
4101 HESSMER AVE APT 320, METAIRIE LA 70002-7117
1235 7TH ST, NEW ORLEANS LA 70115-3316
4104 CHATEAU BLVD, KENNER LA 70065-5721
806 MANNING WAY SW, MARIETTA GA 30064-3056
She was arrested for harassment charges in 2006. The Social Security number given to the officer filling out said report was 316-92-XXXX. Maybe this was a mistake. Maybe not.
Saturday, March 6, 2010
she has denied ever portraying herself as a state or federsl agent, and she denys ever causing animals to die. Statement from a very repitable rescuer.
I have taken the liberty of removing the so called rescuers name to cover myself and others, her name has been replaced with she , her
---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: XXXXX
Date: Fri, Aug 14, 2009 at 1:03 PM
Subject: RE: I was a volunteer in outside Atlanta when MSRF came in and brought aroun...
To:
Cc:
This is when (she) represented herself to us to be a non profit and registered animal rescue group, which she is not. Ray DeLuca came in because USAP is an unlicensed group, as he should have. He did not “harass” anyone. In fact he did his job. Mr. DeLuca very kindly found us other groups to work with, including Humane Society of Atlanta and German Shepherd Rescue and another rescue, and I apologize to them for not remembering their name. These were organizations that were authorized to adopt out animals. They came in with the appropriate paperwork, which (she) did not have. All checks were made out to her veterinarian, so no one but the veterinarian “made off” with any money. The rescue groups that did take the animals had the records since they were the official adoption partners. The true heroes here were the rescue groups who worked with us “despite”(her). The people at Atlanta Humane were amazing.! Atlanta Humane is a stellar organization. During Hurricane Gustav they took in hundreds of animals from Jefferson Parish.
At some point (she) called Hammond, saying she was from the Department of Agriculture, and ended up screaming at them and slamming down the phone.( XXXXXX) was there trying to pull animals that day under MuttShack. This incident caused them to deny (XXXXXX) the animals and they were euthanized instead.
XXXXXX
---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: XXXXX
Date: Fri, Aug 14, 2009 at 1:03 PM
Subject: RE: I was a volunteer in outside Atlanta when MSRF came in and brought aroun...
To:
Cc:
This is when (she) represented herself to us to be a non profit and registered animal rescue group, which she is not. Ray DeLuca came in because USAP is an unlicensed group, as he should have. He did not “harass” anyone. In fact he did his job. Mr. DeLuca very kindly found us other groups to work with, including Humane Society of Atlanta and German Shepherd Rescue and another rescue, and I apologize to them for not remembering their name. These were organizations that were authorized to adopt out animals. They came in with the appropriate paperwork, which (she) did not have. All checks were made out to her veterinarian, so no one but the veterinarian “made off” with any money. The rescue groups that did take the animals had the records since they were the official adoption partners. The true heroes here were the rescue groups who worked with us “despite”(her). The people at Atlanta Humane were amazing.! Atlanta Humane is a stellar organization. During Hurricane Gustav they took in hundreds of animals from Jefferson Parish.
At some point (she) called Hammond, saying she was from the Department of Agriculture, and ended up screaming at them and slamming down the phone.( XXXXXX) was there trying to pull animals that day under MuttShack. This incident caused them to deny (XXXXXX) the animals and they were euthanized instead.
XXXXXX
The claim on court papers she is a 501c3
DISTRICT COURT OF THE STATE OF LOUISIANA
LAFAYETTE, LOUISIANA
---------------------------------------X
GARO ALEXANIAN, in his individual capacity and in his official
Capacity as Executive Director of the Companion Animal Network, an unincorporated association,
TWILLA FREE,
MARILYN MCGEE,
JOHNNY ROBICHAUX,
CINDY BROUSSARD,
CODY RIESS,
MELODY HALLIGAN,
BERT CLAVERIE,
TRACY PENROD,
OLA AYERS,
DAWN TAYLOR BECHTOLD,
FRAN BORGES,
SHERRY ROBICHAUX,
Petitioners,
VERIFIED PETITION
- against -
JOEY DUREL, individually and in his official capacity as President of Lafayette Parish,
LAFAYETTE CITY-PARISH CONSOLIDATED GOVERNMENT,
CITY OF LAFAYETTE,
Respondents.
---------------------------------------X
Petitioners, in their pro se capacity, respectfully allege as follows:
At all times mentioned herein, Petitioners FREE, ROUSSEL, McGEE, ENGEL, J ROBICHAUX, BROUSSARD, RIESS, HALLIGAN, CLAVERIE, PENROD, AYERS, BORGES, S ROBICHAUX, were and are still citizens and residents of the state of Louisiana.
2) Petitioner GARO ALEXANIAN (‘ALEXANIAN’) is a citizen of the State of New York and is the founder and Executive Director of COMPANION ANIMAL NETWORK (‘CAN’), a not-for-profit association, incorporation pending, having its principal place of business at Queens, New York.
3) Petitioner DAWN BECHTOLD TAYLOR (‘TAYLOR’) was and still is a citizen and resident of the State of Georgia, and the founder and President of UNITED STATES ANIMAL PROTECTION, a federally recognized tax-exempt charity incorporated under IRS Rule 501 ( c ) 3, having its principal offices in Atlanta, Georgia.
MADE DEFENDANTS HEREIN, JOEY DUREL, individually and in his official capacity as President of Lafayette Parish,
LAFAYETTE CITY-PARISH CONSOLIDATED GOVERNMENT, CITY OF LAFAYETTE
4) Upon information and belief Respondent JOEY DUREL (‘DUREL’) was and still is President of Lafayette City-Parish Consolidated Government, a political subdivision of the State of Louisiana. At all times mentioned herein DUREL is responsible for the decisions made by Lafayette City-Parish.
5)Upon information and belief Respondent Lafayette City-Parish Consolidated Government (‘LCG’) is a local governmental subdivision of the State of Louisiana which operates under a home rule charter and, subject to said charter, operates under the authority of Article VI, Section 5 of the Louisiana Constitution of 1974.
6) Upon information and belief Respondent City of Lafayette (‘LAFAYETTE’) is a City located in the State of Louisiana with its boundaries as specified in the Lafayette City-Parish Consolidated Government’s Charter § 2-1.
FACTUAL ALLEGATIONS
7) On December 17, 2006 Petitioners made a Public Records request under Louisiana R.S. 44.1 et seq. to DUREL, LCG, and LAFAYETTE seeking copies of such documents as stated in their letter dated on such date, a copy of which is annexed as Exhibit A.
8) On December 18, 2006 Respondents DUREL, LCG, and LAFAYETTE replied, through their City-Parish Attorney Patrick S. Ottinger, that it would "take some time to locate, identify, and assemble the requested information," a copy of which is annexed as Exhibit B.
9) Four months later on April 11, 2007 Respondents DUREL, LCG, and LAFAYETTE responded, through their City-Parish Attorney Patrick S. Ottinger, that they were invoking La. R.S. 44:32A and requiring and limiting Petitioners to the "examination of records in other than regular office or working hours," a copy of which is annexed as Exhibit C. Respondents alleged that they did not know which documents Petitioners sought to inspect nor copy, despite the fact that Petitioners had clearly identified the sought documents using the terminology and indexing method provided by Respondents, a copy of which is annexed as Exhibit D.
10) Petitioners responded to Respondents’ denial of their Records Access request with a letter dated April 11, 2007 asking for a page count of 27 of 28 items sought by whatever indexing manner available so the appropriate sums of monies could be paid for the copying, and agreed to eliminate the one possibly "voluminous" item sought, a copy of which is annexed as Exhibit E.
11) By latter dated April 16, 2006 Respondents DUREL, LCG, and LAFAYETTE replied, through their City-Parish Attorney Patrick S. Ottinger, that their position was that they are not
"required to conduct research. . . . to determine how many pages such listing of records entail. . . . . . To collate and assemble for your review the documents responsive to your request will take a significant amount of time (perhaps hundreds of hours), and then a like amount of time to re-file the documents,"
a copy of which is annexed as Exhibit F.
Respondents clearly stated that they refuse to
"review [the documents]in order to identify relevant documents,"
thus refusing to make any good faith effort whatsoever to fulfill Petitioners’ request, and instead demanding Petitioners to personally travel to Lafayette and to pay for the salaries of Respondents’ employees under the guise of
"interfering with the orderly conduct of business."
12) By letter dated April 17, 2007 Petitioners replied to Respondents’ denial reiterating that Respondents’ blanket refusal to make any effort or attempt to locate and segregate any of the 28 items sought, and instead demand that Petitioners travel to Lafayette in order to personally examine
"200 boxes. . . . as many as 20,000 pieces of paper,"
all at an hourly expense to Petitioners to pay for Respondents’ employees’ salaries after normal business hours in addition to the copying charges, was an arbitrary and capricious determination since the law of averages would mandate that some of the 28 items sought would be able to be located and segregated and page counted, a copy of which is annexed as Exhibit G.
13) On May 1, 2007, after not receiving a reply to our April 17th letter, Petitioners made an Appeal to City-Parish President DUREL to exhaust all administrative remedies which may be available, a copy of which is annexed as Exhibit H.
14) On May 3, 2007 Respondents replied that at this time, five months and numerous communications after the commencement of the records request, Defendents’ new interpretation of Petitioners’ Records Request was to be one requesting them to make up a "list," and that they have no obligation to make up a "list," if it "does not (already) exist," a copy of which is annexed as Exhibit I. Respondents are clearly stating that they consider any letter from Respondents to Petitioners which would state the numbers of pages contained in each of the 28 sought items as a "list which does not exist," and are cloaking themselves under the well-settled issue that Respondents are not obligated to make up a "list." Petitioners cannot overemphasize the egregiousness of such an attempt by Respondents to completely subvert the Records Access Law. Indeed, if such were the case, every Records Request response giving details of the sought documents in terms of pages, numbers of tapes, or any letter which mentioned any quantification information of the documents would be considered a "list," which has never been the ruling of any court.
15) Respondents, in their Appeal denial letter of May 3, 2007, (Exhibit I) claimed at this time for the first time, after five months and numerous communications after the commencement of the records request, and five months after having promised to "locate, identify, and assemble the requested information" in their initial response of December 18, 2006 (Exhibit B), that they were now determining the Petitioners’ records request to be "unreasonably burdensome or expensive," under R.S. 44:32A(2), without providing any reasons or justification since no effort had yet been made to "locate" or "identify" nor "assemble" any of the sought documents.
16)Moreover, Respondents also claimed, again for the first time, that they interpret the Louisiana Public Records Law to only provide for a "mail option" of only the initial request, not for the mailing back of the copies requested to the requestor and that the copies requested must be picked up in person by the requestor (Exhibit I, page 3).
17) On May 7, 2007 Petitioners wrote their final reply to Respondents, alleging that Respondents’ numerous changing of positions, premature, arbitrary and capricious interpretations and invocations of law, refusals to locate, or segregate or identify whatsoever any documents, refusal to make or mail copies of the sought documents, were all arbitrary and capricious determinations done to either totally or partially prevent or make as difficult and expensive as possible for Petitioners to obtain the documents sought, a copy of which is annexed as Exhibit J. Respondents have refused to reply whatsoever.
18) Respondents’ determination of the records request being too "burdensome or expensive" without stating which sought documents are causing the "burden" or "expense," and especially five months after promising to "locate, identify, and assemble" the documents is arbitrary and capricious.
19) Respondents should be precluded from invoking a determination of "burdensome and expensive" due to the enormous amount of time and communication which had transpired from the initial request until such claim was made..
20) Moreover, Respondents should be precluded from invoking a determination of "burdensome and expensive" due to their having promised and pretended to "locate, identify, and assemble" the sought documents for five months.
21) Respondents should also be precluded from invoking a determination of claim of "burdensome and expensive" because in their letter of April 16th, they stated that "LCG, in certain (but not all) instances, it might be necessary to review documents in other than regular or normal business hours." Yet, LCG refuses to still state, in their May 3rd letter of denial of the Appeal, five months after the request, in WHICH instances (items sought) this "might" be necessary, thus delaying our request for months, and now contradicting their own words of a few weeks ago when they claimed that they did not assert that all documents must be reviewed after hours. Yet now, weeks after their letter of April 16th, they are specifically refusing to give us information on which items after-hours viewing would be necessary, which puts Petitioners in a position of having to personally review all of Respondents’ documents, in the hundreds of thousands, and subrogate Petitioners’ rights to obtain copies by mail.
22) The determinations of Respondents to:
1) refuse to provide any information as to the number of documents Petitioners’ request entailed to allow Petitioners to pay for and order copies,
2) refuse to make any effort whatsoever to "locate, identify, assemble" or segregate any of the requested documents despite having promised in writing (Exhibit B) to be actively doing so for five months,
3) refuse to make photocopies of the requested documents and instead require Petitioners to physically travel half way across the country to personally "locate, identify, assemble" and segregate the sought documents from "as many as 20,000 pages" and "200 boxes" totaling in the hundreds of thousands of pages, thus assuring that Respondents are able to hide the sought documents as "needles in a haystack," if at all made available inside the haystack,
4) invoke R.S. 44:33 A(2) under a claim that every single one of the 28 items sought in Petitioners’ request is too "burdensome" and "expensive" to "locate, identify, assemble" or segregate after having promised in writing to be actively doing so for five months,
5) invoke R.S. 44:32 (A) under a claim that every single one of the 28 items sought in Petitioners’ request would "interfere with the orderly conduct of business" to "locate, identify, assemble" or segregate after having promised in writing to be actively doing so for five months
6) refuse to mail copies of the sought documents to Petitioners
were contrary to and were errors of law, arbitrary and capricious and an abuse of discretion in that R.S. 44:1 et seq. provides for the full disclosure of all public records unless the records are specifically exempt from disclosure under state or federal statute. The public records and documents sought by Petitioners are not so specifically exempted.
23) Respondents’ defenses for refusing to supply the sought documents go to the very core of the Public Records Law, which is well-settled that any controversy and interpretation of the law must be interpreted on the side of maximum disclosure.
24) Respondents have decided to define the terms " mail-in" "burdensome" "expensive," "interfere with the ordinary conduct of business," which have not been defined in the law, in the most constricting way imaginable, contravening numerous well-settled court rulings.
25) Petitioners’ request is sufficiently specific in time and the nature of documents sought, and have been requested and identified by Petitioners using the indexing method provided by Respondents, a copy of which is annexed as Exhibit D. Therefore, Respondents’ claim of the sought documents allegedly being excessively "burdensome" to locate is self-evident to be a fabrication for the purpose of obfuscating and impeding Petitioners’ request.
26) These decisions of Respondents have denied Petitioners their rights to obtain copies of the sought documents in the manner proscribed by law. Petitioners’ willingness to arrive at reasonable accommodations has been restated numerous times yet Respondents’ have not been amenable to any accommodation whatsoever. Respondents’ actions are a classic case of abuse of discretion and an arbitrary and capricious effort at impeding Petitioners’ request by making it excessively costly and time consuming.
WHEREFORE, Petitioners seek a Writ of Mandamus annulling the determinations of Respondents denying Petitioners copies of the public records and documents enumerated in Petitioners’ request, and compelling Respondents to supply Petitioners with copies of those public records and documents upon payment by Petitioner of the proper fee to be charged per page.
WHEREFORE, Petitioners demand actual damages, the costs of the suit incurred herein, civil penalties of $100 per day calculated from three days after receipt of the original records request date of December 16, 2006, attorneys’ fees as may be allowed by law, and such other relief as the Court may deem appropriate.
Dated:
GARO ALEXANIAN
2 Bay Club Dr., #18G
Bayside, NY 11360
VERIFICATION
State of Louisiana }
} ss.:
County of Queens }
I, GARO ALEXANIAN, being duly sworn, depose and say:
That I am a petitioner in the above entitled action; that I have read the foregoing Petition abd know the content thereof; and as to those matters which concern me, that the same is true to my knowledge except as to matters therein stated to be alleged upon information and belief, and that as to those matters I believe them to be true.
GARO ALEXANIAN
Sworn to before me on September, 2007
__________________________
NOTARY PUBLIC
SERVICE INSTRUCTIONS
Please serve Summons and Petition upon:
JOEY DUREL, individually and in his official capacity as President of Lafayette Parish,at 705 West University Avenue, Lafayette, LA 70502
LAFAYETTE CITY-PARISH CONSOLIDATED GOVERNMENT at 705 West University Avenue, Lafayette, LA 70502
CITY OF LAFAYETTE at 705 West University Avenue, Lafayette, LA 70502
LAFAYETTE, LOUISIANA
---------------------------------------X
GARO ALEXANIAN, in his individual capacity and in his official
Capacity as Executive Director of the Companion Animal Network, an unincorporated association,
TWILLA FREE,
MARILYN MCGEE,
JOHNNY ROBICHAUX,
CINDY BROUSSARD,
CODY RIESS,
MELODY HALLIGAN,
BERT CLAVERIE,
TRACY PENROD,
OLA AYERS,
DAWN TAYLOR BECHTOLD,
FRAN BORGES,
SHERRY ROBICHAUX,
Petitioners,
VERIFIED PETITION
- against -
JOEY DUREL, individually and in his official capacity as President of Lafayette Parish,
LAFAYETTE CITY-PARISH CONSOLIDATED GOVERNMENT,
CITY OF LAFAYETTE,
Respondents.
---------------------------------------X
Petitioners, in their pro se capacity, respectfully allege as follows:
At all times mentioned herein, Petitioners FREE, ROUSSEL, McGEE, ENGEL, J ROBICHAUX, BROUSSARD, RIESS, HALLIGAN, CLAVERIE, PENROD, AYERS, BORGES, S ROBICHAUX, were and are still citizens and residents of the state of Louisiana.
2) Petitioner GARO ALEXANIAN (‘ALEXANIAN’) is a citizen of the State of New York and is the founder and Executive Director of COMPANION ANIMAL NETWORK (‘CAN’), a not-for-profit association, incorporation pending, having its principal place of business at Queens, New York.
3) Petitioner DAWN BECHTOLD TAYLOR (‘TAYLOR’) was and still is a citizen and resident of the State of Georgia, and the founder and President of UNITED STATES ANIMAL PROTECTION, a federally recognized tax-exempt charity incorporated under IRS Rule 501 ( c ) 3, having its principal offices in Atlanta, Georgia.
MADE DEFENDANTS HEREIN, JOEY DUREL, individually and in his official capacity as President of Lafayette Parish,
LAFAYETTE CITY-PARISH CONSOLIDATED GOVERNMENT, CITY OF LAFAYETTE
4) Upon information and belief Respondent JOEY DUREL (‘DUREL’) was and still is President of Lafayette City-Parish Consolidated Government, a political subdivision of the State of Louisiana. At all times mentioned herein DUREL is responsible for the decisions made by Lafayette City-Parish.
5)Upon information and belief Respondent Lafayette City-Parish Consolidated Government (‘LCG’) is a local governmental subdivision of the State of Louisiana which operates under a home rule charter and, subject to said charter, operates under the authority of Article VI, Section 5 of the Louisiana Constitution of 1974.
6) Upon information and belief Respondent City of Lafayette (‘LAFAYETTE’) is a City located in the State of Louisiana with its boundaries as specified in the Lafayette City-Parish Consolidated Government’s Charter § 2-1.
FACTUAL ALLEGATIONS
7) On December 17, 2006 Petitioners made a Public Records request under Louisiana R.S. 44.1 et seq. to DUREL, LCG, and LAFAYETTE seeking copies of such documents as stated in their letter dated on such date, a copy of which is annexed as Exhibit A.
8) On December 18, 2006 Respondents DUREL, LCG, and LAFAYETTE replied, through their City-Parish Attorney Patrick S. Ottinger, that it would "take some time to locate, identify, and assemble the requested information," a copy of which is annexed as Exhibit B.
9) Four months later on April 11, 2007 Respondents DUREL, LCG, and LAFAYETTE responded, through their City-Parish Attorney Patrick S. Ottinger, that they were invoking La. R.S. 44:32A and requiring and limiting Petitioners to the "examination of records in other than regular office or working hours," a copy of which is annexed as Exhibit C. Respondents alleged that they did not know which documents Petitioners sought to inspect nor copy, despite the fact that Petitioners had clearly identified the sought documents using the terminology and indexing method provided by Respondents, a copy of which is annexed as Exhibit D.
10) Petitioners responded to Respondents’ denial of their Records Access request with a letter dated April 11, 2007 asking for a page count of 27 of 28 items sought by whatever indexing manner available so the appropriate sums of monies could be paid for the copying, and agreed to eliminate the one possibly "voluminous" item sought, a copy of which is annexed as Exhibit E.
11) By latter dated April 16, 2006 Respondents DUREL, LCG, and LAFAYETTE replied, through their City-Parish Attorney Patrick S. Ottinger, that their position was that they are not
"required to conduct research. . . . to determine how many pages such listing of records entail. . . . . . To collate and assemble for your review the documents responsive to your request will take a significant amount of time (perhaps hundreds of hours), and then a like amount of time to re-file the documents,"
a copy of which is annexed as Exhibit F.
Respondents clearly stated that they refuse to
"review [the documents]in order to identify relevant documents,"
thus refusing to make any good faith effort whatsoever to fulfill Petitioners’ request, and instead demanding Petitioners to personally travel to Lafayette and to pay for the salaries of Respondents’ employees under the guise of
"interfering with the orderly conduct of business."
12) By letter dated April 17, 2007 Petitioners replied to Respondents’ denial reiterating that Respondents’ blanket refusal to make any effort or attempt to locate and segregate any of the 28 items sought, and instead demand that Petitioners travel to Lafayette in order to personally examine
"200 boxes. . . . as many as 20,000 pieces of paper,"
all at an hourly expense to Petitioners to pay for Respondents’ employees’ salaries after normal business hours in addition to the copying charges, was an arbitrary and capricious determination since the law of averages would mandate that some of the 28 items sought would be able to be located and segregated and page counted, a copy of which is annexed as Exhibit G.
13) On May 1, 2007, after not receiving a reply to our April 17th letter, Petitioners made an Appeal to City-Parish President DUREL to exhaust all administrative remedies which may be available, a copy of which is annexed as Exhibit H.
14) On May 3, 2007 Respondents replied that at this time, five months and numerous communications after the commencement of the records request, Defendents’ new interpretation of Petitioners’ Records Request was to be one requesting them to make up a "list," and that they have no obligation to make up a "list," if it "does not (already) exist," a copy of which is annexed as Exhibit I. Respondents are clearly stating that they consider any letter from Respondents to Petitioners which would state the numbers of pages contained in each of the 28 sought items as a "list which does not exist," and are cloaking themselves under the well-settled issue that Respondents are not obligated to make up a "list." Petitioners cannot overemphasize the egregiousness of such an attempt by Respondents to completely subvert the Records Access Law. Indeed, if such were the case, every Records Request response giving details of the sought documents in terms of pages, numbers of tapes, or any letter which mentioned any quantification information of the documents would be considered a "list," which has never been the ruling of any court.
15) Respondents, in their Appeal denial letter of May 3, 2007, (Exhibit I) claimed at this time for the first time, after five months and numerous communications after the commencement of the records request, and five months after having promised to "locate, identify, and assemble the requested information" in their initial response of December 18, 2006 (Exhibit B), that they were now determining the Petitioners’ records request to be "unreasonably burdensome or expensive," under R.S. 44:32A(2), without providing any reasons or justification since no effort had yet been made to "locate" or "identify" nor "assemble" any of the sought documents.
16)Moreover, Respondents also claimed, again for the first time, that they interpret the Louisiana Public Records Law to only provide for a "mail option" of only the initial request, not for the mailing back of the copies requested to the requestor and that the copies requested must be picked up in person by the requestor (Exhibit I, page 3).
17) On May 7, 2007 Petitioners wrote their final reply to Respondents, alleging that Respondents’ numerous changing of positions, premature, arbitrary and capricious interpretations and invocations of law, refusals to locate, or segregate or identify whatsoever any documents, refusal to make or mail copies of the sought documents, were all arbitrary and capricious determinations done to either totally or partially prevent or make as difficult and expensive as possible for Petitioners to obtain the documents sought, a copy of which is annexed as Exhibit J. Respondents have refused to reply whatsoever.
18) Respondents’ determination of the records request being too "burdensome or expensive" without stating which sought documents are causing the "burden" or "expense," and especially five months after promising to "locate, identify, and assemble" the documents is arbitrary and capricious.
19) Respondents should be precluded from invoking a determination of "burdensome and expensive" due to the enormous amount of time and communication which had transpired from the initial request until such claim was made..
20) Moreover, Respondents should be precluded from invoking a determination of "burdensome and expensive" due to their having promised and pretended to "locate, identify, and assemble" the sought documents for five months.
21) Respondents should also be precluded from invoking a determination of claim of "burdensome and expensive" because in their letter of April 16th, they stated that "LCG, in certain (but not all) instances, it might be necessary to review documents in other than regular or normal business hours." Yet, LCG refuses to still state, in their May 3rd letter of denial of the Appeal, five months after the request, in WHICH instances (items sought) this "might" be necessary, thus delaying our request for months, and now contradicting their own words of a few weeks ago when they claimed that they did not assert that all documents must be reviewed after hours. Yet now, weeks after their letter of April 16th, they are specifically refusing to give us information on which items after-hours viewing would be necessary, which puts Petitioners in a position of having to personally review all of Respondents’ documents, in the hundreds of thousands, and subrogate Petitioners’ rights to obtain copies by mail.
22) The determinations of Respondents to:
1) refuse to provide any information as to the number of documents Petitioners’ request entailed to allow Petitioners to pay for and order copies,
2) refuse to make any effort whatsoever to "locate, identify, assemble" or segregate any of the requested documents despite having promised in writing (Exhibit B) to be actively doing so for five months,
3) refuse to make photocopies of the requested documents and instead require Petitioners to physically travel half way across the country to personally "locate, identify, assemble" and segregate the sought documents from "as many as 20,000 pages" and "200 boxes" totaling in the hundreds of thousands of pages, thus assuring that Respondents are able to hide the sought documents as "needles in a haystack," if at all made available inside the haystack,
4) invoke R.S. 44:33 A(2) under a claim that every single one of the 28 items sought in Petitioners’ request is too "burdensome" and "expensive" to "locate, identify, assemble" or segregate after having promised in writing to be actively doing so for five months,
5) invoke R.S. 44:32 (A) under a claim that every single one of the 28 items sought in Petitioners’ request would "interfere with the orderly conduct of business" to "locate, identify, assemble" or segregate after having promised in writing to be actively doing so for five months
6) refuse to mail copies of the sought documents to Petitioners
were contrary to and were errors of law, arbitrary and capricious and an abuse of discretion in that R.S. 44:1 et seq. provides for the full disclosure of all public records unless the records are specifically exempt from disclosure under state or federal statute. The public records and documents sought by Petitioners are not so specifically exempted.
23) Respondents’ defenses for refusing to supply the sought documents go to the very core of the Public Records Law, which is well-settled that any controversy and interpretation of the law must be interpreted on the side of maximum disclosure.
24) Respondents have decided to define the terms " mail-in" "burdensome" "expensive," "interfere with the ordinary conduct of business," which have not been defined in the law, in the most constricting way imaginable, contravening numerous well-settled court rulings.
25) Petitioners’ request is sufficiently specific in time and the nature of documents sought, and have been requested and identified by Petitioners using the indexing method provided by Respondents, a copy of which is annexed as Exhibit D. Therefore, Respondents’ claim of the sought documents allegedly being excessively "burdensome" to locate is self-evident to be a fabrication for the purpose of obfuscating and impeding Petitioners’ request.
26) These decisions of Respondents have denied Petitioners their rights to obtain copies of the sought documents in the manner proscribed by law. Petitioners’ willingness to arrive at reasonable accommodations has been restated numerous times yet Respondents’ have not been amenable to any accommodation whatsoever. Respondents’ actions are a classic case of abuse of discretion and an arbitrary and capricious effort at impeding Petitioners’ request by making it excessively costly and time consuming.
WHEREFORE, Petitioners seek a Writ of Mandamus annulling the determinations of Respondents denying Petitioners copies of the public records and documents enumerated in Petitioners’ request, and compelling Respondents to supply Petitioners with copies of those public records and documents upon payment by Petitioner of the proper fee to be charged per page.
WHEREFORE, Petitioners demand actual damages, the costs of the suit incurred herein, civil penalties of $100 per day calculated from three days after receipt of the original records request date of December 16, 2006, attorneys’ fees as may be allowed by law, and such other relief as the Court may deem appropriate.
Dated:
GARO ALEXANIAN
2 Bay Club Dr., #18G
Bayside, NY 11360
VERIFICATION
State of Louisiana }
} ss.:
County of Queens }
I, GARO ALEXANIAN, being duly sworn, depose and say:
That I am a petitioner in the above entitled action; that I have read the foregoing Petition abd know the content thereof; and as to those matters which concern me, that the same is true to my knowledge except as to matters therein stated to be alleged upon information and belief, and that as to those matters I believe them to be true.
GARO ALEXANIAN
Sworn to before me on September, 2007
__________________________
NOTARY PUBLIC
SERVICE INSTRUCTIONS
Please serve Summons and Petition upon:
JOEY DUREL, individually and in his official capacity as President of Lafayette Parish,at 705 West University Avenue, Lafayette, LA 70502
LAFAYETTE CITY-PARISH CONSOLIDATED GOVERNMENT at 705 West University Avenue, Lafayette, LA 70502
CITY OF LAFAYETTE at 705 West University Avenue, Lafayette, LA 70502
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