DeLuca: ‘No Comment’ on DelCog/PDD Request. Butler: ‘Don’t blame me (or Beau), It was the Gen Assembly’
Chad Livengood reports on the not so shocking reactions.
Butler’s dissembling hoax wrapped in a joke of a pretext is complete bullshit, but I liked this little shot that Butler takes at George Bush:
“The General Assembly enacted the ‘security exception’ to the FOIA law in the wake of 9/11. Like so much of the activity at that time, it was done hastily and with little long-range planning,” Butler wrote.
Invasion of Iraq = Putting DeLuca behind a security cordon of secrecy
If you are keeping score at home…
Now that the reactions are in, the last act in this drama is for Ron Williams to write a “Nothing to see here folks, move along.. Move along now” column and then the curtain comes down and we all let this whole episode fade into the mists of Delaware Way history.
I’d love to see the computer login and logout times for these people.
Plus their browser histories and email logs.
I’m just saying that if the people want to see if these legislators are breaking the rules, there are methods other than records of when they swiped their cards. It would a lot more accurate too.
Even though they might be in the right building, they could still be doing work for the other job.
Just saying.
Browser histories would be great.
Crunchy –
Alas, the General Assembly, in its infinite wisdom, said that its members’ emails are to be kept secret, even while allowing public access to letters, faxes, phone messages, memos, receipts, phone bills, call logs, etc.
Who would have to amend the law to open emails up to the public? Why, the General Assembly, of course.