
Several UVA foundations argue in a court brief that subjecting foundation records to public scrutiny would undermine the General Assembly’s directive to look for other sources of higher ed financing.
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Last week, several foundations of the University of Virginia submitted a friend of the court brief in the case of Transparent GMU v. George Mason University on the side of ensuring that foundation records stay separate from the university and not subject to FOIA. Read the brief and view other filings in the case on VCOG’s case clearinghouse page.
VCOG website
The former head of Newport News/Williamsburg International Airport was arrested Monday, charged with a series of federal financial crimes involving the airport’s secret $4.5 million loan to a defunct airline. Federal prosecutors charged Ken Spirito with 18 counts of of violating federal law, all involving a complicated series of financial transactions. An indictment unsealed Monday says the maneuvers were meant to hide the use of public funds to finance People Express Airlines during its brief time operating at the Newport News airport in 2014. The charges include 11 counts of taking other entities’ money — specifically, state grants to the airport, federal money meant to promote air service and sums from a regional airport development program — and using them for purposes those bodies had not approved.
Daily Press
Circuit Court Judge Jeffery W. Parker has scheduled a two-day bench trial for February 20 and 21, 2020 in the matter of Marian Bragg v Rappahannock County Board of Supervisors, a case known as Bragg 1. Filed in 2016, the suit will finally be heard on the merits after having generated hundreds of pages of documents and clocked hours and hours of court and attorney time. Parker also ruled that Bragg must supply to the defendants information regarding any lawyer fees that have been accrued, as well as the fee agreement with her attorney, David Konick. A federal government employee and llama farmer, Bragg charges the county’s Board of Supervisors violated Virginia’s Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) by going into closed sessions on several occasions — without public notice — to discuss the hiring of a county attorney in 2016. The case is separate from a second petition Bragg filed in October 2018. In Bragg 2, she again charged the BOS with violating FOIA during selection of the county administrator.
Rappahannock News
Franklin attorney P. Daniel Crumpler III, during his presentation to City Council on Monday, alleged that Southampton County and Franklin had misled the public as to the consequences of voting “yes” or “no” in the 2017 courthouse referendum question, which asked, “Shall the courthouse be removed to 30100 Camp Parkway, Courtland, VA, and shall the Board of Supervisors be permitted to spend $26.5 million therefor?” and gave only two choices: “yes” or “no.” Crumpler obtained emails, along with other county and city records concerning the courthouse, via a Freedom of Information Act request, and provided copies to The Tidewater News following his presentation to the Council.
The Tidewater News
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