Transparency News, 10/17/25

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The Supreme Court of Virginia issued an opinion yesterday in a defamation case brought by a frequent critic of the Suffolk School Board against two school board members. The critic — Deborah Wahlstrom — sued Judith Brooks-Buck and Tyron Riddick in their individual capacities, not as school board members. She said the pair defamed her by including in a disciplinary matter against another school board member a statement that Wahlstrom had perjured herself during her successful FOIA case against the school district a few years ago. The issue before the Supreme Court was whether Brooks-Buck and Riddick were immune from suit. The court first confirmed that a local legislative body engages in a legislative act when it disciplines one of its members, but nonetheless found that the concept of “legislative immunity” did not apply in this case because the statements about Wahlstrom were “gratuitous and nonessential to the disciplinary proceedings.” The court then found that the lawsuit wasn’t barred by sovereign immunity, either. Sovereign immunity protects government and officials from burdensome litigation, but the court stressed that the doctrine applies only when officials are acting in their official capacity, but not for intentional negligence, and not when they are sued in their individual capacity.

Read the opinion

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“Democracies die behind closed doors.” ~ U.S. District Judge Damon Keith, 2002

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