Washington Post - EPA
Held in Contempt By Judge
07/24/2003
- An article in today's Washington Post discusses Judge Lamberth's contempt
order against the EPA.
A federal
judge yesterday held the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency in contempt for
violating his court order by destroying computer hard drives and deleting
e-mails of the agency's top officials in the final days of the Clinton
administration and beyond.
U.S. District Judge Royce C. Lamberth ruled that agency officials -- through
a mixture of ignorance and "egregious" inattention -- failed to
comply with his January 2001 restraining order that the agency preserve and
protect its records concerning environmental rules written in the final months
before President Bill Clinton was to leave office.
Lamberth's order was issued Jan. 19, 2001, one day before George W. Bush's
inauguration. A conservative group, Landmark Legal Foundation, had sued the
agency in the fall of 2000 to turn over public documents on the rules.
Then-EPA Administrator Carol M. Browner had her computer hard drive
destroyed on the same day the order was issued, the judge found, and deputy
administrator W. Michael McCabe deleted e-mails in the days right after. Then
general gounsel Gary S. Guzy did not alert top officials or staff about the
order, nor did the U.S. Attorney's Office, though it was handling the case.
The judge's contempt ruling means the agency will have to pay tens of
thousands of dollars in legal bills incurred by Landmark, which is based in Herndon.
Lamberth declined to hold the former EPA officials in contempt. He said there
was not sufficient evidence to show that Browner or McCabe knew about the order
or that Guzy had a duty to alert his office.
© 2003 The Washington Post Company