VIRGINIA
FREEDOM OF INFORMATION
ADVISORY COUNCIL
COMMONWEALTH OF VIRGINIA
AO-10-09
November
18, 2009
Colonel
W. S. (Steve) Flaherty
Superintendent
Department of State Police
Richmond, Virginia
The
staff of the Freedom of Information Advisory Council is
authorized to issue advisory opinions. The ensuing staff
advisory opinion is based solely upon the information presented
in your letter of October 2, 2009.
Dear
Colonel Flaherty:
You
have asked whether subsection G of § 2.2-3706 (subsection
G) applies to the Department of State Police (the Department).
In full, subsection G reads as follows:
Records
kept by law-enforcement agencies as required by § 15.2-1722
shall be subject to the provisions of this chapter except:
1.
Those portions of noncriminal incident or other investigative
reports or materials containing identifying information
of a personal, medical or financial nature provided to a
law-enforcement agency where the release of such information
would jeopardize the safety or privacy of any person;
2.
Those portions of any records containing information related
to plans for or resources dedicated to undercover operations;
or
3.
Records of background investigations of applicants for law-enforcement
agency employment or other confidential administrative investigations
conducted pursuant to law.
The
referenced section, § 15.2-1722, addresses the
duty of the sheriff or chief of police of every
locality to insure, in addition to other records
required by law, the maintenance of adequate personnel,
arrest, investigative, reportable incidents, and noncriminal
incidents records necessary for the efficient operation
of a law-enforcement agency. [Emphasis added.] Section
15.2-1722 contains no reference to the Department or records
held by the Department. In light of this language, your
inquiry may be rephrased in the alternative: whether the
Department, as a law-enforcement agency, may use
the exemptions set forth in subsection G, or instead, whether
the reference to § 15.2-1722 limits the use of the
exemption solely to the records described therein (in effect
meaning that only local sheriffs and police departments
may invoke subsection G).
In
analyzing this question, we must be guided by the policy
provisions of the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) set
forth in § 2.2-3700:
The
provisions of this chapter shall be liberally construed
to promote an increased awareness by all persons of governmental
activities and afford every opportunity to citizens to witness
the operations of government. Any exemption from public
access to records or meetings shall be narrowly construed
and no record shall be withheld or meeting closed to the
public unless specifically made exempt pursuant to this
chapter or other specific provision of law.
Additionally,
it is worthwhile to consider the legislative history of
subsection G and § 15.2-1722. Prior to 1999, there
was no equivalent to subsection G in FOIA. Instead, outside
of FOIA, the prior version of § 15.2-1722 had its own
exemption for certain records held by local sheriffs and
chiefs of police, which read in relevant part as follows:
Except for information in the custody of law-enforcement
officials relative to the identity of any individual other
than a juvenile who is arrested and charged, and the status
of the charge of arrest, the records required to be maintained
by this section shall be exempt from the provisions of [FOIA].
In 1999, the General Assembly changed both § 15.2-1722
and FOIA as it relates to law-enforcement records. Specifically,
the General Assembly removed the FOIA exemption language
from § 15.2-1722; it created then-new § 2.1-342.2
within FOIA (now § 2.2-3706), which compiles law-enforcement
and criminal records exemptions into a single section; it
moved certain language from § 15.2-1722 into §
2.1-342.2 (specifically, the part concerning the identity
of any individual other than a juvenile who is arrested
and charged, and the status of the charge of arrest);
and it created subsection G of § 2.1-342.2 (now subsection
G of § 2.2-3706).1 The prefatory language of subsection
G as it was originally enacted in 1999 read nearly identically
to the current language, except it referred then to provisions
of this section rather than provisions of this
chapter (the latter being the current phrasing). The
language of the three subdivisions of subsection G, as quoted
previously, has remained unchanged.
In
examining why these changes were made, further legislative
history shows that the General Assembly established a joint
subcommittee to study FOIA in 1998. The study continued
over two years and issued its final report in 2000.2 That
report states that the provision of § 15.2-1722 quoted
above
was
in direct conflict with the criminal records portion of
[FOIA]. It was agreed that the conflict would be resolved
in favor of [FOIA] and that any criminal record exemption
should be stated in [FOIA] itself. As a result, a single
section in [FOIA] was dedicated to access to criminal records
by consolidating all criminal records exemptions there.3
The
report of the joint subcommittee does not indicate that
there was any intent to limit the application of subsection
G to local law-enforcement agencies, nor does it indicate
any intent to expand it beyond local law-enforcement agencies
to include records of the Department as well. It appears
that the Department participated in the work of the joint
subcommittee, and prepared a review of the proposed draft
legislation.4 While the Department's review did consider
the changes to FOIA and § 15.2-1722, it was likewise
silent regarding whether subsection G would or should apply
to the Department's records. In short, it appears that these
legislative changes were made as part of a larger review
of FOIA as a whole and with the specific intent to resolve
a conflict between FOIA and § 15.2-1722. It does not
appear that there was any consideration of the question
of whether subsection G would apply to the Department's
records at the time these changes were made.
In
the context of your inquiry, the history of subsection G
demonstrates that it was based on a provision of law taken
from Title 15.2, a provision that applied solely to records
held by local sheriffs and chiefs of police. There was no
equivalent provision within FOIA for similar records held
by the Department. The plain language of subsection G refers
to records kept by law-enforcement agencies as required
by § 15.2-1722. It would be an improper reading
of the law to ignore the reference to § 15.2-1722.
As stated by the Supreme Court of Virginia, legislative
enactments are to be read to give meaning to all the
words used and cannot be read to render any words
meaningless.5 Interpreting subsection G to apply to
records held by all law-enforcement agencies without regard
to the reference to § 15.2-1722 would violate this
principle. With that background, and in light of the narrow
construction rule for exemptions set forth in § 2.2-3700,
it must be concluded that subsection G applies to records
kept as required by § 15.2-1722, necessarily limiting
subsection G to certain records of local sheriffs and chiefs
of police. Therefore subsection G does not apply to records
of the Department. However, while I believe this to be the
correct legal analysis, it begs the question of whether
it is the intent of the General Assembly to give different
access to records held by local sheriffs and chiefs of police
than to the same types of records held by the Department.
That policy question can only be answered by the General
Assembly.
Thank
you for contacting this office. I hope that I have been
of assistance.
Sincerely,
Maria
J.K. Everett Executive Director
1While
not directly relevant to your inquiry, I note that one effect
of these changes was to make it so records held pursuant
to § 15.2-1722 could no longer be withheld in their
entirety, but instead could only be redacted in accordance
with the provisions of subsection G. 2Report of the Joint Subcommittee Studying
Virginia's Freedom of Information Act, House Document No.
106 (2000). 3Id. at 25. 4Id.,
Appendix E. 5Northampton County Bd. of Zoning
Appeals v. Eastern Shore Dev. Corp., 277 Va. 198, 202,
671 S.E.2d 160, 162 (2009)(internal quotes and citations
omitted).