Kilmartin Calls Open Records Lawsuit Against Him “Political”

GoLocalProv News Team and Kate Nagle

Kilmartin Calls Open Records Lawsuit Against Him “Political”

Attorney Peter Kilmartin
The Office of Rhode Island Attorney General Peter Kilmartin is calling the recent lawsuit filed against him, which is suing for the release of documents related to his involvement with group of Attorneys General working together on “AGs United for Clean Power”, a “politically motivated filing.”

The lawsuit, which was filed by the Energy & Environmental Legal Institute and Rhode Island attorney Will Wray, calls on Kilmartin’s office to release documents pertaining to the group of Attorneys General attempting to investigate if RICO statutes were violated regarding Exxon Mobil’s global warming stance, and the oil company’s ties to free market groups and think tanks, among other pursuits.

Kilmartin’s Public Information Officer Amy Kempe issued the following response following the filing of the lawsuit. 

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“It is clear that this is yet another means for which climate-change deniers, big oil, and those they convince to do their bidding for them, are trying to forestall a legal and legitimate inquiry.  This politically motivated filing will not stop the Office of Attorney General from seeking the truth and does not dissuade the Attorney General’s commitment to protect the environment or to investigate and hold accountable our biggest corporate polluters who try to buy and bully their way out of their responsibility.”

Mike Stenhouse with the Rhode Island Center for Freedom and Prosperity, who assisted national legal groups with the lawsuit, said the response from Kilmartin’s office was “missing the point.” 

“The point is if what it is they’re doing is legitimate, they’ll release the documents,” said Stenhouse, of what he says is the AG group's "secrecy pact" documents related to their taxpayer funded activity.

Climate Change, Politics Collide

In March, New York Attorney General Eric T. Schneiderman joined Al Gore and a number of AGs, to announce a coalition of law enforcement officials to working together on “key climate change-related initiatives, such as ongoing and potential investigations into whether fossil fuel companies misled investors and the public on the impact of climate change on their businesses.”

It is the documents pertaining to aspects of that agreement that EELI — and Stenhouse — are attempting to secure.

Mike Stenhouse
“There are at least four major issues at play here,” said Stenhouse, of both the attempt by the group of AGs that Kilmartin is involved with to crack down on climate change critics — and refusal to release their own documents. “First, it is an assault on free speech. Secondly, shouldn’t there be full transparency as to [the AGs’] actions?”

“Third, the Center [for Freedom and Prosperity] released a report this year that shows exactly what the climate change is agenda is, which we detailed,” said Stenhouse. “We’re not doing this just to do this. It shows how economically harmful it is.” 

“The fourth is the question, who’s driving this agenda? Is it a billionaire with special interests financing politicians?” quipped Stenhouse, referring to billionaire environmentalist Tom Steyer, whose political activities — and fundraising — were outlined in a recent Washington Times article.

“This is important to us. This isn’t political,” said Stenhouse. “Rhode Island is 50th in business climate, 48th on jobs and opportunity index, and I could go on. Meanwhile, three of our state’s politicians, which includes Senator [Sheldon] Whitehouse and Governor Raimondo, who just signed on to the group of Governors for a 'new energy future,' are all fixated on this."

“Isn't it time that politicians focus on issues important to Rhode Islanders than on advancing the interests of a dubious agenda? I guess not," said Stenhouse. "I guess it's all about advancing an agenda." 


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