NEW: Raimondo Failed to Comply with State Divestment Law

GoLocalProv News Team

NEW: Raimondo Failed to Comply with State Divestment Law

A RI law enacted in 2007 requires the State report annually on its efforts to make sure its investments do not have ties to Sudan.
Rhode Island General Treasurer Gina Raimondo announced that she was pushing Rhode Island’s pension system to divest from a gun manufacturer, but a GoLocalProv investigation finds that Raimondo’s office has failed implement an existing state law requiring that Rhode Island show it is divesting from companies with ties to Sudan due to human rights violations, which was enacted in 2007 by the Rhode Island General Assembly.

As part of the 2007 Sudan divestiture law, the General Treasurer of the State of Rhode Island is required to file annual reports with the Rhode Island Attorney General and Rhode Island General Assembly.

See copy of law HERE

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When asked for the reports on Wednesday, Treasury spokesperson Joy Fox said that she was "looking into it", but she didn't "think there was anything to pick up." When further asked by GoLocal if there were publicly available reports as required by Section Five of the law, Fox did not respond for comment.

Tom Evans, the State Librarian, said the last report he had on file from the General Treasurer's office referencing Sudan investments was from Fiscal Year 2008, and had nothing on file since then. Raimondo was elected to the General Treasurers office in 2010 and was sworn in in January 2011.

Attorney General Office Tasked With Oversight

In the law, the Attorney General's Office is tasked with "enforcing the provision of this act, and through any lawful designee, may bring such actions in court as are necessary to do so."

The Spokesperson for the Attorney General claims the General Treasurer has never filed the reports. Amy Kempe told GoLocalProv that no reports are on file and that none have been transmitted.

Kempe, in response, said, "The statute does not prescribe any penalties for failure to comply with the law, and therefore does not prescribe what action the Office of Attorney General may take for failure to comply with the law."

Law Requires Annual Reports

Public annual reports are required to be filed with the Attorney General's office and General Assembly - but were not on file at either location on Wednesday.
According to the Rhode Island state law, both the Attorney General's Office and Rhode Island General Assembly are required to receive annual "publicly available reports" that include a scrutinized companies list -- but as reported by Go Local, neither had reports on file, when specifically asked for the years 2010, 2011, and 2012 on Wednesday.

See law requirement below:

Section 5. Reporting.—

(a) The public fund shall file a publicly-available report to the Rhode Island general assembly and office of the attorney general that includes the scrutinized companies list within thirty (30) days after the list is created.

(b) Annually thereafter, the public fund shall file a publicly-available report to the Rhode Island general assembly and the office of the attorney general and send a copy of that report to the United States Presidential Special Envoy to Sudan (or an appropriate designee or successor) that includes:

(1) A summary of correspondence with companies engaged by the public fund under subdivisions 4(a)(2) and (a)(3);
(2) All investments sold, redeemed, divested, or withdrawn in compliance with subsection 4(b);
(3) All prohibited investments under subsection 4(c); and
(4) Any progress made under subsection 4(e).  


Timeline - Rhode Island Pension Reform

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