Petition Launched Asking Gov. Raimondo to Release 38 Studios Documents

GoLocalProv News Team

Petition Launched Asking Gov. Raimondo to Release 38 Studios Documents

Governor Gina Raimondo
A petition has been launched calling on Rhode Island Governor Gina Raimondo to release the documents of the criminal investigation of 38 Studios. In late July, Attorney General Peter Kilmartin - who was in the leadership with Gordon Fox and voted for the 38 Studios funding scheme - announced that after four years, there would be no indictments.

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Raimondo has stated Kilmartin should have recused himself from the investigation. 

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More than thirty leaders and civic groups have called for the release of the documents. The Governor's comments have been inconsistent on the issue of releasing the documents. She has implied that the documents should be released, but has refused to instruct the the head of the State Police to release the interview documents and the associated notes.

Recently, the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) released the interview files and notes of the agency's interview with Hillary Clinton.

Non-Responsive Response

On Thursday, the Rhode Island State Police released four CDs of media articles and copies of documents previously released by Judge Michael Silverstein from the 38 Studios Civil case, but failed to release any of the information requested by GoLocal in its Access to Public Records Act (APRA) request regarding the agency's null four-year criminal investigation into 38 Studios.

The open government groups (including Common Cause, League of Women Voters and RI ACLU) argued that there were compelling reasons for releasing the investigatory records that were gathered by the two agencies outside of the grand jury.

Noting that “of the 146 witnesses your agencies interviewed, only 11 were called before the grand jury,” the groups stated that there was “thus a wide range of independent information gathered by your agencies that would shed light on this incredibly important incident in Rhode Island history if you publicly released the information – which, under the Access to Public Records Act (APRA), you have the clear right to do.”

The letter noted that the State Police recently took that route following two highly publicized incidents – the Cranston parking ticket scandal and the controversial school resource officer “body slam” incident at Tolman High School in Pawtucket. “Surely the public deserves similar access to information about an investigation involving millions of taxpayer dollars,” the groups’ letter claimed.

 

 

Leaders, Groups Call for Release of 38 Studios Docs Following Criminal Investigaton

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