Linda Daves, chairwoman of the N.C. Republican Party, is calling on Attorney General Roy Cooper to investigate claims that the governor's office directed state officials to destroy public records.
Daves sent a letter to Cooper today asking that he investigate claims by Debbie Crane, who was fired recently as the chief spokeswoman for the state Department of Health and Human Services, that she and her counterparts at other state agencies were instructed to destroy e-mails they sent to the governor's office.
Daves also cited the comments this week by Gov. Mike Easley, a Democrat, that he tossed away a letter he received from Carmen Hooker Odom, the former head of DHHS.
"The public records laws are a critical tool in making certain that a window into government is open so that we know our elected representatives are working judiciously on our behalf," Daves wrote in the letter.
Officials with Cooper's office could not immediately be reached for comment.
Update: Noelle Talley, a spokeswoman for Cooper, said the attorney general's office "has been examining these issues" since The N&O first raised the issue. She said that "comments now would be premature" because of the possibility of litigation over the matter.
But Talley, who said Cooper has not yet received the letter, indicated she was not surprised that Daves turned to Cooper for help. "Of course they would turn to Attorney General Cooper, who wrote most of the state's public records laws and is a leader on open government," she said.




Re: N.C. GOP calls for records inquiry
Sunshine day my A**!