Kudos to Knoxville News Sentinel reporter Jamie Satterfield on her truly excellent piece of investigative reporting today uncovering for the first time what many suspected, namely that Knox County Sheriff Jimmy "JJ" Jones and his inner circle were well aware of the criminal drug activity of a sitting judge.
Ms. Satterfield's new story is everything local journalism should be - with informed context, multiple interviews and sources, and skeptical inquiry toward authorities. The lengthy front page article lays complex information out clearly and unapologetically, without suggesting conclusions or wrapping facts in dramatic innuendo or bias. It's just a really solid, effective piece of investigative reporting. Thank you to the News Sentinel and Ms. Satterfield for the hard work and time that went into publishing a great piece of reporting.
Since reading this new story in the News Sentinel early this morning, I've published a new post over at Justice for Henry, laying out how the fresh info from Ms. Satterfield's reporting today brings the blatant mishandling by KCSO and DA Nichols of the investigation into my teenage son's death even closer to the circumstances around Judge Richard Baumgartner's case, as well as how the full picture of KCSO's failure to go after drug dealers in this community is truly starting to come into clear focus.
We're getting there.
-Katie Allison Granju
Knoxville,TN
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To whom does the TBI report?
To whom does the TBI report? Their website says they're an independent agency, but their director is appointed by the governor.
If there were an all out push to get the rest of the TBI report released, should it be directed toward the agency or governor? Does Burchett have any power in this equation?
With an apparently incestuous judiciary and complacent law enforcement, the answers as what's going on will have to come from an outside source. The TBI holds the keys to what voters should know, so how do the people that fund their service unlock their information?
The TBI answers to the
The TBI answers to the Governor, the State Attorney General, the District Attorneys General, the Supreme Court, and the Court of the Judiciary. They conduct investigations at the behest of any of those institutions. For example, the reason the TBI investigated Baumgartner was b/c Nichols recused his office and KPD and requested TBI investigation. Which is not conducive to the actions of somebody with something to hide, unless of course the TBI is also part of the conspiracy.
,or you wouldn't worry about
,or you wouldn't worry about the TBI results if you could keep them indefinitely under wraps using the ruse of an "ongoing investigation". Never mind the investigation was centered on a person whose judgment has long since been rendered.
As for something to hide, what's the DA's stance on the TBI report now?
My understanding is a
My understanding is the DA reversed their previous willingness to stipulate its contents at the Christian Newsom Motion for New Trial. They probably expected Blackwood to rule in their favor, which was obviously a serious miscalculation on their part. Still, the TBI file is part of that record now, and everybody on the defense side and in the appellate courts who wants to see it can (although the appeals court isn't interested yet). The DA has flipped on the issue of stipulating the file for purposes of the new onslaught of New Trial motions and possible retrials, which is an understandable tactical position to take. In and of itself it isn't suspicious. What people need to bear in mind is, the TBI is full of cops who conduct investigations and arrest people those investigations reveal to have violated the law. At the conclusion of their investigation in this case, they arrested Baumgartner. If anybody else had committed crimes that came to light in the course of that investigation, those people would have been arrested, too. The TBI is like the honey badger: It doesn't give a shit. It just investigates, makes arrests, and turns its file over to the A.G. As long as all this retrial litigation is going on, the process of opening the TBI file is going to be arduous. But eventually, everybody will see it.
Edit: That last sentence is incorrect. I did not know that TBI files are not subject to the Open Records Act even after they are closed. So much for that.
Satterfield reports that
Satterfield reports that McClain told her assigned TBI agent about a KCSO deputy that ignored her evidence. The agent attributed that to the officer getting above his "pay grade". I'd think many in law enforcement, on all levels, understand their "pay grade".
As for the report, I'm guessing it's going to be so arduous it won't happen before the next election for DA and Sheriff.
There are very significant
There are very significant issues of privacy and governmental power that are in play with regard to investigations. The idea that TBI files should be open to public inspection because they are created with public funds is at best simplistic. Were that to become policy, it would constitute a major expansion of state power and erosion of individual liberty.
Angry mobs do not make good policy, and anyone contemplating policy changes based on this particular episode needs to step back to first principles rather than just reacting to the case at hand.
The scenario to consider here
The scenario to consider here is the case where a person is investigated and no charges are brought. That person is still well within the realm of "presumed innocent," and would no doubt prefer to get past the experience without the general public having access to private details of his or her life that would be exposed in an open file.
Imagine the potential for intimidation if an innocent person could not only be made the subject of a police investigation, but also that, regardless of innocence, the details of that investigation would be guaranteed to be made public.
HIPPA
I realize that the information came from a second hand source and not the doctor - but it seems much of the detailed medical info should have been covered by HIPPA or at least privacy respected by the employee. Made me a little uneasy. I would have been OK with just a comment that there were medical reasons the judge had been prescribed the pills.
Otherwise - great article and kudos to Ms Satterfield.
http://www.knoxnews.com/news/
(link...)
If you believe that, we should at least now know there is apparently no Tennessee agency or court capable of letting voters know "who knew what when".
Chairman Hammond shouldn't waste his time with writing his letter to the State, the commission's request for help should be addressed to the FBI and/or the DOJ.