Quantcast

Judge To Bloomberg: Release Email Correspondence With Cathie Black

201104_cathieblack.jpg
Cathie Black (AP)
Are you dying to see how many emoticons former Schools Chancellor Cathie Black used in her thank-you emails to Mayor Bloomberg shortly before taking office? Thanks to a FOIA request and a judge's ruling, those puppies will be open for our perusal in 15 business days or less. Former Village Voice reporter, Sergio Hernandez, who's now with ProPublica, applied for the emails last year and was rebuffed twice by the city because "releasing them would violate someone's (although nobody said whose) privacy." According to the Daily News, in a ruling yesterday Judge Alice Schlesinger called that logic "particularly specious" because Black and her staff at Hearst were "de facto agents of the city."

Perhaps we'll see email chains of Black and Bloomberg dismissing any concerns on her expertise, or discussing the merits of David After Dentist. Either way, Judge Schlesinger wrote in her opinion, "As Ms. Black did not meet the credentialing requirements for the all important position of school chancellor, the public has the right to know what information about her employment history and qualifications was disclosed in the emails." Any "intensely personal" information in the emails "could easily be redacted."

A spokesperson for the city's Law Department said, "We are disappointed with the decision and are considering our legal options." Man they must have shared some embarrassing Groupons, huh?

Contact the author of this article or email tips@gothamist.com with further questions, comments or tips.

Comments [rss]

  • This is going to be very interesting - El Bloombito necesito un hiding place

  • FU Boy

    To the Bahamas!  

  • latinlad

    maybe we'll find something like  "you make me Chancellor me love you long time...me sucky sucky"  

  • Bernie_Geotz_Squirrel_Luv

    Just another court mandate the Mayor will ignore.
    Add this to the pile.

  • FU Boy

    Personally damaging to someone still in office, maybe? 

    Mwahahahaha!  I'm feeling giddy with the hope that someone found a way to grab Bloomberg by the figurative nuts.

  • What good does it do now? Everyone already consented to this with their vote.  You're stuck with it till 2013.

  • randomtransplant

    49 % to 51 % is hardly "everyone". 

  • FU Boy

    There is impeachment, or scandal so damning that an elected official steps down from his/her position.  Spitzer, for one, if you've forgotten.  And that wasn't about how he ran the state, but what he did on personal time.

    If this official correspondence shows favors or an improper arrangement to get a buddy a job, this could be a coffin nail for Bloomberg.

    You're never 'stuck' with someone.  There are options.

  • GalBklyn

    Actually - I never consented. 

    And am with FUboy. Pass the popcorn. 

blog comments powered by Disqus

send a tip

tips@gothamist.com