Travis Padgett, Appellant/cross-res. V Department Of Corrections, Res/cross-appellant

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedJune 25, 2019
Docket51081-2
StatusUnpublished

This text of Travis Padgett, Appellant/cross-res. V Department Of Corrections, Res/cross-appellant (Travis Padgett, Appellant/cross-res. V Department Of Corrections, Res/cross-appellant) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Washington primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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Opinion

Filed Washington State Court of Appeals Division Two

June 25, 2019

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

DIVISION II TRAVIS LEE PADGETT, No. 51081-2-II

Appellant/Cross-Respondent

v.

DEPARTMENT OF CORRECTIONS, UNPUBLISHED OPINION

Respondent/Cross-Appellant

SUTTON, J. — This appeal arises from inmate Travis Lee Padgett’s Public Records Act

request (PRA)1 to the Department of Corrections (DOC) for alleged PRA violations related to his

request for his telephone records. Padgett appeals, arguing that the trial court erred by failing to

find that the DOC acted in bad faith and denying his motion for PRA penalties. He also argues

that the trial court erred by not ruling that the DOC also violated the PRA when it failed to conduct

an adequate search for his account statement and balance record (ASB record). The DOC cross

appeals the trial court’s denial of its CR 26(g) motion for sanctions against Padgett.

We hold that DOC did not act in bad faith. Because the trial court concluded that DOC

had violated the PRA by failing to provide Padgett with the fullest assistance on his ASB record

request, we need not address whether DOC also violated the PRA by failing to conduct a

reasonable search for the ASB record because that issue is moot. Thus, we affirm the trial court’s

summary judgment order that DOC had violated the PRA and its order denying PRA penalties.

1 Ch. 42.56 RCW. No. 51081-2-II

We also hold that the trial court did not have a complete record at the time it made its CR 26(g)

ruling and remand to the trial court to make a CR 26 violation determination based on its January

12, 2018 order.

FACTS

I. BACKGROUND FACTS

A. THE INMATE TELEPHONE SYSTEM

Padgett has been housed at the DOC’s Coyote Ridge Corrections Center (CRCC) and the

Airway Heights Corrections Center.

The DOC provides telephone services to inmates incarcerated in its facilities which allows

the inmates to call their families, friends, and other individuals in the community. The DOC

contracts with a third party vendor, Global Tel Link Corporation (GTL), to operate the telephone

system and maintain the telephone records for inmates housed at DOC’s facilities. GTL provides,

installs, owns, and maintains the equipment and network associated with the inmate telephone

system. If a facility has problems, the DOC contacts GTL who then addresses the issue.

1. Telephone Logs

The GTL system contains the records and information about inmates’ telephone calls.

Inmates are required to use an individual personal identification number (IPIN) to place telephone

calls against a pre-paid telephone balance so that the inmate “can be identified in the event of a

security concern or a complaint from the public.” Clerk’s Papers (CP) at 617. An inmate’s IPIN

can be changed if lost, stolen, or compromised. The inmates themselves are responsible for the

security of their IPINs.

2 No. 51081-2-II

The GTL system has the capability to generate a report of all telephone calls associated

with an IPIN, which is referred to as a “phone log.” The phone log contains the following

information: the inmate’s name and DOC number, IPIN, date and time of initiation of the call,

duration of the call, telephone number to which the call was placed, the DOC facility from which

the call was placed, and the completion code or resolution of the call. When the phone log is

printed out by GTL an inmate’s IPIN is replaced with their DOC number.

2. Personal Allowed Number List

The GTL system contains the inmates’ personal allowed number (PAN) lists. The initial

PAN list is populated with telephone numbers of the first twenty-five successfully connected calls

placed by the inmate within the first fourteen days an inmate is housed at a DOC facility. Inmates

are responsible for establishing their own PAN list, but inmates are not provided printed copies of

their PAN list. If an inmate wants to change his PAN list, the inmate dials #57 from the facility

telephone to request the change. According to GTL, once an inmate changes his PAN list, that

inmate’s PAN list is updated or overwritten in the GTL system. Thus, the historical PAN

information as to what telephone numbers were previously on an inmate’s PAN list are not kept

within the GTL system. Accordingly, the DOC through the GTL system, only has access to current

PAN lists. Only limited DOC staff have access to the PAN lists.

3. ASB Record

The GTL system also contains financial information related to an inmate’s telephone

account, which is referred to as account statement and balance or ASB record. The GTL system

can generate a report containing the ASB record, including account telephone usage charges,

deposits, and withdrawals. The report also includes a telephone account summary that includes

3 No. 51081-2-II

the account’s balance, total deposits, total withdrawals, previous balance and deposits, total call

charges, and ending balance.

Inmates have direct access to their ASB record and can check it at any time through the

facility telephone by using their IPIN. Inmates can also check the cost of their last call through

telephone prompts while on the facility telephone. Only limited DOC staff can access the ASB

record to respond to an inmate’s complaint about their telephone account or if there is suspicion

that an inmate’s IPIN may have been compromised.

B. PRIOR LITIGATION AND DOC’S CHANGE IN POLICY—PHONE LOGS

DOC’s Public Records Officer Denise Vaughan issued a written guideline in June 2013 to

provide direction to DOC staff regarding how to process inmate PRA requests for their phone logs.

This guideline states that the phone logs are not public records unless the records were pulled from

the GTL system for use in the DOC’s business. This guidance was not intended to apply to other

GTL records related to the telephone system.

A number of inmates had previously filed lawsuits related to their PRA requests for phone

logs, including inmate Jeffrey R. McKee. McKee outlined a plan for use by other inmates to

litigate PRA cases for phone logs and collect attorney fees if the DOC did not provide the requested

phone logs. McKee was actively involved in litigation over inmate phone logs, and he met Padgett

after Padgett transferred to the CRCC in February 2015.

In 2013 and early 2014, the DOC received multiple lawsuits filed by inmates who had

spent time at the CRCC when they submitted their PRA requests for phone logs. In 2014, a

Franklin County Superior Court judge ruled that an inmate’s phone logs were public records. As

4 No. 51081-2-II

a result, the DOC changed its practice in February 2015 to direct DOC staff to begin retrieving

inmate’s phone logs from GTL when requested by inmates in PRA requests.

II. PADGETT’S PRA REQUEST

A. INITIAL REQUEST AND DOC’S INITIAL RESPONSE

Padgett kited2 the DOC’s Intelligence and Investigation Unit (IIU) staff to ask questions

about potential overcharges related to a telephone call. On December 15, 2015, Padgett submitted

a PRA request to the DOC’s public disclosure unit, which DOC received on December 21. In his

request, Padgett asked for three sets of records related to his inmate telephone records: his phone

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