Rick Scott is just teflon so far but thanks to the Miami Herald and Tampa Bay Times, they are trying very hard to make his corruption stick somewhere. The 10 times Pultizer Prize winner, The Tampa Bay Times has filed suit joined by the Miami Herald against Rick Scott regarding his violation of the Sunshine Law and his secret emails.
Several media groups have joined the suit against Scott. This man thinks he can plead the 5th over and over and over.
http://www.tampabay.com/...
This Scott bunch has a lot to hide. We are definately sitting under corruption. People don't hide that which is legal. We need help down here with people standing against this administration and The Marti's diary was very timely. We did not vote for this crook and we don't deserve him.
Come on Republicans, run him for president... What do you party leaders know also?
I mean he is twice elected governor of a big state like Florida !
He is a tea party favorite !
He wears his navy hat everywhere !
Doesn't he belong in the presidential clown car with Walker?
He can bankroll his own campaign.
What do you RNC people really know about this guy? Answer the question Conservatives...Why is Scott not being run for president? Afraid of what he has hidden?
News media is digging for those answers and you all know something or he would be right up there with Scott Walker and Jeb in the clown car.
The media outlets' emergency motion, filed in state court Monday, focuses squarely on Scott's controversial record in maintaining public records. They cited the mass deletions of emails by Scott's transition team in the hectic weeks that preceded his taking office in January 2011 and a policy by Scott's office that allows employees to subjectively destroy records they consider "transitory" and not subject to the state public records law.
"The governor has had what can best be described as a series of unfortunate incidents when it comes to preserving records that he was required by law to preserve," wrote the attorney for the plaintiffs, Andrea Flynn Mogensen of Sarasota. She wants a court-ordered inventory of all systems and content to be preserved during the lawsuit and trial.
More than a dozen media outlets, including the Tampa Bay Times and Miami Herald, filed suit against Scott and all three Cabinet members this month, accusing them of violating Florida's Sunshine Law in the ouster of a top state law enforcement official in December. Other plaintiffs include St. Petersburg lawyer Matthew Weidner and the Florida Society of News Editors