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Gov. Rick Scott won't show for deposition but will attend fundraiser instead

 
If he fails to submit to the deposition, Gov. Rick Scott could be held in contempt and ordered to pay damages.
If he fails to submit to the deposition, Gov. Rick Scott could be held in contempt and ordered to pay damages.
Published Oct. 24, 2014

TALLAHASSEE — Gov. Rick Scott is planning not to appear today for a deposition in a lawsuit he filed in California to block the release of information about Google email accounts used by him and his executive staff.

Attorney Steven R. Andrews was prepared to put the governor under oath in Tallahassee, but Scott's communications director, Frank Collins, said Thursday that "there is not going to be a deposition tomorrow." Scott's lawyers asked the judge to quash the deposition but, as of late Thursday, they hadn't received an answer.

Scott is instead expected to attend a fundraiser at the Biltmore in Coral Gables, featuring former Gov. Jeb Bush, U.S. Sen. Marco Rubio and Lt. Gov. Carlos Lopez-Cantera.

However, if the governor is a no-show for a deposition in a case he initiated, it may not be without consequences.

According to California's rules of civil procedure, the governor must submit to the deposition today unless he has received the court's permission to change the date, said Walter Clark, a trial lawyer who practices in Southern California.

If Scott fails to submit to the deposition, the judge could hold him in contempt and make him pay damages, according to California law.

"You can't just not show up at a deposition and say we'll talk about it later," Clark said. "You have to ask a court for relief."

The governor filed the lawsuit in September in a Santa Clara County court in an attempt to prevent Google from releasing information about who and when the private Gmail accounts used by Scott and two staff aides were created.

Andrews claims that Scott set up the gov.rls@gmail.com account to circumvent the state's public records law. When the governor refused to turn over the information, Andrews got a Tallahassee court to approve a subpoena to seek the information from Google. Circuit Court Judge Charles A. Francis also ordered the governor to stop fighting the request.

Scott then hired private Tallahassee attorney Pete Dunbar and a California law firm to challenge the subpoena. After the state spent nearly $100,000 on a Jacksonville attorney to fight the release of records, Scott's staff said last week that the governor will no longer use taxpayer funds as he pursues the California lawsuit.

The subpoena asks Google to turn over documents that show when the Gmail accounts were created, who created them and which computers were used. Andrews has also scheduled depositions for next week for two of Scott's former aides, Brad Piepenbrink and Sarah Hansford, to counter the lawsuit against the subpoena.

Scott campaign spokesman Greg Blair said the deposition was never on the governor's calendar because "a deposition is not scheduled just because Steven Andrews taps his heels and tries to make it so. All sides have to agree to a date before saying it is 'scheduled.' "

Andrews disagreed and pointed to the California law that requires the governor to seek a court's permission to stop the deposition.

"Rick Scott doesn't respect the law of Florida, so why should he respect California law?" Andrews said. "To get depos from guys like him, you normally have to file five motions and defend an appeal to get him in the witness chair. So I guess I am saying I am not surprised he is not showing up. Let's face it, he sued me in California and is dodging his deposition. Typical."

Dunbar could not be reached for comment, but the governor's California lawyer has asked for a Nov. 7 hearing on the motion to quash the subpoena. The court has scheduled the hearing for Nov. 21.

According to the governor's schedule, Scott has no plans to be in Tallahassee as he continues his re-election campaign with a multicity bus tour scheduled through the next week.