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Judge rules against Reveille

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INSPIRE TICKET

INSPIRE TICKET

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BY CLAIRE SULLIVAN @sulliclaire

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A Baton Rouge judge ruled against the Reveille editor-inchief on Thursday in a public records lawsuit, arguing that documents related to a 2019 internal investigation of an LSU employee are not subject to public record.

The decision comes after Reveille editor-in-chief Josh Archote sued LSU for the release of the records in January.

Archote and his lawyers, from the Tulane First Amendment Law Clinic in New Orleans, intend to appeal the decision.

The judge, Kelly Balfour of the 19th Judicial District Court, held that because access to the records had already been shot down in another case, McMakin v. LSU, in 2022, no one can seek those records in the future.

Archote’s lawyers argued that circumstances surrounding Abels and the 2019 police report are different now compared to when the McMakin case was decided, and that Archote’s reasons for seeking the records were related to the public’s interest in the case.

The court ruled in the McMakin case that the privacy of the

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