Professional Documents
Culture Documents
The complaint filed against Van Meteren, which ultimately resulted in the Commission fining
him $7,500, was the first and only such complaint to be filed against a private citizen under an
obscure 1974 law. Throughout the complaint and hearing process, Van Meteren continued to
assert that speaking publicly about his complaint against Umbarger amounted to constitutionally
protected free political speech. The Commission refused to accept Van Meteren’s defense and
dismissed the case law cited by Van Meteren’s legal team.
Only after Van Meteren filed an appeal in Shawnee County District Court did the Ethics
Commission seek to determine if his claims of constitutional protection had merit. Kansas
Attorney General Steve Six was retained by the Commission for the appeals process. Shortly
after taking the case, Six advised the Commission that they had acted illegally and had, in fact,
violated Van Meteren’s right to free speech. As a result, the Commission was forced to reverse
itself, vacating the order and fine that it had levied against Van Meteren.
This letter is Van Meteren’s attempt to seek reimbursement for the legal expenses he incurred
while defending himself against the Commission’s unconstitutional actions. It spells out some of
the egregious actions of the Commission that led to their order being overturned.
Attorney Ryan Kriegshauser, who represented Van Meteren during the hearing process, will
address the Commission at 1:00 PM tomorrow, July 22, 2009, regarding the details of this
demand letter. He is expected to expand on the damaging aspects of the Commission’s decision.
Members of the press and public with an interest in free speech are encouraged to attend.
The meeting will be held in the Board of Agriculture Hearing Room on the 4th Floor of the Mills
Building located at 109 SW 9th Street in downtown Topeka (one floor down from the Ethics
Commission office).
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July 20, 2009
Please consider this letter as my client Kris Van Meteren’s formal demand for
payment from the Kansas Governmental Ethics Commission to compensate him for
actual damages suffered at the Commission’s hands for its unconstitutional and illegal
prosecution of him in Complaint No. 424. This letter is addressed directly to the
Commissioners at the behest and with the permission of Commission counsel Judy
Moler, who is copied on this correspondence.
The facts of this matter are as follows. On September 15, 2008, Mr. Van Meteren
filed a complaint against Senator Dwayne Umbarger with the Kansas Governmental
Ethics Commission. While the Commission appeared uninterested in the clear errors in
Senator Umbarger’s campaign finance reports (errors which were serendipitously
discovered and remedied by Senator Umbarger immediately after they were initially
brought to the Commission staff’s attention), the Commission was anxious to prosecute
my client for exercising his First Amendment rights to freely discuss this matter of clear
public policy implication with the press.
The Commission filed its own complaint against Mr. Van Meteren (Complaint
No. 424) on October 22, 2008, accusing him of speaking to the press and alleging that
such speech was criminal in nature. See Findings of Fact, ¶ 8 (Feb. 18, 2009). Mr. Van
Meteren never attempted to hide the fact that he had discussed this matter with the press.
In fact, Mr. Van Meteren positively asserted his First Amendment rights to do so. The
Commission brushed aside such constitutional rights and pursued its prosecution with
vigor, going so far as to harass members of the press and obtain sworn statements from
reporters.
Mr. Van Meteren was forced to retain counsel who subsequently filed a Motion to
Dismiss and argued it before the Commission. The Motion to Dismiss clearly set forth
the governing law in this matter: “There is little to no argument that confidentiality
Caleb Stegall Robert A. Fox
PRINCIPAL OF COUNSEL
At oral argument on Mr. Van Meteren’s motion, the Commission was openly
disdainful of the constitutional protections afforded free speech. This inexplicable
disdain was carried over to the Commission’s subsequent Order. In its Order of February
18, 2009, the Commission held that Mr. Van Meteren’s political speech was illegal and
subjected him to a civil fine imposed of $7,500 and, as Ms. Williams made certain to
mention to Mr. Carpenter of the Topeka Capital Journal, possible criminal sanction as
well. The Commission entered this finding with nary a backwards glace at the
Constitution or what is perhaps its most cherished right—the right to free political
speech. This alone represents a staggering display of hubris on the part of the
Commission.
The Commission justified its decision by reference to one case—and did not
discuss a single other case on this most important of rights—Nichols v. Kansas
Governmental Ethics Commission. This case did not even deal with the issue before the
Commission, but rather with the propriety of sealing a record.
As a result of this decision, Mr. Van Meteren was forced to expend further
resources to file his judicial appeal of the Commission’s blatantly unconstitutional order.
That appeal was filed, and in response, apparently for the first time, the Commission
sought representation by the Kansas Attorney General. This fact, too, demonstrates the
cavalier attitude and arrogance with which the Commission had, to this point, handled
this matter. In spite of the claims by Mr. Van Meteren and his legal counsel from the
earliest days of this case that his right to free speech was in danger of being infringed and
in spite of the fact that the Commission announced that it was taking the extraordinary
step of allowing itself an extra month to consider his claims, apparently at no time in the
five months leading up to the issuance of the order fining Mr. Van Meteren did the
Commission seek to determine, either from the Attorney General or any other
constitutional authority, whether his claims of constitutional protection had merit. This is
appalling, especially in light of the fact that a majority of the Commissioners are
attorneys.
After a review of the state of the law regarding such confidentiality rules showing
that courts routinely have held the application of such rules against complaining parties to
be unconstitutional, the Attorney General then dismissed the Commission’s reliance on
the Nichols case as, essentially, a mere pretext used by the Commission to reach its
desired result—in complete contravention of the constitutionally protected rights of Mr.
Van Meteren. As a result of this letter from the Attorney General, the Commission
vacated its Feburary 18, 2009 Order. See Commission Order (May 13, 2009).
Mr. Van Meteren intends to pursue this course of action, however, it is our intent
to allow the Commission to do the right thing before proceeding with litigation. The
Commission should immediately admit its fault and make Mr. Van Meteren whole, at
least with respect to his direct and measurable costs associated with clearing his name.
(This will not, and cannot, compensate him for the harm to his reputation that this
Commission has caused, however, Mr. Van Meteren is willing to forego such claims in
an effort to put this unseemly episode behind him.) Those costs amount to the nearly
$17,500 in attorney fees which Mr. Van Meteren has incurred.
1
The Commission and commissioners may additionally be subject to liability in state court for malicious
prosecution. See K.S.A. § 25-4162 and § 46-261.
As such, Mr. Van Meteren formally submits his claim and demand for payment
from the Commission in the amount of $17,500 to recompense him for the actual, direct,
and foreseeable damages he has tangibly suffered as a result of the Commission’s illegal
actions. This offer of settlement shall remain open for 30 days.
Caleb Stegall