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The Public Records Officer Podcast

Podcast von Jamie Nixon

Englisch

Nachrichten & Politik

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The Public Records Officer Podcast Fighting for the People’s Right to Know.From public records battles to quiet cover-ups, from deleted chats to documents they hoped you’d never see... The Public Records Officer Podcast (PROP) exposes the ways power hides from the people it serves.Hosted by open government advocate, a former elected official, state government public information officer and communications director Jamie Nixon, this show pulls back the curtain on the tactics used by public agencies to avoid transparency, and highlights the citizens, journalists, and legal warriors fighting back.Season One investigates the ontologically shocking story of how Washington State agencies used Microsoft Teams to automatically delete public records after just seven days, raising questions of legality, accountability, and who gets to decide what the public has a right to see.Each episode blends documents, depositions, interviews, and digital trails with sharp commentary and a sense of civic urgency. Whether it’s a modified invoice, redacted emails, or a policy crafted to vanish before a subpoena hits... The PROP is here to shine a light where the law demands it.Featuring interviews with journalists, attorneys, and the officials who tried to sound the alarm before it was too late. The truth doesn’t expire in seven days.

Alle Folgen

18 Folgen

Episode Ep. 17 Are You Trying to Kill Me? Cover

Ep. 17 Are You Trying to Kill Me?

In this episode, Jamie breaks down the May 12, 2026 Seattle Times story [https://www.seattletimes.com/education-lab/complaint-alleges-lets-go-washington-violated-campaign-finance-laws/] about a Public Disclosure Commission complaint involving Brandi Kruse, Let’s Go Washington [https://drive.google.com/file/d/1OLS6vctCVNRwcjhajBXOup4yNz_y4lLr/view?usp=drive_link], and alleged unreported in-kind political advertising. But this is not just about Brandi. It is about a much bigger question: what happens when campaign-finance law collides with the modern influencer economy? The complaint alleges that Kruse’s repeated promotion of Let’s Go Washington initiatives may have provided reportable value to the campaign. Kruse responded by framing the complaint and related media coverage as an effort to ruin her reputation — or even get her killed. Jamie examines the actual complaint, Kruse’s response, the difference between protected political speech and reportable political advertising, and why public disclosure still matters when political advocacy happens through podcasts, social media, sponsored content, and online personalities. Also discussed: victimhood as brand management, the hypocrisy of crying defamation while labeling critics “stalkers,” [https://drive.google.com/file/d/1f9QGJ3XP6w-jSmXEYkmU39xAsrhfd8X8/view?usp=drive_link] and why “I believe in the cause” is not a campaign-finance reporting category. Support the show [https://coff.ee/thepublicrecordsofficer] Transcript + Source Docs: Get the full hyperlinked transcript and all documents referenced in this episode: thepublicrecordsofficer.com [https://www.thepublicrecordsofficer.com/ep-15-legislative-secrecy/] Sign up for updates: Join our mailing list for future episodes and investigations thepublicrecordsofficer.com [https://thepublicrecordsofficer.com/] Support the show: We’re powered by public records and public support. Buy us a coffee [https://coff.ee/thepublicrecordsofficer] https://coff.ee/thepublicrecordsofficer [https://coff.ee/thepublicrecordsofficer]  About WashCOG: The Washington Coalition for Open Government (WashCOG) fights for transparency and accountability in Washington State. Learn more: washcog.org [https://www.washcog.org/] Tip of the hat to the musicians who created the music used on the show: Alex Grohl [https://artlist.io/royalty-free-music/artist/alexgrohl/1571], Ian Post [https://artlist.io/royalty-free-music/artist/ian-post/161], Jakub Pietras [https://artlist.io/royalty-free-music/artist/jakub-pietras/1530], lumine wave [https://artlist.io/royalty-free-music/artist/lumine-wave/2589], Roberto Pravo [https://artlist.io/royalty-free-music/artist/roberto-prado/3442], Solis [https://artlist.io/royalty-free-music/artist/solis/216], ... [https://artlist.io/royalty-free-music/artist/the-magnetic-buzz/1844]

13. Mai 2026 - 32 min
Episode Ep. 16 No Legitimate Concern Cover

Ep. 16 No Legitimate Concern

When an Office of Financial Management [https://ofm.wa.gov/]public records officer complained in writing about requests from “West and Nixon,” [https://drive.google.com/file/d/1nfT236OLXBARpTe-VDiKREwBtW4dcjUY/view?usp=drive_link]she didn’t just vent about workload. She accused those requests of having “no legitimate concern,” suggested there should be ways to “tighten and restrict those particular types of requests,” and contrasted them with what she called “legitimate requests.”  In this episode, Jamie Nixon breaks down why that email matters, what request OFM was actually processing at the time, and why the request at issue was plainly in the public interest: records about the 2020 deletion of roughly 1.5 terabytes of Microsoft Teams chat data during the first summer of COVID. The episode also draws on the Washington Coalition for Open Government’s 2024 [https://www.washcog.org/your-right-to-know-report] report to argue that requesters are not the problem. The real problem is underinvestment, disorganization, and a government culture that treats accountability as the irritant instead of the point.  Expect AI-read public records, sharp commentary, and one public official’s bad Outlook decision becoming very public indeed.  Support the show [https://coff.ee/thepublicrecordsofficer] Transcript + Source Docs: Get the full hyperlinked transcript and all documents referenced in this episode: thepublicrecordsofficer.com [https://www.thepublicrecordsofficer.com/ep-15-legislative-secrecy/] Sign up for updates: Join our mailing list for future episodes and investigations thepublicrecordsofficer.com [https://thepublicrecordsofficer.com/] Support the show: We’re powered by public records and public support. Buy us a coffee [https://coff.ee/thepublicrecordsofficer] https://coff.ee/thepublicrecordsofficer [https://coff.ee/thepublicrecordsofficer]  About WashCOG: The Washington Coalition for Open Government (WashCOG) fights for transparency and accountability in Washington State. Learn more: washcog.org [https://www.washcog.org/] Tip of the hat to the musicians who created the music used on the show: Alex Grohl [https://artlist.io/royalty-free-music/artist/alexgrohl/1571], Ian Post [https://artlist.io/royalty-free-music/artist/ian-post/161], Jakub Pietras [https://artlist.io/royalty-free-music/artist/jakub-pietras/1530], lumine wave [https://artlist.io/royalty-free-music/artist/lumine-wave/2589], Roberto Pravo [https://artlist.io/royalty-free-music/artist/roberto-prado/3442], Solis [https://artlist.io/royalty-free-music/artist/solis/216], ... [https://artlist.io/royalty-free-music/artist/the-magnetic-buzz/1844]

20. März 2026 - 16 min
Episode Ep. 15 Legislative Secrecy Cover

Ep. 15 Legislative Secrecy

In this episode of The Public Records Officer Podcast, Jamie Nixon takes on one of the biggest transparency fights in Washington State: the Legislature’s push to keep its internal deliberations hidden from the public. After years of rhetoric about openness and restraint, courts have now handed lawmakers a powerful new shield — legislative privilege grounded in separation of powers. What does that mean in practice? More redactions, more withheld records, and less public access to the decisions being made in your name.  Jamie breaks down the recent appellate rulings, explains how this privilege is being used, and shows why the real-world result is a system where access to records can depend on which legislator you ask. He also examines a proposed constitutional amendment from Senators Jesse Solomon and Adrian Cortes that could give voters a chance to push back against this growing culture of secrecy.  This episode is about more than one court loss. It is about whether democracy can function when lawmakers claim the right to deliberate in secret while everyone else in government remains subject to public scrutiny. If you care about open government, public accountability, and the public’s right to know, this one matters. Support the show [https://coff.ee/thepublicrecordsofficer] Transcript + Source Docs: Get the full hyperlinked transcript and all documents referenced in this episode: thepublicrecordsofficer.com [https://www.thepublicrecordsofficer.com/ep-15-legislative-secrecy/] Sign up for updates: Join our mailing list for future episodes and investigations thepublicrecordsofficer.com [https://thepublicrecordsofficer.com/] Support the show: We’re powered by public records and public support. Buy us a coffee [https://coff.ee/thepublicrecordsofficer] https://coff.ee/thepublicrecordsofficer [https://coff.ee/thepublicrecordsofficer]  About WashCOG: The Washington Coalition for Open Government (WashCOG) fights for transparency and accountability in Washington State. Learn more: washcog.org [https://www.washcog.org/] Tip of the hat to the musicians who created the music used on the show: Alex Grohl [https://artlist.io/royalty-free-music/artist/alexgrohl/1571], Ian Post [https://artlist.io/royalty-free-music/artist/ian-post/161], Jakub Pietras [https://artlist.io/royalty-free-music/artist/jakub-pietras/1530], lumine wave [https://artlist.io/royalty-free-music/artist/lumine-wave/2589], Roberto Pravo [https://artlist.io/royalty-free-music/artist/roberto-prado/3442], Solis [https://artlist.io/royalty-free-music/artist/solis/216], ... [https://artlist.io/royalty-free-music/artist/the-magnetic-buzz/1844]

13. März 2026 - 39 min
Episode Ep. 14 Get It Gone 2: The Bureaucracy Strikes Back Cover

Ep. 14 Get It Gone 2: The Bureaucracy Strikes Back

In our last episode, we exposed the alleged destruction and withholding of public records inside OMWBE. This case was documented through emails, chats, and timelines of their Public Records Officer. This week, we widen the lens. The allegations didn’t disappear.  In this sequel episode, we break down the Attorney General’s stunning non-response to a credible felony report, the structural conflicts that leave public records officers defenseless, and the systemic incentives that now reward secrecy over compliance. We examine how the very institutions meant to enforce Washington’s transparency laws have quietly positioned themselves as defense counsel for the agencies accused of wrongdoing. If you care about public records, government accountability, whistleblower protections, or simply want to understand why Washington’s transparency system keeps failing, this episode walks you through the uncomfortable truth: there is no functioning enforcement mechanism for records-destruction felonies in this state. And the people who report them often pay the price. Full transcript [https://www.thepublicrecordsofficer.com/p/ep-14-get-it-gone-2-the-bureaucracy-strikes-back/] and all cited documents: thepublicrecordsofficer.com. Support the show [https://coff.ee/thepublicrecordsofficer] Transcript + Source Docs: Get the full hyperlinked transcript and all documents referenced in this episode: thepublicrecordsofficer.com [https://www.thepublicrecordsofficer.com/ep-15-legislative-secrecy/] Sign up for updates: Join our mailing list for future episodes and investigations thepublicrecordsofficer.com [https://thepublicrecordsofficer.com/] Support the show: We’re powered by public records and public support. Buy us a coffee [https://coff.ee/thepublicrecordsofficer] https://coff.ee/thepublicrecordsofficer [https://coff.ee/thepublicrecordsofficer]  About WashCOG: The Washington Coalition for Open Government (WashCOG) fights for transparency and accountability in Washington State. Learn more: washcog.org [https://www.washcog.org/] Tip of the hat to the musicians who created the music used on the show: Alex Grohl [https://artlist.io/royalty-free-music/artist/alexgrohl/1571], Ian Post [https://artlist.io/royalty-free-music/artist/ian-post/161], Jakub Pietras [https://artlist.io/royalty-free-music/artist/jakub-pietras/1530], lumine wave [https://artlist.io/royalty-free-music/artist/lumine-wave/2589], Roberto Pravo [https://artlist.io/royalty-free-music/artist/roberto-prado/3442], Solis [https://artlist.io/royalty-free-music/artist/solis/216], ... [https://artlist.io/royalty-free-music/artist/the-magnetic-buzz/1844]

9. Dez. 2025 - 30 min
Episode Ep. 13 Get It Gone: Anatomy of a Records Crime Cover

Ep. 13 Get It Gone: Anatomy of a Records Crime

What starts as a routine public records request at a small Washington agency detonates into one of the clearest documented cases of alleged records destruction in recent memory. In this episode, Jamie Nixon walks through the stunning internal messages, emails, and timelines surrounding the Office of Minority & Women’s Business Enterprises (OMWBE), where leadership allegedly ordered staff to delete Microsoft Teams posts specifically because of an active request — and then retaliated when their public records officer refused to play along. This is the story of Julie Bracken, a PRO who followed the law, preserved the evidence, and tried to warn her agency before the consequences spiraled. Instead, she found herself sidelined, overruled, isolated, and ultimately disciplined by the very people implicated in the misconduct. With primary documents, internal chat logs, and verbatim excerpts from Bracken’s notes, this episode dissects how a single deletion order grew into a full-blown culture of obstruction — and what it reveals about Washington’s fragile transparency infrastructure. Transcript with links to source materials found here. [https://www.thepublicrecordsofficer.com/p/ep-13-get-it-gone-anatomy-of-a-records-crime/]  If you care about accountability, ethics, or how easily public records can be erased in the shadows of bureaucracy, this is an episode you won’t forget. Support the show [https://coff.ee/thepublicrecordsofficer] Transcript + Source Docs: Get the full hyperlinked transcript and all documents referenced in this episode: thepublicrecordsofficer.com [https://www.thepublicrecordsofficer.com/ep-15-legislative-secrecy/] Sign up for updates: Join our mailing list for future episodes and investigations thepublicrecordsofficer.com [https://thepublicrecordsofficer.com/] Support the show: We’re powered by public records and public support. Buy us a coffee [https://coff.ee/thepublicrecordsofficer] https://coff.ee/thepublicrecordsofficer [https://coff.ee/thepublicrecordsofficer]  About WashCOG: The Washington Coalition for Open Government (WashCOG) fights for transparency and accountability in Washington State. Learn more: washcog.org [https://www.washcog.org/] Tip of the hat to the musicians who created the music used on the show: Alex Grohl [https://artlist.io/royalty-free-music/artist/alexgrohl/1571], Ian Post [https://artlist.io/royalty-free-music/artist/ian-post/161], Jakub Pietras [https://artlist.io/royalty-free-music/artist/jakub-pietras/1530], lumine wave [https://artlist.io/royalty-free-music/artist/lumine-wave/2589], Roberto Pravo [https://artlist.io/royalty-free-music/artist/roberto-prado/3442], Solis [https://artlist.io/royalty-free-music/artist/solis/216], ... [https://artlist.io/royalty-free-music/artist/the-magnetic-buzz/1844]

23. Nov. 2025 - 36 min
Super gut, sehr abwechslungsreich Podimo kann man nur weiterempfehlen
Super gut, sehr abwechslungsreich Podimo kann man nur weiterempfehlen
Ich liebe Podcasts, Hörbücher u. -spiele, Dokus usw. Hier habe ich genügend Auswahl. Macht 👍 weiter so

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