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Facing a class-action lawsuit, Oregon DHS subpoenas senator鈥檚 emails before she testifies

Sen. Sara Gelser Blouin chairs a hearing in the Oregon Legislature on Sept. 28, 2023.
Ben Botkin
/
Oregon Capital Chronicle
Sen. Sara Gelser Blouin chairs a hearing in the Oregon Legislature on Sept. 28, 2023.

The agency has subpoenaed nine years of state Sen. Sara Gelser Blouin鈥檚 correspondence with constituents, journalists and even Paris Hilton.

Oregon Department of Human Services attorneys have subpoenaed nine years of state Sen. Sara Gelser Blouin鈥檚 correspondence with hundreds of people, including foster children, lawyers, journalists and even celebrity Paris Hilton.

The agency鈥檚 surfaced last week in the federal class-action lawsuit filed against the Oregon Department of Human Services on behalf of Oregon foster children in 2019 by Disability Rights Oregon and A Better Childhood, a national advocacy organization. The lawsuit alleges the state has failed children in the foster care system in myriad ways, such as placement of children in hotels and other inadequate, abusive or unsafe settings. If successful, the lawsuit would force the state to make systemic policy changes in how it takes care of foster children.

Gelser Blouin, D-Corvallis, is set to testify on behalf of the plaintiffs as a witness in the case, which is scheduled to go to trial in Eugene in two weeks. For years, Gelser Blouin, chair of the Senate Human Services Committee, has been a longtime advocate for vulnerable children and has frequently proposed and championed legislation to force the state鈥檚 foster care and child welfare systems to improve their care.

鈥淚 think it鈥檚 shocking for lawyers for a state government agency to target a sitting state legislator in this way and try and intimidate her from testifying,鈥 said Tom Stenson, deputy legal director for Disability Rights Oregon.

A spokesperson for the Oregon Department of Human Services didn鈥檛 immediately respond to a request for comment.

The state has spent years haggling over what documents plaintiffs can access and trying to get the case thrown out at a cost to Oregon taxpayers of $18 million as of February. And in its latest move: On April 24, the state鈥檚 private attorneys in the case subpoenaed Gelser Blouin for what鈥檚 likely to be thousands of pages of her correspondence, including emails and texts, dating to January 2015.

The request has asked for correspondence with current and former foster children, advocates, attorneys for the plaintiffs, their paralegals and support staff and others, such as court-appointed special advocates for children, physicians and social workers. The Oregon Department of Human Services also wants to see her communications with reporters for Oregon Public Broadcasting and The Oregonian/OregonLive which have written extensively about problems in the foster care system. The news organizations did not immediately respond to a request for comment on the subpoena by mid-day Tuesday.

The subpoena also requested Gelser Blouin鈥檚 communications with Paris Hilton, a well-known celebrity and national advocate for children鈥檚 issues.

In an interview, Gelser Blouin said she doesn鈥檛 believe the records contain surprises for the agency because she passes any concerns she gets to the state child welfare.

As for Paris Hilton, Gelser Blouin said she鈥檚 visited with her about policy and has met with her while on trips to Washington, D.C. But Gelser Blouin said the lawsuit isn鈥檛 something that has ever come up. Gelser Blouin praised Hilton鈥檚 advocacy on issues like appropriate care for children in congregant facilities.

In 2021, in support of a bill to regulate child restraints before Gelser Blouin鈥檚 Senate Human Services Committee and shared her experiences of physical and emotional abuse while living in youth residential facilities as a teenager. In her account, Hilton spoke about how she was handcuffed and taken to a facility.

鈥淧aris and I have spent a lot of time talking about policy in general 鈥 not necessarily Oregon policies,鈥 Gelser Blouin said. 鈥淚鈥檝e never talked about this case with her.鈥

鈥楾ry and distract people鈥

Stenson, with Disability Rights Oregon, said the agency鈥檚 pursuit of emails with Paris Hilton are a sign that DHS has nothing to show the public that points to progress with the foster care system.

鈥淚f DHS had real successes, like real tangible successes, to point to, they鈥檇 be talking about all their successes,鈥 he said. 鈥淲hen you don鈥檛 have a good case, you try and distract people. You try and throw out these other stories. You try and make it about whether Senator Gelser Blouin is emailing Paris Hilton.鈥

Gelser Blouin said she鈥檒l comply with all legally appropriate requests for records and is searching for a private attorney to help her respond to the subpoena.

鈥淢eanwhile, my office is searching for potentially responsive records spanning dozens of individuals, children, attorneys, media outlets and other entities over the past nine years so that I am ready to comply with any parts of the subpoena the court deems should move forward,鈥 Gelser Blouin said in a statement. She said the lawyers also sent her office a separate public records request, which will also be processed.

The plaintiffs have filed a motion to quash the subpoena, calling it a last-minute attempt to harass a witness and not a legitimate attempt to get evidence.

鈥淚t鈥檚 just a big fishing expedition to try and embarrass the senator to try and make it hard for her and to shift the narrative this case away from 鈥楢re kids safe? Are kids getting the services they need? Are they finding safe places to live?鈥欌 Stenson said.

A judge has not yet ruled on the motion.

If the subpoena is successful, everything will be due by 9 a.m. May 10, slightly more than two weeks after Gelser Blouin received the subpoena. At that time, Gelser Blouin is ordered to produce the records at the Portland office of Markowitz Herbold, the private law firm representing the state. That鈥檚 also just three days before the trial starts.

Ben Botkin covers justice, health and social services issues for the Oregon Capital Chronicle. Ben Botkin has been a reporter since 2003, when he drove from his Midwest locale to Idaho for his first journalism job. He has written extensively about politics and state agencies in Idaho, Nevada and Oregon.