On Jan. 8, Office of Hawaiian Affairs Trustee Brandon Kaleiana Lee wrote an op-ed in the Honolulu Star-Advertiser entitled

NOTE: pick the correct link

In that article, Lee was reacting to State Auditor Les Kondo鈥檚 insistence that the OHA trustees turn over unredacted executive session minutes that apparently contain legal advice given by their hired counsel.

He contended that 鈥渋t is clear that such communications are clearly protected as part of the OHA board鈥檚 attorney-client privilege as a matter of longstanding U.S. Supreme Court constitutional law,鈥 and turned the matter into an indigenous peoples issue: 鈥淲hy is it when Native Hawaiians seek the same rights and protections to which everyone else is entitled, they are called protesters, are deemed uncooperative, or are accused of hiding something?鈥

This deserves an answer.

The answer starts with Hawaii Revised Statutes section 23-5(a): 鈥淭he auditor may examine and inspect all accounts, books, records, files, papers, and documents and all financial affairs of every department, office, agency, and political subdivision鈥︹

OHA OFfice of Hawaiian Affairs entrance.
The entrance to OHA’s offices on Nimitz Highway. Trustees cite attorney-client privilege in refusing to release documents to the state auditor. Cory Lum/Civil Beat/2019

Section 23-1 defines 鈥渄epartments, offices, and agencies鈥 to mean 鈥渁ll executive departments, boards, commissions, bureaus, offices, agencies, and all independent commissions and other establishments of the state government (excepting the legislature) and all quasi-public institutions and all courts which are supported in whole or in part by, or which handle state or public funds.鈥

So, if you are a department, office, or agency, and you handle public funds, then the auditor gets to see all, and I repeat 鈥渁ll,鈥 accounts, books, records, files, papers, and documents. In other words, if you are handling public money then it鈥檚 the auditor鈥檚 prerogative to see what is going on with it.

Flawed Reasoning

The attorney-client privilege protects confidential communications between an attorney and a client and protects against disclosure of those communications to a third party. It doesn鈥檛 prohibit disclosure to someone who is not a third party.

Suppose I was the store manager of the Paia branch of Tomco, a national retail store chain, and I consulted with an attorney on store business, receiving a memo from her as a result. If Tomco鈥檚 San Diego-based regional finance manager wanted to see the memo, he has the right to see it regardless of my wishes, and the attorney-client privilege would not stand in the way.

It would be a different story, however, if I hired the attorney myself and did not pay her with Tomco money.

The flaw with Trustee Lee鈥檚 reasoning is that he has a myopic perception of the 鈥渃lient.鈥

We the people, speaking through the Hawaii Constitution, created OHA (article XII, section 5), the Office of the Auditor (article VII, section 10), and the rest of state government. No government official, not even an elected one like Trustee Lee, has the authority to create a fiefdom unaccountable to the rest of government, or to the people of Hawaii who put that government in place.

This is not an indigenous peoples issue.

The same result, by the way, applies when public moneys and assets are dropped into a limited liability company owned by the agency. The limited liability company thus created is still a part of government and, as we found out from the courts recently, is subject to our Uniform Information Practices Act and other open records laws.

This is not an indigenous peoples issue. The same result would apply to any other agency.

Our state constitution says that the auditor will 鈥渃onduct post-audits of the transactions, accounts, programs and performance of all departments, offices and agencies of the State.鈥 That鈥檚 what the auditor is doing.

There are consequences for getting in the auditor鈥檚 way, and, barring a last-minute attitude adjustment, we will soon find out what they are.

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