The agency used to do the search itself for free if you knew to call and ask. Now, you have to pay $1,000 a month for a subscription to look up a person’s name on the public database.

When Gov. Josh Green recently nominated Honolulu attorney Vladimir Devens to a seat on the Hawaii Supreme Court, he failed to make public one important fact: Devens had for years served as the director a powerful political action committee that had helped put Green in office.

That information became public knowledge only after Devens was approved by the Senate Judiciary Committee and confirmed by the full Senate. His leadership role with the Be Change Now PAC — affiliated with Pacific Resource Partnership — was never mentioned and the nominee was never asked about it.

When the relationship was revealed in a Civil Beat story days after the confirmation, Green’s office defended the lack of transparency, saying the information was publicly available in the files of the Hawaii Department of Commerce and Consumer Affairs, where Be Change Now is registered. 

Devens 鈥渉as made his past experiences and affiliations completely transparent,鈥 Green鈥檚 office said, citing the DCCA filings.

US Post Office / King Kalakaua Building located on Merchant Street.
Hawaii’s Department of Commerce and Consumer Affairs Business Registration Divisions on Merchant Street maintains a database of businesses including executives and officers, but the ability of people to search registrations by business officer and executive names is limited to those who pay $1,000 a month for a subscription to the database. (Cory Lum/Civil Beat/2022)

There鈥檚 just one problem with that explanation: It鈥檚 nearly impossible to search DCCA鈥檚 business registrations by a person鈥檚 name. Under DCCA鈥檚 system, finding Devens鈥 connection to Be Change Now would require going through hundreds, perhaps thousands, of registrations on the agency鈥檚 site.

Such a disclosure might meet a technical or legalistic definition of 鈥渄isclosure,鈥 said Camron Hurt, program manager of Common Cause Hawaii. But Hurt questioned the adequacy of such a disclosure when it would have been nearly impossible for the average person to find. 

鈥淚 don鈥檛 think it鈥檚 a fair explanation,鈥 he said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 not an example of a government acting in good faith.鈥

Hawaii Chose Not To Allow The Public To Search By Name

Civil Beat randomly checked other state business records sites and found more than a dozen other states that let the public do such searches.听These include western states like聽,听,听听补苍诲听.听鈥檚 website allows the public to do executive name searches but charges a $3 fee.

Other states allowing such searches include聽, ,听,听,听,听,听听补苍诲听. Plug a person鈥檚 name into these state search engines and it鈥檚 possible to see business entities for which the person serves as an officer, member, director or agent.

DCCA considered allowing the public to search business registrations by officer name when it set up its online system, says Russell Castagnaro, former president of the Hawaii Information Consortium, which established the online business registration system in the early 2000s. 

But Hawaii opted not to do that, Castagnaro said.

鈥淭hat capability to do a search for officers 鈥 that was something a lot of people had a lot of discomfort with,鈥 he said.

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The concerns involved issues related to privacy and worries that people could be defrauded if such information was readily available, he said.

Also troublesome was the idea that a person鈥檚 connection to a business would be subject to public scrutiny even after the business had been dissolved, he said.

Instead, DCCA opted to make such searches feasible, but only for DCCA staff, Castagnaro said. A member of the public could get the information, but DCCA would have to do the search.

Another option, he said, was to let the public buy the entire database.

鈥淎nybody who buys that has access to it,鈥 Catagnaro said.

Subscriptions Cost $1,000 Per Month

In the past Honolulu lawyer Jim Wright regularly availed himself of DCCA鈥檚 executive name searches. Such research was typically done by DCCA staff for free and was a routine and important step in conducting due diligence related to legal matters, Wright said.

That included doing things like looking for assets that parties might be trying to hide, and to identify actual or potential conflicts with law firm clients, he said.

But earlier this year, Wright learned DCCA wouldn鈥檛 do that anymore.

鈥淲e are unable to search by persons’ name due to our office regulations,鈥 Emily Wen, of DCCA鈥檚 Business Registration Division wrote in an Oct. 3 email after Wright asked for information about two individuals. 鈥淵ou may search based on the business name on the Hawaii Business Express website at .鈥

鈥淚 was really surprised,鈥 Wright said. 鈥淚 thought, 鈥榃ow this is a big deal.鈥欌

William Nhieu, a spokesman for DCCA, wouldn’t comment on Castagnaro’s and Wright’s assertions that the agency in the past would conduct searches based on an officer or executive’s name.

鈥淲e are not able to verify or validate that,鈥 he said, and added that the agency can perform such searches but does so only for law enforcement, not the general public.

In addition, he said, a person can pay $1,000 a month for access to the database, which is updated weekly. A subscriber can search registrations by officer name, he said.

DCCA鈥檚 lack of transparency has implications beyond lawyers doing due diligence. The agency鈥檚 opacity also can shroud the connections of government officials, and is far less transparent than other states. For instance, plug the name 鈥淪aban鈥 into , and you can see a list of businesses connected to , University of Alabama football coach Nick Saban, and his wife Terry.

In Hawaii, finding what businesses public offcials are connected to is considerably harder.

Sen. Donovan Dela Cruz, left, and DBEDT Deputy Director Dane Wicker, right, own a business together. But the connection would be difficult to discover unless someone already knew the company’s name. (Anthony Quintano/Civil Beat/2018)

Making the Wicker-Dela Cruz Connection

Consider, for example, Dane Wicker, the deputy director of the Department of Business, Economic Development and Tourism. A financial disclosure required by state ethics laws shows that in addition to a state salary of $100,000 to $150,000, Wicker earned or received $10,000 to $25,000 from Wicker Enterprises LLC. 

Type 鈥淲icker Enterprises LLC鈥 into DCCA鈥檚 business search site, however, and all you can see is that Wicker is the agent and sole manager of the LLC. There鈥檚 no way to search deeper — to see, for instance, what companies Wicker or his Wicker Enterprises are connected to.

Wicker Enterprises is a partner with Wicker鈥檚 former boss, Hawaii Senate Ways and Means Committee Chairman Donovan Dela Cruz, in a tea company called Kilani Brew LLC. But the only way to see the connection between the state鈥檚 second-highest economic development official and the senator who controls the state鈥檚 finances is to search for Kilani Brew on the DCCA site.

鈥淚f you can鈥檛 search by officer name, you cannot identify business associations,鈥 Wright said. 鈥淎nd that makes it impossible to vet people, but also to be fully informed about who you鈥檙e dealing with.鈥

There are some services that acquire the entire business registration database and allow customers to conduct searches by executive and officer name, Wright said. But the services require expensive subscriptions, he said, and some aren鈥檛 available to the general public.

Wicker and Dela Cruz did not respond to requests for comment.

Honolulu attorney Vlad Devens, left, was director of a political organization that donated more than $1.5 million to Gov. Josh Green’s political campaigns in recent years before Green, center, nominated Devens to be a Hawaii Supreme Court justice this year. Devens’ connection to Green’s major contributor was largely hidden, limited to a business registration that is difficult for the public to find. (Chad Blair/Civil Beat/2023)

The Elusive Devens-Green Connection

In Devens鈥 case, the governor never mentioned the connection , although Green did share that Devens was a director for the nonprofit Crime Stoppers Honolulu, Inc. and a former police officer.

Devens also left his connection to Be Change Now off the resume that was given to the Senate Judiciary Committee before his confirmation hearing.

In fact, Devens鈥 connection to Be Change Now was made public only when Civil Beat published an article based on a confidential tip. A business name search using Be Change Now, not Devens鈥 name, corroborated the tip.

Common Cause鈥檚 Hurt said all this should have been plainly disclosed to the public before Devens鈥 confirmation — and not just buried in a business registration that most people have no idea how to access.

He said it鈥檚 important to know more about why DCCA won鈥檛 let the public search business registrations by officer name.

鈥淣ot letting the DCCA filing be accessible to the public without adequate reasoning only fans the flames of the idea that the government works from within an exclusive circle that prefers to keep things behind closed doors,鈥 Hurt said.

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