Lawsuits and Rumors of Lawsuits
Another reader shares an anonymous tip: "Word on the street ... is that Linda, the manager that got fired, has already filed a lawsuit."
The same correspondent asks, "Is there an easy way to check Ramsey County and/or federal court filings against the city?" Give us your suggestions in the comments.
We have another closed session about litigation this evening, don't we? Anyone know if it's the same lawsuit topic as last week, or a different one?
The same correspondent asks, "Is there an easy way to check Ramsey County and/or federal court filings against the city?" Give us your suggestions in the comments.
We have another closed session about litigation this evening, don't we? Anyone know if it's the same lawsuit topic as last week, or a different one?
4 Comments:
At 9:48 AM, drawnLeftward said…
The agenda shows that the HR 'attorney' Bethel will be present. That narrows the field a bit, but it could be a new lawsuit - unlikely, who would sue Maplewood over an HR issue?
At 10:02 AM, Frostbrand said…
Haha.
It's like a murder mystery where everyone has a motive.
At 2:53 PM, Anonymous said…
Just a suggestion, once a complaint/lawsuit has been filed and all parties served, the information is considered public information. Interested persons could contact the civil division and simply ask if there has been anything filed naming the City of Maplewood as a defendant recently.
At 2:46 AM, Anonymous said…
The subject of attorney client closed council meetings is public information. Typically the governing body states a short summary of what issue they are meeting on and a brief summary of the general nature of the discussion.
For the conspiracy theorists, chill out and just ask the question to the council at the meeting. They can't try to bluff you by saying we are talking about person x when they are really talking about person y.
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