
A think tank founded and almost wholly funded by conservative mega-donor and North Carolina Deputy Budget Director Art Pope recently filed a broad Freedom of Information Act request seeking all emails and other records of a University of North Carolina law school professor and anti-poverty crusader over a monthlong period.
The Raleigh-based Civitas Institute wants the email correspondence, phone records and calendars of Gene Nichol, director of the UNC Center on Poverty, Work and Opportunity and a Moral Monday protest participant. It seeks Nicholsโ records from Sept. 14 through Oct. 25, the day the request was filed. Civitas submitted the FOIA request the week after Nichol wrote a newspaper column critical of the McCrory administration.
FOIA laws were designed to ensure government information is available to the public. But in recent years, requests from conservative groups for the records of academics in Virginia, Texas, Wisconsin and Michigan have raised questions whether FOIA is being used for politically motivated harassment.
โFor a crowd that talks so much about liberty, they sure love to shut people up,โ Nichol told Facing South.
Civitas, which was also behind the controversial database of Moral Monday arrestees, filed the information request 11 days after Nichol published a column in The News & Observer in which he called North Carolinaโs new election law imposing strict photo voter ID requirements and other limits on voting the โmost oppressive in the nationโ and likened Gov. Pat McCrory to โa 21st century successor to Maddox, Wallace and Faubus,โ referring to the segregationist governors of Georgia, Alabama and Arkansas.
Nicholโs column sparked an angry response from Civitas Executive Director Francis De Luca and Jane Shaw, director of the Art Pope-founded Pope Center for Higher Education Policy. In an Oct. 18 blog post at the Civitas website titled โAcademic Freedom or Shrill Partisanship?โ, they accused Nichol of going โover the top in his invective.โ
A nasty attack of this sort on a governor might be ignored if Gene Nichol were a fringe figure. But he is not. He is a law professor who receives $205,400 per year from North Carolina taxpayers.
A request for comment from De Luca, who submitted the FOIA request, was not immediately returned because he is traveling. Civitas played an important role in building support for the election law changes that Nichol criticized. De Luca is the former director of the North Carolina chapter of Americans for Prosperity, a conservative political advocacy group founded with the support of the billionaire brothers behind the Koch Industries oil and chemical conglomerate. He was recently appointed to the N.C. Ethics Commission.
Nichol said he is complying with Civitasโ information request, but the university is allowing him to go through the records and identify personal ones from family and others that should be excluded. He said his understanding is that UNC attorneys would then sort through the materials and determine what is privileged information such as trade secrets and commercial information and thus not required to be disclosed under the law. A request for comment left with the office of UNCโs counsel was not immediately answered.
The information request targeting Nichol is part of a broader pattern seen in recent years of conservative groups filing such requests against critics and ideological foes:
- In 2011, during heated protests over the conservative agenda of Wisconsinโs Republican Gov. Scott Walker, that stateโs GOP submitted a request for emails of University of Wisconsin environmental historian William Cronon. The request came two days after Cronon wrote a blog post criticizing the role of the American Legislative Exchange Council, a corporate-funded group that advances a pro-business agenda in the states, in promoting anti-public sector union efforts.
- That same year in Michigan, a free-market think tank called the Mackinac Center for Public Policy submitted FOIA requests to the Labor Studies Center at the University of Michigan, the Douglas A. Fraser Center for Workplace Issues at Wayne University in Detroit, and Michigan State Universityโs School of Human Resources and Labor Relations. The group sought information on professorsโ responses to the situation in Wisconsin.
- Also in 2011, the American Tradition Institute (ATI), a conservative think tank that has worked closely with Art Popeโs network of think tanks to discredit climate science, submitted a request for the emails of Michael Mann, a former University of Virginia professor and leading climate scientist whoโs now at Penn State. That request followed an unsuccessful effort by Virginia Attorney General Ken Cuccinelli, another climate science skeptic, to obtain documents related to Mannโs grants when he was on the UVA faculty from 1999 to 2005. UVA fought ATIโs request, and the courts ultimately ruled that the documents the group was seeking do not have to be disclosed under an exemption in the stateโs public records law covering scholarly communications.
- ATI also sought communications of climate scientists at Texas A&M and Texas Tech, with a particular interest in their correspondence with journalists. In addition, the group used FOIA to target NASA climatologist James Hansen and Gavin Schmidt, co-founder with Mann of the RealClimate blog.
However, there are differences of scope between some of these earlier information requests and that submitted by Civitas for Nicholโs communications. The request from the Wisconsin GOP for Crononโs correspondence sought only those emails that contained specific keywords including โRepublican,โ โScott Walker,โ โrecallโ and โcollective bargaining.โ Mackinacโs requests in Michigan were limited to emails that contained keywords including โScott Walker,โ โWisconsinโ and โMaddow,โ referring to MSNBC news personality Rachel Maddow.
The Civitas request seeks all of Nicholโs emails during a specific time period. This could include communications from students having difficulties and people heโs interviewed as part of his anti-poverty work. Civitas has submitted information requests related to Nicholโs work in the past, he reported, but they were tied to specific events.
โThis one is just to me, and itโs so encompassing,โ he said.
This article appeared in print with the headline โNichol-ed and dimed.โ


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