Skip to content
Home
>
News
>
Jim Hood, lobbyists to meet behind...

Jim Hood, lobbyists to meet behind closed doors

By: Magnolia Tribune - September 16, 2008

When the nation’s association of Democratic attorneys general meets here later this week it will largely be under a cloud of secrecy despite the fact that the event is open to non-Democrats and lobbyists.

The coordinator for the Democratic Attorneys General Association has declined to answer any questions about this weekend’s event and who is attending the organization’s Fall Policy Conference at the swanky Westin Savannah Harbor Golf Resort & Spa.

DAGA Executive Director Travis Berry said the event is closed to the press, and declined to share with LNL which AGs or even how many AGs plan to attend the two days of meetings and social gatherings.

“It’s closed to the press,” Berry said Monday. “There is no portion of (the event) that is open to the press.”

Asked which attorneys general would attend, Berry said, “We don’t discuss that.”

Legal Newsline has learned that of the nation’s 28 Democratic attorneys general, just nine are planning to attend the meeting.

They are: Thurbert Baker of Georgia, James “Buddy” Caldwell of Louisiana, Robert Cooper, Jr. of Tennessee, Roy Cooper of North Carolina, Doug Gansler of Maryland, Jim Hood of Mississippi, Patrick Lynch of Rhode Island, Stephen Six of Kansas and William Sorrell of Vermont.

According to an event agenda obtained by LNL, a group of political strategists, including Doug Sosnik, who was political director for President Bill Clinton during his second term, and DAGA’s senior political adviser Joe Eyer, will address conference attendees about state AG races.

Afterwards, attorneys general will have more than two hours of private, face-to-face time with conference attendees, including lobbyists and potential outside counsel, who can schedule 15-minute “meet-and-greet” meetings with specific AGs, the agenda indicates.

Legal Newsline
9/16/8

About the Author(s)
author profile image

Magnolia Tribune

This article was produced by Magnolia Tribune staff.