Undersheriff Blake Richards Graduation

ASOTIN COUNTY, WA – The paper trail is now a confession. Newly unredacted emails, court filings, and public records obtained by the LCV Blotter reveal a coordinated effort by Asotin County officials to hide the use of taxpayer money for the personal legal defense of Superior Court Judge Brooke Burns. The evidence includes a proposed “retroactive retainer agreement,” a sham special deputy appointment, false statements to the Washington State Auditor, and a judge whose father sits on the county commission that controls the budget. The case, Switzer v. Asotin County (Columbia County Superior Court No. 26‑2‑00027‑07), began as a routine Public Records Act (PRA) request. It has since exploded into a sprawling scandal involving potential criminal violations of unauthorized practice of law, official misconduct, and first‑of‑their‑kind digital obstruction tactics. The Retroactive Confession On January 9, 2026, Amanda Daylong – a private attorney hired by Asotin County and appointed as a special deputy prosecutor – sent an email to County Chief Operating Officer Chris Kemp and former clerk Stacey Harman. The subject line claimed attorney‑client privilege. The content destroyed it. “We need to have you get a retroactive retainer agreement signed to ensure we are cleared regarding Switzer’s potential objections on expenditure of public funds.” A retroactive retainer is a document that purports to take effect on a date earlier than the date it is actually signed. The only reason to seek one is to create the appearance of lawful authority after the fact. In other words: Daylong knew the County’s original July 2025 fee agreement and special deputy appointment were legally suspect, and she instructed Kemp to backdate a cure. When the unredacted email was inadvertently produced to the requester, Daylong demanded that all recipients delete it under a claim of attorney‑client privilege. That claw‑back request was itself a confession – and it was declined. The Sham Special Deputy Appointment The underlying scheme began in July 2025. On July 10, Asotin County signed a fee agreement with Daylong’s firm, Floyd, Pflueger, Kearns, Nedderman & Gress, P.S., agreeing to pay $325 per hour for “Public Records Act Litigation and Consulting, Switzer v. Asotin County, et al.” The problem? No such lawsuit existed. The case caption was a fiction. Eleven days later, Prosecutor Curtis Liedkie signed a “Special Deputy Prosecuting Attorney Appointment” for Daylong – again for the same nonexistent case caption. The appointment was notarized by Tammy Bolte, Daylong’s paralegal. The actual purpose of the appointment became clear on July 8, 2025, when Liedkie filed a notice of withdrawal and substitution in the Washington Supreme Court case Switzer v. Hon. Brooke Burns. Liedkie withdrew as counsel for Judge Burns, and Daylong substituted in. The County was never a party to that case. The special deputy appointment was a legal fiction designed to launder taxpayer money through the prosecutor’s budget to pay for a judge’s personal defense. Father and Daughter: The Commissioner Connection Adding another layer of conflict, public records confirm that Asotin County Commissioner Brian Shinn is the father of Judge Brooke Burns. The relationship was referenced in a July 2024 Lewiston Tribune article, which stated that Commissioner Shinn spoke publicly about his daughter’s judicial workload. Commissioner Shinn has voted on county budgets and resolutions that funded the very legal defense of his daughter. Under RCW 42.23.030, a public officer who has a direct financial interest in a contract or matter they vote on is prohibited from doing so. The appearance of impropriety alone is enough to violate the Code of Judicial Conduct for a judge, and the nepotism implications are inescapable. The requester’s PDR 26‑10 specifically sought emails between Judge Burns and the county commissioners – including her father. The County’s first response to that request was a zip file containing 157 email files. A CSV manifest of those files (Exhibit C in the court record) shows: · Zero emails from, to, or copied to Judge Burns, Prosecutor Liedkie, or Coroner Webber; · 139 emails authored by the requester himself, forwarded among county officials; · 18 delivery receipts and out‑of‑office replies. The requester had explicitly instructed the County to omit his own emails. The instruction was ignored. --- False Statements to the State Auditor In December 2025, the County responded to a whistleblower complaint filed with the Washington State Auditor’s Office. Stacey Harman wrote on December 31, 2025: “As of today, no funds have been expended for this purpose.” Chris Kemp wrote on December 16, 2025: “The County did not hire and pay a private law firm”; “Coverage was provided under our insurance policy and assigned legal counsel”; “Mr. Liedkie never filed ‘Notice of Appearance.’” All three statements are false. The July 10, 2025 fee agreement obligated the County to pay Daylong’s firm. The July 3, 2025 disclaimer letter from WCRG/Clear Risk Solutions stated that coverage for PRA claims was “not afforded.” The July 8, 2025 notice of withdrawal in the Washington Supreme Court proves that Liedkie did appear as counsel for Judge Burns. The false statements are now part of the criminal referral filed with the Washington State Attorney General’s Office. The Answer That Admitted Everything On June 11, 2026, Asotin County filed its Answer to the Amended Complaint. The Answer is a boilerplate document, but it contains binding admissions: venue is proper, the lawsuit was filed within the statute of limitations, the County charged a scanning fee, it gave an 87‑day estimate for PDR 26‑10, it entered into a retainer agreement with Daylong, and Daylong was appointed as a special deputy. These admissions will be used against the County at summary judgment. Twenty affirmative defenses were also pleaded. A motion to strike most of them was filed the same day. The defenses that will likely survive (attorney‑client privilege and exempt records) are already hollow: the privilege log is a one‑line citation, which waives the exemption under Sanders v. State, and the retroactive retainer email triggers the crime‑fraud exception under Dietz v. Doe. The Tactical Blizzard: Nine New PDRs Filed On June 11, 2026, the requester submitted nine new Public Records Act requests to Asotin County, seeking: · Financial records of all payments to Daylong; · Communications about the retroactive retainer; · Complete insurance claim files (W1756); · Personnel files of key officials; · Text messages from personal devices; · Settlement agreements involving PRA or OPMA violations; · Training records for PRA/OPMA compliance; · Billing records for the defamation threat letter; · All communications with the State Auditor’s Office. Each new PDR is a separate potential violation. Each has its own penalty clock. The County’s response deadlines are approaching. --- The Defamation Threat That Never Materialized On March 23, 2026, Daylong sent a letter to the requester threatening “separate correspondence” regarding alleged defamatory statements. The letter identified no specific statement, cited no legal authority, and set no deadline. The requester demanded clarification or retraction on May 29, 2026. The County never responded. No defamation lawsuit has been filed. The threat is now part of the record as evidence of bad faith and an ultra vires use of public resources. --- What Comes Next A motion for summary judgment is pending. The requester has also filed a motion to strike the affirmative defenses, a motion to compel metadata production to determine if the July 2025 documents were backdated, and a criminal referral requesting appointment of a special prosecutor. The court has been asked to set expedited hearings. Judge Burns has recused herself. Visiting Judge K. Peter Palubicki of Adams County is presiding. The County’s best strategy would be to capitulate and minimize penalties. Instead, it continues to fight, delay, and obstruct – a choice that only increases its exposure. --- Read the Documents All court filings, exhibits, and PRA requests are available for download upon request via email to lcvblotter@gmail.com. The unredacted retroactive retainer email (Exhibit P) is posted in full. The CSV manifest of 157 non‑responsive files is also available. LCV Blotter is an independent watchdog publication. It is not supported by advertising. It is supported by readers who believe that a free press must be free of corporate influence. If you value investigative journalism, consider becoming a contributor or a free‑agent contributor under the LCV Blotter brand. --- Corey Switzer is the founder of LCV Blotter and the pro se plaintiff in Switzer v. Asotin County. He can be reached at coreyswitzer@gmail.com.

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💬 Comments

corey2026-06-13 09:43:51
Date: June 13, 2026

To: Blake Richards

Undersheriff Richards,

This correspondence is a formal demand for a public statement regarding your refusal to fulfill your statutory duty under RCW 36.28.011 to make complaint of criminal violations that have come to your knowledge within your jurisdiction.

As you are aware, on August 12, 2025, I reported to you through your official Facebook page what the Washington Supreme Court and this Court have now confirmed: that Asotin County Prosecutor Curtis Liedkie and Asotin County Coroner Lisa Webber engaged in the unauthorized legal representation of Superior Court Judge Brooke Burns in Switzer v. Hon. Brooke Burns, Washington Supreme Court No. 104080-6. At the time I posted that comment on your official campaign page, you did not respond. Instead, you immediately disabled comments. You did not investigate. You did not refer the matter. You did not make complaint of the criminal violations that you now, indisputably, know.

Since that time, the following facts have been established beyond any reasonable dispute:

1. Your statutory duty under RCW 36.28.011 is mandatory. In addition to the duties contained in RCW 36.28.010, it is the duty of all sheriffs to make complaint of all violations of the criminal law which shall come to their knowledge within their respective jurisdictions. RCW 36.28.011. This duty is not discretionary. It does not require a conviction. It does not require a preliminary investigation. It requires only that a violation of criminal law comes to your knowledge. That happened on August 12, 2025. You have not acted.

2. Curtis Liedkie engaged in the unauthorized private practice of law. Asotin County has a population of approximately 23,000, which exceeds 18,000. Under RCW 36.27.060(1), the prosecuting attorney, and deputy prosecuting attorneys, of each county with a population of eighteen thousand or more shall serve full time and except as otherwise provided for in this section shall not engage in the private practice of law. Liedkie appeared as counsel for Judge Brooke Burns in a personal capacity mandamus action. Asotin County was not a party. That is private practice. That is a violation of RCW 36.27.060.

3. Lisa Webber engaged in the unauthorized practice of law. Under RCW 36.24.170, the coroner shall not appear or practice as attorney in any court, except in defense of himself or herself or his or her deputies. Webber acted as a “legal administrative assistant” to Prosecutor Liedkie in the same matter. Her conduct further violates RCW 2.48.200, which provides that no person shall practice law who holds a commission as coroner. RCW 2.48.200; RCW 36.24.170.

4. Liedkie and Webber also violated the official misconduct statute. Under RCW 42.20.010, a public officer who knowingly does an act in excess of his or her lawful authority commits a Class B felony. Liedkie signed a sham special deputy appointment for a nonexistent case caption, an act in excess of his lawful authority. Webber, as coroner, participated in the representation of a judge, an act in excess of her lawful authority.

5. You have known of these violations since August 12, 2025. You cannot credibly claim otherwise. I posted the identical report on your official Facebook page. You disabled comments immediately after. That is not the act of an official who did not see the report. That is the act of an official who saw the report and suppressed it.

6. Your failure to act has facilitated a pattern of obstruction. Since your refusal to act, the County has:

· Issued a deficient exemption log in violation of Sanders v. State;
· Charged an unlawful scanning fee for electronic records;
· Provided an 87‑day unreasonable estimate for PDR 26‑10;
· Produced 157 non‑responsive files in response to that request;
· Executed a sham special deputy appointment for a nonexistent case caption;
· Proposed a “retroactive retainer agreement” to conceal the expenditure of public funds;
· Made false statements to the State Auditor’s Office regarding the expenditure of public funds.

Your inaction was the first link in this chain of obstruction.

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DEMAND FOR PUBLIC STATEMENT

By June 20, 2026, please issue a public statement (by email to this distribution list) answering the following questions under penalty of perjury:

1. Do you acknowledge that RCW 36.28.011 imposes a mandatory duty on you, as Undersheriff, to make complaint of all violations of the criminal law that come to your knowledge?
2. Do you acknowledge that the above‑described conduct by Prosecutor Liedkie (private practice in violation of RCW 36.27.060) and Coroner Webber (unauthorized practice of law in violation of RCW 36.24.170 and RCW 2.48.200) constitutes a violation of Washington criminal law?
3. If not, on what legal basis do you conclude that the conduct described does not constitute a criminal violation?
4. Do you acknowledge that the report of these violations came to your knowledge on August 12, 2025, when it was posted to your official Facebook page?
5. What action, if any, have you taken since August 12, 2025, to fulfill your duty under RCW 36.28.011 with respect to these violations?
6. Have you made complaint to the Asotin County Prosecutor’s Office? If so, on what date? If not, why not, given that the prosecutor himself is a target of the complaint?
7. Have you referred this matter to the Washington State Attorney General’s Office or any other prosecuting authority for independent investigation? If so, on what date and to which office? If not, why not?
8. Do you maintain that your decision to immediately disable comments on your official Facebook page after I posted the report was unrelated to the content of the report? If so, please explain the reason.
9. Under Lindke v. Freed, 601 U.S. 187 (2024), a public official who restricts access to an official social media page based on the content of speech engages in state action subject to the First Amendment. Do you acknowledge that your conduct in disabling comments constituted viewpoint‑based retaliation? If not, please explain.
10. Do you intend to take any action now to fulfill your duty under RCW 36.28.011? If so, describe the specific action you will take and the timeline for doing so.

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Legal Authority

· RCW 36.28.011 – Duty to make complaint of all violations of the criminal law that come to the sheriff’s knowledge.
· RCW 36.27.060(1) – Full‑time prosecuting attorney shall not engage in private practice.
· RCW 36.24.170 – Coroner shall not appear or practice as attorney in any court.
· RCW 2.48.200 – No person shall practice law who holds a commission as coroner.
· RCW 42.20.010 – Official misconduct.
· RCW 9A.80.010 – Official misconduct (alternative provision).
· RCW 9A.76.175 – Making a false or misleading statement to a public servant (relevant to the County’s false statements to the SAO).
· Lindke v. Freed, 601 U.S. 187 (2024) – Social media blocking or comment suppression based on viewpoint violates the First Amendment.

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Failure to Respond

Failure to provide a complete, sworn response by June 20, 2026 will be treated as an admission that you have knowingly failed to fulfill your statutory duty under RCW 36.28.011. I will present this failure to the Court in Switzer v. Asotin County, No. 26‑2‑00027‑07, as further evidence of the County’s coordinated obstruction, and will supplement the pending criminal referral to the Attorney General to include you as a target for official misconduct under RCW 9A.80.010 and RCW 42.20.010.

The public record is complete. Your refusal to act is now part of it.

Respectfully,

Corey Michael Switzer