Thousands of Emails from Oklahoma Office of Trump EPA Administrator Scott Pruitt Published

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By Steve Horn, Sharon Kelly and Grahamย Readfearn

The Center for Media and Democracy (CMD) has published thousands of emails obtainedย fromย the office of former Oklahoma Attorney General, Scott Pruitt, who was recently sworn in as the head of theย U.S. Environmental Protection Agencyย (EPA) for the Trumpย Administration.ย 

Housed online in searchable form by CMD, the emails cover Pruitt’s time spent as the Sooner State’s lead legal advocate, and in particular show a โ€œclose and friendly relationship between Scott Pruittโ€™s office and the fossil fuel industry,โ€ CMD said in a press release. CMD was forced to go to court in Oklahoma to secure the release of the emails, which had sat in a queue for two years after the organization had filed an open recordsย request.

Among other things, the emails show extensive communication with hydraulic fracturing (โ€œfrackingโ€) giant Devon Energy, with Pruitt’s office not only involved in discussions with Devon about energy-related issues like proposed U.S. Bureau of Land Management fracking rules, but also more tangential matters like how a proposed airline merger might affect Devon’s international travel costs. They also show a close relationship with groups such as the Koch Industries-fundedย Americans for Prosperity and the Oklahoma Public Policy Council, the latter a member of the influential conservative State Policy Network (SPN).

On the BLM fracking rule, Priutt’s office solicited input from Devon, the Oklahoma City fracking company, which seemed to incorporate the feedback in the company’s formal legal response. Pruitt’s office was aiming to sue the BLM on the proposed rules, a case multiple states eventually won, getting indispensibleย aid in the effort from the Interstate Oil and Gas Compact Commission (IOGCC).

โ€œAny suggestions?โ€ Pruitt’s office wrote in a May 1, 2013 email to a Devon vice president. Attachments missing from the FOIA response make it unclear to what extent edits suggested by Devon were actually inserted into the AG‘s correspondence, although Pruitt’s deputy later wrote โ€œthanks for all your help onย this.โ€

ย 

Image Credit: Oklahoma Office of the Attorneyย General

In two other emails dated May 1, 2013, a Devon Energy director replied with suggestedย changes to Pruitt’s office.ย The next day, Pruitt’s office sent the final draft of the letter to Devon, which replied, โ€œIโ€™m glad the Devon team could help, and thanks for all of your work onย this.โ€

Image Credit: Oklahoma Office of the Attorneyย General

This batch of emails was not among those published by the New York Times as a part of its investigation into the correspondence Pruitt and other Republican state-level Attorneys General had with energy companies, which revealed that Devonย had ghostwritten letters which Pruitt’s office sent to federal officials andย agencies.

โ€œCut andย Pasteโ€

Another section of the emails (page 562) shows that an official from Edison Electric Institute (EEI) emailed Pruitt’s office to solicit an article for theย Air and Waste Management Association Journal on the topic of regional haze.ย When Pruittโ€™s spokesman said the office will not be able to make the deadline, the EEI official toldย them not to worry because it can โ€œbe cut and paste from past editorials and court filings, language that has already been approved in theย past.โ€ย 

Pruitt Emails

Image Credit: Oklahoma Office of the Attorneyย General

It does not appear Pruitt’s office ever wrote the article, however. But that same month, Stuart Solomon, President of Public Service Company of Oklahoma (a subsidiary of American Electric Power), thanked Pruitt โ€œpersonallyโ€ in a February 2014 emailย for its help fending off the EPA‘s proposed regional hazeย rule.

Image Credit: Oklahoma Office of the Attorneyย General

โ€œWe are pleased the EPA has approved a plan developed by PSO and state leaders,โ€ย Stuart Solomon, President and Chief Operating Officer for Public Service Company of Oklahoma, said in a press release at the time. โ€œI want to thank Governor Fallin and her administration for their leadership and assistance in helping develop this plan along with the Oklahoma Department of Environmentalย Quality.โ€

Pruitt and his office were not thanked within the press release.ย In July 2016, the U.S. Court of Appears issued a stay on that rule and it was neverย promulgated.

Kochย Ties

The emails also shed new light on the relationship between Pruitt and the sphere of advocacy outfits andย legal groups funded by Koch Industries‘ billionaires Charles and Davidย Koch.

For example, Pruitt and many other Attorneys General โ€”ย plus industry actors at companies such as Southern Company, ConocoPhillips, Chesapeake Energy, TransCanada, Devon Energy, Marathon Oil and others โ€”ย received an invitation (see page 560) to an event hosted by George Mason University, the Koch-funded libertarian bastion, at its Mason Attorneys General Education Program.ย That invite came from Henry Butler, Dean of the George Mason University School ofย Law.

Harold Hamm, President Donald Trumpโ€™sย campaign energy adviser, was also included on theย list of those invited, as well. An email attachment of the invite was not included in theย batch.

Beyond George Mason, the emails also show Pruitt’s office maintained communications (see page 683) with Americans for Prosperity Oklahoma State Director, John Tidwell, as well as with SPN member Oklahoma Public Policy Council. SPNย receivesย Koch money.

Too Little, Tooย Late?

These are some of the highlights found within the massive batch of emails. CMD argues, as the Democratic Party’s Senate leadership posited, that these emails would have been useful in doing their constitutional โ€œadvise and consentโ€ confirmation process work forย Pruitt.

โ€œThere is no valid legal justification for the emails we received last night not being released prior to Pruittโ€™s confirmation vote other than to evade public scrutiny,โ€ said Arn Pearson, general counsel for CMD. โ€œThere are hundreds of emails between the AGโ€™s office, Devon Energy, and other polluters that Senators should have been permitted to review prior to their vote to assess Pruittโ€™s ties to the fossil fuelย industry.โ€

Photo Credit: U.S. Environmental Protectionย Agency

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Steve Horn is the owner of the consultancy Horn Communications & Research Services, which provides public relations, content writing, and investigative research work products to a wide range of nonprofit and for-profit clients across the world. He is an investigative reporter on the climate beat for over a decade and former Research Fellow for DeSmog.

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