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Case Ref: OFH-2025-001-PRA
Public Records Act Forensic Analysis

PRA Suppression Report — City of Redmond Request #32782

Forensic analysis of deliberate withholding in PRA production
Date
February 21, 2026
Case Reference
OFH-2025-001-PRA
Prepared By
Akataleptos Forensics

Old Fire House Teen Center – Forensic Analysis of Deliberate Withholding

Prepared: February 21, 2026
Subject: Public Records Act Request #32782, City of Redmond, WA
Topic: Closure and planned demolition of the Old Fire House Teen Center, 16510 NE 79th Street, Redmond, WA 98052
Applicable Law: Washington Public Records Act, RCW 42.56


Executive Summary

In early 2025, the City of Redmond closed the Old Fire House (OFH) Teen Center – a community institution since 1952, built by 75 volunteers – with less than three weeks’ public notice. The city then announced plans to demolish the building. A public records request (#32782) was filed to understand how and why this decision was made.

The City of Redmond produced four installments totaling 7,573 documents. This report demonstrates that the production was deliberately manipulated to conceal the decision-making process. The evidence is not ambiguous:

This is not sloppy records management. The pattern of what is missing – decision-maker communications, legal documents, financial records, post-controversy correspondence – is too precise to be accidental.


By The Numbers

Metric Count What It Means
Total documents produced 7,573 This is the number the city can point to and say “we gave you everything”
Unique substantive documents ~1,541 This is what they actually gave you
Exact duplicate copies 5,047 Same email copied 2, 3, 10, even 134 times
Cross-installment duplicates 1,137 Same email appearing in multiple installments
Automated/boilerplate noise 985 Google Alerts, system notifications, no-reply emails
Near-duplicates (different bodies) 433 Same sender/subject/date but body text changed – potential tampering
Production inflation rate 79.7% Four out of five documents are filler
Emails with attachments stripped 4,109 54.3% of production references documents you never received
Total individual attachments referenced 35,455 Every one of these was withheld
Unique attachment filenames 288 PDFs, Word docs, spreadsheets, presentations – all gone
Proven withheld emails (ghost analysis) 911+ Minimum count – actual number is higher
Ghost entities (proven senders whose emails are missing) 10 confirmed, 73 total suspicious Including the Mayor, a Council member, and the City Administrator
Orphan threads (replies with no original) 41 Conversations where the initiating email was removed
Channel-switching instances 45 “Give me a call” – moving conversations off the record
Months with zero emails 5 Sept 2024 through Jan 2025 – completely absent
Kenmore mentions 0 A directly relevant city with zero presence
Plymouth Housing mentions 142 But only the city’s sanitized version
Production date range Feb 17, 2025 – April 10, 2025 Six weeks of a multi-year project
Post-March 30 substantive emails 0 Production effectively ends here

The Attachment Strip

What Happened

Of the 7,573 emails in the production, 4,109 (54.3%) reference attachments in their headers or body text. These attachments are listed by filename in the email metadata. Not a single one was included in any of the four installments.

The total count of individual attachment references is 35,455. Many of these are embedded images (email signatures, logos), but 288 unique filenames were identified, including substantive documents that are legally part of the record.

What Was Stripped

The non-image attachments that were referenced but never provided include:

Attachment Times Referenced Why It Matters
Embargoed press materials PDF (Mar 10, 2025) 40 The manufactured press package sent the night before the public announcement
Redmond Teen Services Engagement Plan (FINAL) 38 The official plan for “engaging” the community after the decision was already made
COR Community Center Presentation 36 Internal presentation about facility plans
2025 Council Extended Meeting Calendar 33 Shows what was scheduled and when
RCCMV Floor Plan 20 The replacement facility plans
City of Redmond Schedule (CSV) 18 Scheduling data
Teen Contact List (Excel) 12 Contact information for affected teens
To Do List for OFH-RCCMV Transition (Word) 15 The actual task list for shutting down the teen center
IFB 10861-25 Bid Submittal Sheet (Word) 12 Bidding document – financial
Facilities ADA Transition Plan (PDF) 8 ADA compliance documentation
Amendment to Transfer Option Agreement (PDF) 4 Legal document for property transfer
Interest Group 2025 Cost Recovery Alignment (PowerPoint) 4 Financial planning document
Old Fire House Teen Center Daily Attendance (Excel) 4 Attendance data used to justify closure
Teen Space Layout Options (PowerPoint) 4 Design options for replacement
Facility Details Report (PDF) 4 Building condition documentation
Teen Services Transition (PowerPoint/Word) 6+6 The transition plan documents
City of Redmond Final Report (PDF) 6 Unknown scope – “final report” on what?
ALTA Title Insurance Commitment (PDF) 4 Title insurance for property transfer

What This Means Legally

Under Washington’s Public Records Act (RCW 42.56.080), agencies must provide records “in the format in which they are normally retained.” Attachments are part of the email record. They are not optional add-ons that can be selectively excluded. Stripping 4,109 emails of their attachments is not a technical glitch – it is a separate withholding decision for each document.

The most damning items on this list are the legal and financial documents: the Amendment to Transfer Option Agreement, the ALTA title insurance commitment, the bid submittal sheets, and the cost recovery alignment presentation. These are the documents that would show who was negotiating what with whom regarding the property.


Proven Withheld Emails (Ghost Analysis)

How This Works

Email has a simple and unbreakable rule: if Person A sends a reply (“Re: Subject”) addressed to Person B, then Person B sent the original message that Person A is replying to.

If we have Person A’s reply in the production, but Person B’s original is not in the production, then Person B’s email was withheld. This is not speculation. It is a mathematical proof. The reply cannot exist without the original having been sent.

We ran this analysis across all 7,573 documents.

The Results: 10 Proven Withheld Entities

Entity Email Emails TO Them Reply-To Proofs Outgoing Produced Verdict
Mayor’s Office mayor@redmond.gov 573 108 0 WITHHELD
Angela Birney (Mayor) abirney@redmond.gov 432 82 54 (28 dupes of 1 subject) WITHHELD
D. Edmunds (Stepherson PR) dedmunds@stephersonassociates.com 209 178 0 WITHHELD
H. Rudin (Stepherson PR) hrudin@stephersonassociates.com 209 178 0 WITHHELD
S. Fields (Council Member) sfields@redmond.gov 325 114 0 WITHHELD
O. Salahuddin (City Admin) osalahuddin@redmond.gov 298 105 0 WITHHELD
City Council council@redmond.gov 310 120 0 WITHHELD
Malisa Files mfiles@redmond.gov 405 84 6 WITHHELD
C. Payne cpayne@redmond.gov 123 20 0 WITHHELD
City Clerk cityclerk@redmond.gov 27 15 0 WITHHELD
TOTAL 1,004

The minimum number of provably withheld emails is 911+ (after deducting the small number of outgoing emails that were actually produced for Birney and Files).

Additional Suspicious Entities

These people received over 100 emails each but have zero outgoing emails in the production and no reply-to proofs yet (they may have communicated through other channels):

Entity Emails Addressed TO Them Outgoing Produced
C. Cornwell 242 0
M. Plocke 223 0
D. Lowe 169 0
D. Tuchek 160 0
A. Wynn 151 0
S. Allen 145 0

Total ghost entities across the production: 73.

What These People Were Discussing

The withheld emails are not random. The reply-to analysis shows that the ghosts were being replied to on these subjects:

These are the operational emails about how the closure was planned, coordinated, and communicated. The replies survive. The originals – the ones containing the actual decisions and directives – do not.


The Padding Strategy

How It Works

The City produced 7,573 documents. That sounds comprehensive. Here is what that number actually contains:

Category Count % of Total
Exact duplicate copies 5,047 66.6%
Automated notifications (Google Alerts, system emails) 985 13.0%
Near-duplicates with altered bodies 433 5.7%
Padding subtotal ~6,032 79.7%
Unique substantive content ~1,541 20.3%

The Worst Offenders

Email Copies Installments
Angie Nuevacamina (single email) 134 Installments 1 & 4
Vanessa Kritzer council reply 51 Multiple
Erica Chua (no subject) 48 Multiple
Vanessa Kritzer “Redmond Teen Center” 39 Multiple
“Facilities Meeting” (Birney calendar invite) 28 Multiple

One email from Angie Nuevacamina was duplicated 134 times. That single email accounts for 1.8% of the entire production.

Cross-Installment Duplication

1,137 emails appear in more than one installment. This means the city counted the same documents multiple times across supposedly separate productions. The duplicates table in the forensic database contains 4,372 cross-installment duplicate records.

Why This Matters

Padding is a known PRA obstruction technique. The requester asks for records. The agency produces thousands of documents – far more than anyone can easily review – but the vast majority are duplicates, automated notifications, and irrelevant boilerplate. The real documents (the ~1,541 unique records) are buried in noise, while the substantive communications (the 911+ withheld emails, the 4,109 stripped attachments) are simply not there.

The effect is that a reviewer who looks at the production count thinks they received a thorough response. A reviewer who actually reads the documents discovers they received the same emails over and over again, with the important ones removed.

The Empty Subject Problem

955 emails have no subject line. This is the single largest “subject” category in the production. Many of these are from city officials (Erica Chua: 62, Loreen Hamilton: 30, Brittany Pratt: 26). Subject line stripping makes it harder to thread conversations together, reconstruct timelines, and identify what topics are being discussed – in other words, harder to do exactly the kind of analysis this report represents.


Key Missing Persons

Angela Birney (Mayor)

The Mayor of Redmond has 8 unique emails in a production about a decision she oversaw. Her 54 “sent” emails are 28 duplicates of a “Facilities Meeting” calendar invite, 16 duplicates of a press release quote approval, and 10 duplicates of a media question response. Not a single substantive policy directive, decision email, or internal discussion from the mayor exists in this production.

She is mentioned 1,838 times by others. People talk about her, forward things to her, ask for her approval, rewrite talking points with “the Mayor’s feedback,” and send her embargoed materials. But her own words – her directions, her decisions, her role in closing the teen center – have been removed.

Osman Salahuddin (City Administrator)

Zero outgoing emails. The city administrator oversaw the OFH decision. He is also the official who called Plymouth Housing opponents “NIMBYs” in text messages obtained by journalists in a separate controversy involving the same cast of characters. 298 people wrote to him about the teen center. He replied to at least 105 of them. None of his responses were produced.

Steve Fields (Council Member)

Steve Fields was a sitting city council member during the OFH closure. He was also Angela Birney’s political opponent – he ran against her for mayor in 2019 and lost 4-to-1 in fundraising. He later made a motion to restore teen services that passed 7-0. His 114 provably withheld emails likely contain council deliberations about the closure.

The mayor’s political opponent’s emails about the decision were withheld from the PRA production. This alone should trigger an investigation.

Malisa Files

405 emails sent to her, 6 produced from her. She coordinated talking points for the Mayor and worked with Loreen Hamilton on messaging.

Carol Helland

Stepherson Associates (PR Contractor)

Stepherson Associates was the city’s PR contractor managing the OFH outreach. Two key Stepherson employees are complete ghosts:

Only Aileen Dinh (adinh@stephersonassociates.com) has outgoing emails in the production (401 sent). The other two Stepherson employees who were actively coordinating – proven by 178 reply-to instances each – have been entirely scrubbed.

City Council (Generic Address)

The public wrote 310 emails to the council about the teen center. The council’s responses – all 120+ of them – were withheld.


The March 30 Cutoff

What The Data Shows

The last substantive human-authored email in the production is dated March 30, 2025. After that date, only 12 emails exist:
- Automated “Teen Services Questionnaire” notifications (system-generated)
- Google Alert digests (automated)
- Change.org petition notifications (automated)
- Daniel Kenny legal correspondence about Plymouth Housing financing (April 8-10, unrelated to OFH decision-making)

No emails from any city official about the OFH appear after March 30.

What Was Happening After March 30

Date Event Records Produced
March 30 Public backlash ongoing, council members receiving hundreds of emails 0 human-authored
April 27, 2025 Council study session on OFH building future 0
May 10, 2025 Downtown Redmond light rail station opens (dramatically increasing property value) 0
June 28, 2025 New zoning code takes effect (allows 144 ft / FAR 8.0 in downtown core) 0
July 22, 2025 Council study session – additional building assessments presented 0
Oct 2025 Stakeholder group recommends rebuild (6 meetings, focus groups) 0
Nov 18, 2025 Council votes 6-0 to demolish and rebuild 0

The production covers the announcement and initial backlash. It does not cover a single day of the actual decision-making process that followed. Every council study session, every stakeholder meeting, every internal discussion about what to do with the property, every negotiation about demolition, every assessment of the building – all of it falls outside the production window.

Why This Matters

The PRA request was about the OFH closure and property. The closure was announced March 11. The public demanded answers. The council held study sessions and votes through November 2025. The production gives you March 11-30 (the announcement and initial noise) and nothing after.

This is like asking for records about a car accident and receiving only the 911 call. The investigation, the police report, the insurance claim, the lawsuit – all withheld.


The Kenmore Black Hole

The word “Kenmore” appears zero times in 7,573 documents.

This is significant because:

  1. Plymouth Housing was rejected by Kenmore before being accepted by Redmond 22 days later
  2. Plymouth Housing’s Redmond project (16725 Cleveland Street) involved a $5.5 million property transfer for free, approved with zero public hearings
  3. Plymouth Housing appears in 142 emails in the production, including property transfer negotiations by outside counsel Daniel Kenny
  4. The OFH request specifically concerns property disposition and city decision-making
  5. Kenmore’s rejection is directly relevant context for why Plymouth came to Redmond and how the decision was made

The complete absence of Kenmore from a production about city property decisions involving Plymouth Housing is not plausible. Anyone discussing Plymouth Housing in Redmond during this period would have mentioned that they had just been rejected by Kenmore – it was public knowledge and a major part of the story.

Either every email mentioning Kenmore was withheld, or the search terms used to collect records were deliberately constructed to exclude it. Both explanations indicate deliberate suppression.


Evidence of Deliberate Withholding

Records Management Language in the Production

A search of the production reveals:

The 303 delete/destroy/retention hits are primarily in legal boilerplate and property disposition contexts (Daniel Kenny’s property work, Andrea Sato’s Plymouth Housing correspondence). The near-absence of any discussion of the actual records request that generated this production is itself suspicious – typically, when a city receives a PRA request, there is internal correspondence about scope, search terms, and responsive documents. None of that appears here.

Channel Switching

45 emails contain language directing conversations off the record:

Key examples from the production:

When city officials systematically move substantive discussions to phone calls, those discussions are not captured by email-based records requests. This is a known records-avoidance technique.

Narrative Control Evidence

The production itself contains evidence of coordinated messaging:

The city did not simply announce a closure. It manufactured a coordinated press operation with embargoed materials, approved talking points, and controlled distribution. The talking points themselves – repeatedly referenced – were among the 4,109 stripped attachments.

The Decision Concealment

One email stands out for what it reveals about how the closure decision was concealed:

Note the passive voice: “it was decided.” Not “the Mayor decided” or “the council voted” or “the Parks Department recommended.” The identity of the decision-maker is deliberately obscured. No email in the production identifies who made the decision to close and demolish the OFH.

The Corruption Pattern

The forensic integrity analysis of the raw .msg files reveals:

This pattern – intact containers with selectively corrupted contents – is consistent with deliberate manipulation during the export process, not accidental storage corruption.

What Is Missing vs. What Remains: The Surgical Pattern

What Was Produced What Was Withheld
Automated notifications (Google Alerts, system emails) Mayor’s policy directives
Change.org petition alerts Council member deliberations
Duplicate copies (up to 134x) City Administrator responses
Calendar invites PR contractor strategy emails
Press release draft approvals Property transfer negotiations (Sep 2024-Jan 2025)
Public-facing newsletter tests Decision memos
Boilerplate system disclaimers All 4,109 email attachments
Community emails TO officials Officials’ responses TO community

The production preserves what the public sent in and strips out what the government said back. It preserves drafts and tests but removes finals. It preserves the noise and removes the signal.


The Five-Month Gap: September 2024 – January 2025

What The Data Shows

Month Emails What Should Be There
Aug 2024 10 Last property transfer negotiations
Sep 2024 0 Facility assessments, planning
Oct 2024 0 Budget decisions, contractor work
Nov 2024 0 Project planning, internal discussions
Dec 2024 0 Interview planning docs prove activity occurred
Jan 2025 0 Pre-announcement preparation
Feb 2025 578 Abruptly begins Feb 17

Five consecutive months of zero records. During this period:

  1. Installment 6 is labeled “Email Dec 2024” (224 files) but contains zero emails actually dated in December 2024. File references like “2024_1220_Redmond Fire House Teen Center_Interview Plan” prove December 2024 activity existed.
  2. Property transfer negotiations were active. Daniel Kenny was negotiating the Transfer Option Agreement amendment through August 2024. The amendment would have been finalized during the gap. No records.
  3. 24 emails reference “November 2024” and 24 reference “December 2024” in their body text, proving discussions about events in those months occurred.
  4. The OFH project was continuously active – budget documents, contractor invoices, and interview planning documents with dates in this range prove ongoing work.

This is the period when the closure decision was actually being made. It is entirely absent.


Legal Framework

Washington Public Records Act (RCW 42.56)

The Public Records Act is one of the strongest open-records laws in the country. Key provisions:

RCW 42.56.030 – Broad right of access:

“The people of this state do not yield their sovereignty to the agencies that serve them. The people, in delegating authority, do not give their public servants the right to decide what is good for the people to know and what is not good for them to know.”

RCW 42.56.070 – Duty to provide fullest assistance:

“Each agency… shall make available for inspection and copying all public records, unless the record falls within the specific exemptions…”

RCW 42.56.080 – Format requirements:

Records must be provided in their existing format. Attachments are part of the email record.

RCW 42.56.100 – Withholding justification:

Any withholding must be accompanied by a written statement of the specific exemption and a brief explanation.

RCW 42.56.550 – Penalties:

A court may award penalties of $5 to $100 per day per record for each record wrongfully withheld. With 911+ provably withheld emails, 4,109 stripped attachments, and five months of missing records, the penalty exposure is substantial.

What Constitutes “Adequate Search”

Under Washington law, an agency must conduct a search reasonably calculated to uncover all responsive documents (Neighborhood Alliance of Spokane County v. County of Spokane, 2011). The agency must:

  1. Search all locations where responsive records might be found
  2. Search using terms reasonably calculated to find all responsive records
  3. Produce a privilege log for any withheld records
  4. Provide a written explanation for any exemptions claimed

The City of Redmond’s production fails all four requirements:
- The five-month gap proves not all locations were searched (or that records were destroyed)
- The zero Kenmore results prove the search terms were inadequate or deliberately narrow
- No privilege log was provided despite attorney-client communications being present and absent in the production
- No exemption explanations accompanied any installment

Prior Case Law


What To Do Next

1. File a Follow-Up Records Request

A comprehensive follow-up request has been drafted (see PUBLIC_RECORDS_REQUEST.md). It specifically targets:

2. Request a Penalty Review

Under RCW 42.56.550, file a petition with King County Superior Court requesting:
- A finding that records were wrongfully withheld
- Daily penalties for each withheld record
- Attorney’s fees and costs
- An order compelling complete production

3. File a Complaint with the Attorney General

The Washington Attorney General’s office can investigate public records violations. File a complaint at: www.atg.wa.gov/open-government

Include:
- This report
- The original request and all installments received
- The forensic analysis data (corkboard.db)
- The follow-up records request and the city’s response

4. File a Complaint with the Washington State Auditor

The State Auditor’s office investigates waste, fraud, and abuse in local government. The PRA violations documented here are part of a broader pattern:
- $5.5 million property transfer to Plymouth Housing with no public hearings
- Campaign finance connections between the mayor and the developer next door
- The mayor’s largest donor bloc (Nelson Legacy Group, $11,000+) has a corporate office at 16508 NE 79th Street – physically adjacent to the OFH at 16510 NE 79th Street

5. Preserve Evidence

6. Contact Media

The following reporters have already covered the OFH story:
- Michael Rietmulder, Seattle Times (381+ references in production)
- KOMO News (33-message orphan thread about a KOMO inquiry)
- Jonathan Choe, Fix Homelessness (broke the Plymouth Housing story)

This report provides specific, verifiable, database-backed evidence of PRA suppression. It is not opinion. Every number in this document can be independently verified by querying the forensic database.

7. Consider Litigation

Under Washington’s Public Records Act, a requester can file suit in Superior Court for:
- Injunctive relief (compelling production)
- Penalties ($5-$100/day/record)
- Attorney’s fees
- Costs

Given the scale of withholding documented here (911+ proven withheld emails, 4,109 stripped attachments, five months of missing records), the penalty exposure to the city is significant enough to motivate compliance.


Appendix A: Top Duplicated Emails

Subject Copies What It Is
(no subject) 955 Subject-stripped emails – impossible to thread
News Release: City of Redmond Transitions Teen Programs… 300 The press release, duplicated 300 times
As a decision maker, your action can drive change on this petition 291 Change.org notification spam
RE: S&A x Redmond OFH Outreach Check-In 180 Outreach coordination reply chain
RE: Comment Registration - 3/25 City Council Meeting 123 Council meeting registration
Anonymous User completed Teen Services Questionnaire 117 Automated survey notification
Teen Services Check-In 114 Check-in thread
RE: For review: Redmond OFH 2/18 team check-in meeting notes 102 Team meeting notes (original missing)
City of Redmond Digest 84 Automated digest
RE: As a decision maker, your action can drive change… 81 Reply to petition spam
RE: Our Redmond Stories: TEST 80 Newsletter test replies
TIS Teen Center Walkthrough 78 Walkthrough thread
RE: An Update on the Old Fire House Facility: TEST 76 Update test replies
Overview of Teen Engagement 74 Engagement overview thread
RE: The old fire house property 66 Property discussion reply
Recreation Team Meeting Notes 63 Meeting notes
RE: For review: Redmond Teen Services Engagement Plan (v2)… 60 Engagement plan review
FW: An Update on the Old Fire House Facility: TEST 58 Forwarded update test
RE: Facilities planning list for OFH & RCCMV 51 Facilities planning reply
Comment Registration - 3/25 City Council Meeting 51 Council meeting registration

Appendix B: Monthly Email Volume

Month Emails Notes
2024-04 12 Property/legal (Kenny)
2024-05 0 GAP
2024-06 2 Near-absent
2024-07 8 Property transfer negotiations
2024-08 10 Last pre-gap records
2024-09 0 GAP
2024-10 0 GAP
2024-11 0 GAP
2024-12 0 GAP (despite labeled installment)
2025-01 0 GAP
2025-02 578 Internal prep begins abruptly Feb 17
2025-03 6,466 Announcement (11th) and backlash (25th)
2025-04 12 Only legal/Plymouth (Apr 8-10)

Total emails with parseable dates: 7,088 of 7,573

Peak days: March 11 (784 emails – announcement day) and March 25 (886 emails – council meeting day). The volume distribution is consistent with selective preservation around media-sensitive events.


Appendix C: Installment Breakdown

Installment Date Filed Covers Documents Unique Content (est.)
4th Feb 16-28, 2025 2,205 ~440
2nd 2025-06-19 Mar 1-20, 2025 2,659 ~530
1st 2025-04-24 Mar 21-30, 2025 2,342 ~470
3rd 2025-07-18 2021-2024 (historical) 350 ~100
Other Uncategorized 17 ~1
TOTAL 7,573 ~1,541

Appendix D: Ghost Entity Master List (Proven Withheld)

# Entity Email TO CC Reply-To Proofs Body Quoted Sent Verdict
1 Mayor’s Office mayor@redmond.gov 573 108 Yes 0 WITHHELD
2 Angela Birney abirney@redmond.gov 432 82 Yes 54 (3 unique) WITHHELD
3 D. Edmunds dedmunds@stephersonassociates.com 209 178 Yes 0 WITHHELD
4 H. Rudin hrudin@stephersonassociates.com 209 178 Yes 0 WITHHELD
5 S. Fields sfields@redmond.gov 325 114 Yes 0 WITHHELD
6 O. Salahuddin osalahuddin@redmond.gov 298 105 Yes 0 WITHHELD
7 City Council council@redmond.gov 310 120 Yes 0 WITHHELD
8 Malisa Files mfiles@redmond.gov 405 84 Yes 6 WITHHELD
9 C. Payne cpayne@redmond.gov 123 20 Yes 0 WITHHELD
10 City Clerk cityclerk@redmond.gov 27 15 Yes 0 WITHHELD

Appendix E: Key Non-Image Attachments (Withheld)

Filename Type Times Referenced Significance
March 25 Teen Brainstorming.docx Word 63 Community input document
3.25.25 - March 25 Rec Agenda.docx Word 63 Meeting agenda
Embargoed materials PDF (Mar 10) PDF 40 Manufactured press package
Redmond Teen Services Engagement Plan (FINAL) PDF 38 The “engagement” plan
COR Community Center Presentation PDF 36 Internal facility presentation
2025 Council Extended Meeting Calendar PDF 33 Council scheduling
CityCouncilAgenda 26-Mar-2025 PDF 24 Council meeting agenda
RCCMV Floor Plan PDF 20 Replacement facility plans
City of Redmond Schedule.csv CSV 18 Scheduling data
To Do list for OFH transition Word 15 Closure task list
Teen contact list 2025.xlsx Excel 12 Affected teens’ contact info
RYPAC Members.docx Word 12 Youth advisory committee
IFB 10861-25 Bid Submittal Sheet Word 12 Financial bidding document
Facilities accomplishments Word 10 Facility condition documentation
Old Fire House Condition Report PDF 10 Building assessment
April Teen Program Calendar PDF 8 Programming schedule
ADA Transition Plan PDF 8 ADA compliance
Teen Services Transition.pptx PowerPoint 6 Transition presentation
City of Redmond Final Report PDF 6 Unknown scope
Redmond Summary Report v4 PDF 6 Summary report – of what?
ALTA Title Insurance Commitment PDF 4 Property transfer legal document
Amendment to Transfer Option Agreement PDF 4 Property transfer legal document
Cost Recovery Alignment (PowerPoint) PowerPoint 4 Financial planning
Teen Center Daily Attendance (Excel) Excel 4 Usage data used to justify closure
Teen Space Layout Options PowerPoint 4 Design alternatives

Appendix F: Top Senders (Production Volume)

Sender Email Count Notes
Loreen Hamilton (blank email field) 1,826 Highest volume – email field corrupted
Erica Chua echua@redmond.gov 513 Lead coordinator
City of Redmond (automated) cityofredmond@public.govdelivery.com 431 GovDelivery notifications
Aileen Dinh adinh@stephersonassociates.com 401 PR contractor (only Stepherson with emails)
Brant DeLarme bdelarme@redmond.gov 256 Talking points, embargoed materials
Zach Houvener zhouvener@redmond.gov 241 “Internal only” talking points
Jeff Hagen jhagen@redmond.gov 198 Public interaction
Loreen Hamilton lhamilton@redmond.gov 195 (second email address)
City of Redmond (automated) noreply-servicerequest@redmond.gov 190 Service request system
Lisa Maher lmaher@redmond.gov 171 Communications strategy
Ryan Hoover rhoover@redmond.gov 161 Media updates
Brittany Pratt bpratt@redmond.gov 150 QAlerts, scheduling
Angie Nuevacamina anuevacamina@redmond.gov 134 Single email duplicated 134x
Vanessa Kritzer vkritzer@redmond.gov 123 Council member (also on OneRedmond board)
Let’s Connect Redmond notifications@engagementhq.com 120 Automated engagement platform

Note: The top “sender” has a blank email field (corrupted), accounting for 1,826 entries. This is consistent with the 21.4% sender field corruption rate identified in the forensic integrity analysis.


Appendix G: Emails Referencing Records Management

Sender Subject Date Context
Daniel P. Kenny FW: Redmond Motley Zoo Property - Title Report & Lease 2024-04-12 Property disposition language
Andrea Sato RE: City of Redmond-Plymouth Housing 2024-04-15 Property transfer
Andrea Sato RE: City of Redmond-Plymouth Housing 2024-04-16 Property transfer
Daniel P. Kenny Follow up 2024-06-24 Property follow-up

Total emails containing “delete,” “destroy,” “retention,” or “purge”: 303
Total emails mentioning “records request” or “public records”: 2
Total emails mentioning “exempt,” “redact,” or “withhold”: 2

The near-total absence of any internal discussion about the PRA request itself – how to scope the search, what to produce, what to withhold – is itself evidence of concealment. These discussions happened. They were not produced.


This report was compiled from forensic analysis of all four installments of City of Redmond Public Records Request #32782. All data is preserved in the forensic database at /home/solaya/Desktop/TOE/OFH/corkboard.db. Analysis tools are preserved at /home/solaya/Desktop/TOE/OFH/. Every number in this report can be independently verified by querying the database. Nothing has been deleted or modified from the original production.

The original source files are preserved at /home/solaya/Desktop/TOE/OFH/out/ and /home/solaya/Desktop/TOE/OFH/4th_installment_raw/.

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