A government watchdog on Wednesday filed suit against the Bureau of Land Management to find out why it hired a one-time, anti-public lands advocate to run the agency.
The non-profit Public Employees for Environmental Responsibility, or PEER, said it initially filed a public records request asking for emails and correspondence related to the hiring of acting director William Perry Pendley, a self-described “sagebrush rebel” who once advocated for selling off many federal lands west of the Mississippi.
“Like a lot of people, we were shocked that Mr. Pendley had even been named into a high position there,” said PEER attorney Peter Jenkins.
PEER charges the BLM has not released those requested public records in a timely manner, so it filed a lawsuit in the U.S. District Court in Washington D.C. demanding the documents.
“The nature of [Pendley’s] appointment, how it was carried out and what the terms were are very important,” said Jenkins. “It may shed light on the legal vulnerabilities that we think go with his appointment.”
The Bureau of Land Management said it does not comment on pending litigation. Pendley has repeatedly argued his private beliefs do not influence his work at the BLM.
“I’m a Marine. I understand the chain of command. I know how to follow orders. I get it,” he told the radio show Montana Talks in late August. “Whatever I’ve done or said in the past is irrelevant.”
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