Based on a close review of the documents, there are up to two dozen additional matters for which the House paid a private law firm in 2019 and 2020. But because of the lack of specificity, the redactions, and the organization of the pages, it’s impossible to tell for sure. For the same reasons, it is impossible to calculate the total cost to taxpayers for some of the cases.
The table shows cases that the news organizations were able to identify using invoices and engagement letters, which law firms use to outline the services they plan to provide as well as the costs. Unlike a contract that goes through a bidding process and should be made public on the state treasurer’s website, the legislature signs these letters with no public disclosure or oversight.
Some cases overlap between the chambers, and a single chamber will sometimes use multiple firms for the same case.
Legislative leaders did not respond to requests to provide more information about redacted or vaguely described cases.
To send a tip about any of the cases in the database, contact reporters Angela Couloumbis and Sam Janesch.