Officials in Nashville on Thursday disputed emails that a local news station said showed authorities withheld COVID-19 data because of the low number of cases confirmed to have come from bars or restaurants, even as a member of Congress requested information about the alleged shielding of figures.
According to the emails, the tracing of case origins found as of June 30 that bars and restaurants were the origin of just 22 cases, compared to over 1,000 in nursing homes.
“This isn’t going to be publicly released, right? Just info for Mayor’s Office?” a health official wrote. Benjamin Eagles, the advisor, responded: “Correct, not for public consumption.”
A month later, a reporter for Tennessee Lookout asked the health department about the number of cases that were traced back to bars and restaurants.
Health department official Brian Todd forwarded the query to five other officials, asking how he should respond.
The name of who responded was chopped off, but the person who wrote back said: “My two cents. We have certainly refused to give counts per bar because those numbers are low per site. We could still release the total though, and then a response to the over 80 could be because that number is increasing all the time and we don’t want to say a specific number.”
Councilman Steve Glover told WZTV that he confirmed the emails were authentic with a staff attorney for the health department.
“They are fabricating information,” Glover said. “They’ve blown their entire credibility Dennis. It’s gone, I don’t trust a thing they say going forward ... nothing.”
Cooper was confronted over the emails during a Sept. 17 virtual press conference.
Asked whether there was a deliberate attempt to withhold information about case numbers, Cooper said: “It’s no effort to withhold information; we'll do all we can to open up all information.”
“I think the question comes with a concern that back when we were modifying phase two, that the bar case count was not at that time super high. And I think what you’re hearing is that kind of story out in the community, that the bar case count was not super high,” he said, adding later: “The fact that back in early July, you didn’t have a super high case count at that moment doesn’t mean that it was not a national health priority. And then let’s look at what happened, from Los Angeles to Miami: Everybody adopted the same protocol.”
Cooper then attacked a WZTV reporter after disclosing he'd asked the station to submit a public records request regarding the veracity of the emails, accusing the reporter of having “a lapse in journalistic judgment and due diligence.”
The reporter fired back: “When you call after the newscast and say, gee, we wish you would have asked again, I mean, this isn’t high school. You’re not asking a girl out on a date again who said no. If you don’t have a comment up front, we don’t have to come and ask you again an hour later. We have deadlines that I’m asking you now. So here’s a chance to answer.”
The back-and-forth continued with the reporter saying a city attorney verified the emails in one hour and the mayor saying the reporter should have followed up with his office.
“Come see me. We'll get to the bottom of this,” Cooper said.
He also said he was grateful “to all the bars and restaurants have stepped up their efforts to protect the health and safety of their patrons” as he allows the establishments to fill with 50 percent capacity or 50 people per floor and 50 people outside starting Friday.