TX Assistant Attorney General Scott Smith is now refusing to permit me to review my educational records. FERPA is federal law. Withholding my records is illegal. Texas Tech has had five months to provide me adequate time to review my educational records. The deadline is 45 days. By law. They waited until day 45 to begin scheduling a review--a one-hour review of 1600 documents. It has now been over 150 days since my initial request and still I have not been granted adequate time to review the records, which are longer than War and Peace. Look, these records are PDFs. They could be sent tomorrow. Why doesn't Texas Tech just send them? I have therefore filed another supplement to my complaint with the Department of Education. I will be sending regulatory complaints to other federal agencies today. Oh and in other news, months ago, Texas Tech requested a deposit of nearly $2,000 for a public records request. I gladly accepted and submitted a check. I was happy to receive my records! They cashed the check. And didn't release the records. I have therefore sent a demand letter to Texas Tech and will be filing a third lawsuit within ten business days if they do not release the records. This is a violation of Texas law. That's a lot of legal risk to keep some educational records under wraps from a medical student who suddenly started getting hammered by "professionalism" complaints after writing the truth about the abuse of power by the medical community during the COVID-19 pandemic. It sure is a great deal of trouble. ...