FOIA Commands Headlines as Law Approaches 50th Birthday What Links Operation Condor Convictions to News of Widespread Medicare Overcharging? FOIA! 50 of the Year’s Most Important Stories Made Possible by the Freedom of Information Act, Signed 50 Years Ago this July 4
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FOIA Commands Headlines as Law Approaches 50th Birthday ... · Lansing, Michigan proactively replacing all lead service lines after FOIA requests help show epic government failures
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FOIA Commands Headlines as Law Approaches 50th Birthday
What Links Operation Condor Convictions to News of Widespread Medicare Overcharging? FOIA!
50 of the Year’s Most Important Stories Made Possible by the Freedom of Information Act, Signed 50 Years Ago this July 4
Edited by Lauren Harper and Tom Blanton Design by Rinat Bikineyev
For more information, contact Lauren Harper, 202.994.7000 or [email protected]
Washington DC, June 13, 2016 – Today the National Security Archive celebrates the Freedom of Information Act’s upcoming 50th birthday by highlighting 50 of the year’s biggest news stories made possible by FOIA. The diverse front-page news shows how FOIA can impact human rights, government accountability, and even what you eat.
Here is a sampling of this year’s top stories:
FOIA releases to the National Security Archive provided critical evidence in the historic conviction of 14 Argentine military officers and 1 Uruguayan military officer
for their participation in the Operation Condor international murder ring and were cited 150 times by the prosecution.
Documents released through FOIA proved Pentagon officials deliberately misled Congress on the Defense Department’s handling of sexual assault cases in order to undermine reform legislation.
A FOIA lawsuit uncovered that the Obama White House’s Justice Department aggressively lobbied to kill uncontroversial bipartisan FOIA reform in 2014.
Presidents Ronald Reagan and George H.W. Bush were, FOIA releases to the National Security Archive show, climate change heroes who took action to protect the ozone layer.
State-level FOIA releases in Michigan exposed the cost-driven decisions by Flint administrators not to add corrosion controls to the water supply, causing lead poisoning in kids, and the cover-up by the Michigan Department of Environmental Quality.
Documents released by the Food and Drug Administration under FOIA show that cheese marketed as being“100% parmesan” contained 0% parmesan – and some wood pulp.
Government audits freed by a FOIA lawsuit show widespread billing mistakes – primarily overcharging – in Medicare Advantage program.
ESSENTIAL FOIA RESOURCES
Below is a collection of the Archive’s seminal FOIA history postings, a one-stop-resources-shop as the law turns 50:
Signed: LBJ begrudgingly signs the FOIA into law while vacationing at his Texas ranch fifty years ago on July 4, 1966. But the event does not even appear on LBJ’s Daily Diary. LBJ – normally a fan of over-the-top signing ceremonies – refused a public ceremony for the FOIA, and undercut the bill with a signing statement that includes more about the need to keep secrets than the urgency of openness.
Obstructed: President Ford wanted to sign the FOIA-strengthening 1974 amendments, but concern about leaks (shared by his chief of staff Donald Rumsfeld and deputy Richard Cheney) and legal arguments that the bill was unconstitutional (marshaled by government lawyer Antonin Scalia, among others) persuaded Ford to veto the bill.
Strengthened: On November 20, 1974, the House of Representatives voted to override Ford's veto by a margin of 371 to 31; on November 21, the Senate followed suit by a 65 to 27 vote, giving the United States the core Freedom of Information Act still in effect today including judicial review of executive secrecy claims.
Strengthened Again: The FOIA was strengthened again in 1996 with the passage of the Electronic Freedom of Information Act Amendments (E-FOIA). The law mandated that agencies post key sets of records online, provide citizens with detailed guidance on making FOIA requests, and use new information technology to post online proactively records of
significant public interest, including those already processed in response to FOIA requests and "likely to become the subject of subsequent requests."
Implemented? The National Security Archive’s 15 government-wide audits have examined various aspects of FOIA implementation, from failure to save email, to not posting required material online, to outdated FOIA regulations, the audits highlight what most needs fixing.
A Look behind The Scenes: Bill Moyers’ “In the Kingdom of the Half-Blind.”
An in-depth Legislative History of the FOIA.
Everything you need to Know About Filing a FOIA: The Archive's detailed 122-page guide, "Effective FOIA Requesting for Everyone," is available online at the Archive's FOIA page.
FOIA LEGISLATION NEWS
Today the House of Representatives considers passage of the FOIA Improvement Act of 2016 (S. 337). The bill was introduced by Senators John Cornyn, Chuck Grassley, and Patrick Leahy, and has already unanimously passed the Senate. Representatives Jason Chaffetz and Elijah Cummings have led important efforts to strengthen FOIA in the House, and support the House passing the Senate bill. If the House does pass the Senate bill, it will go to the President’s desk – and the White House has indicated the President will sign it.
The bipartisan, bicameral bill would improve FOIA by:
Mandating a 25-year sunset for the “wildly misused” FOIA exemption (b)(5), an exemption that currently has no time limit and was recently used to successfully deny a CIA draft history of the 53-year-old Bay of Pigs invasion. This incredibly large cutout is often called the “withhold it because you want to” exemption.
Requiring agencies to update their FOIA regulations within 180 days after the passage of the bills. (A National Security Archive audit shows that too many federal agencies have not updated their regulations to comply with the 2007 Open Government FOIA improvements. By neglecting to update their “FOIA handbooks,” agencies are essentially ignoring Congress’s FOIA reforms.)
Codifying the presumption of openness, thereby requiring that records be released unless there is a foreseeable harm or legal requirement to withhold them. This language mirrors the Obama administration’s and the Department of Justice’s (non binding) instructions on FOIA.
Improving public digital access to released records. Strengthening and increasing the independence of the FOIA Ombuds Office – the
Office of Government Information Services (OGIS).
Consideration of this legislation comes just before the law – signed begrudgingly by LBJ on July 4, 1966 – turns 50.
Documents released to the National Security Archive under FOIA cited 150 times in historic Operation Condor convictions
Agency: Multiple
May 9, 2016
Shell and other big oil groups abandon billions in Arctic drilling rights, according to Interior Department records obtained by conservation group Oceana under the FOIA
Agency: Department of the Interior
May 5, 2016
Photos taken by President Bush's personal photographer show Bush's reaction to 9/11 as the day unfolds
FBI hides tech secrets from federal prosecutors out of fear they may one day work as defense attorneys
Agency: Federal Bureau of Investigation
April 18, 2016
DOD deliberately misled Congress over handling of sexual assault cases to dampen support for Senate bill that would grant independent prosecutors more authority, according to documents released under the FOIA to the advocacy group Protect Our Defenders
New York Times FOIA shows Defense secretary Ashton Carter relied on personal email for months after revelation Hillary Clinton used personal email, server exclusively
Agency: Department of Defense
February 3, 2016
FOIA moves to late-night as Stephen Colbert grills Donald Rumsfeld with declassified memo quoting him saying the amount of "unknowns" regarding Iraq's WMD program was "big"
Bacardi FOIA request shows US Patent and Trademark Office renewed trademark registration of Havana Club to the Cuban government after Cuban government seized it from Bacardi during Cuban revolution
Headline: What is the Freedom of Information Act? It is, among other things, the answer to December 7th's Final Jeopardy clue -- "The website for this '60s act says ‘First look to see if the information you are interested in is already publicly available.'"
December 2, 2015
FOIA releases show 1980's GOP recognized the need for US leadership on ozone depletion and climate change
NPR obtains evidence through FOIA that Army conducted chemical experiments on troops according to race; builds database to inform soldiers affected but never informed by DOD
Agency: Department of Defense
October 26, 2015
FOIAs show IRS, increasingly involved in drug cases, buys STINGRAY cellphone surveillance equipment
DOJ cites cited FOIA's exemption 5 – the deliberative process exemption – rather than the national security exemption in denying FOIA request for any OLC memos relating to the constitutionality of using military force against ISIL
Agency: Department of Justice
Extention 5
September 29, 2015
FOIA request shows Generals sought more positive coverage of head injuries from West Point boxing classes after receiving FOIA request from New York Times
FOIA lawsuit for Kissinger Telcons wins release of documents showing US Leaders’ candid thinking about Israel, Vietnam, Cyprus, Korea, U.S.-Soviet Détente, US politics, and key personalities of the period