Radley Balko | August 24, 2007
Via commenter Shawn Smith, the Justice Department is responding to a lawsuit regarding some 5 million missing White House emails dating from 2003 to 2005 by arguing that the White House Office of Administration is not subject to Freedom of Information Act requests. As Ed Brayton notes, that's more than a bit odd, considering...
The Department of Justice list of contacts for FOIA requests includes a contact person in the Office of Administration; her name is Carol Ehrlich and she even has a title - FOIA officer. How odd that an agency that is not subject to the FOIA would have an FOIA officer to handle requests they're not subject to.
Even more odd that the White House website has documentation on the Office of Administration answering FOIA requests (here's the report for FY 2006). Indeed, the White House website for the Office of Administration contains a whole section on FOIA requests, including a list of documents that were "specifically identified for inclusion by the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA), as well as documents for which we have received multiple FOIA requests.
In fact, they have a whole document with their administrative rules for how they comply with FOIA requests and that document requires the Office of Administration to comply with FOIA rules.
As Brayton explains, what the Justice Department probably meant to argue is that the White House Office of Administration should be exempt from FOIA requests when the Justice Department and the White House determine that those requests could be politically damaging to the president.
But that's a tougher point to argue. What more would you expect from the most secretive administration in U.S. history?
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Taktix®,
Yes, and there is also the parallel Republican National Committee
e-mail
system called gwb43.com used by the Administration officials
supposedly for strictly political purposes(the Hatch Act precludes
political work using government resources including e-mail).
Karl Rove uses gwb43.com for 95% of his e-mail per the cite. Some
technical glitch (no shenanigans involved at all) caused many of
these e-mail to be "lost."
If Rove, for example, used gwb43.com for any policy related work
(something like discussing US Attorneys and what should be done
about those that are not toeing the line), well that would be a
violation of the Presidential Records Act. I'm sure that would
never happen, though.
More
PS - Besides claiming that the White House e-mails
are exempt from the FOIA, they also claim the RNC e-mails are
too.
It will be interesting to see how many of those same people will say the White House is subject to FOIA if Hillary is elected.
I'm confused. Are they FOIA'ing the gwb43.com emails? How would the RNC fall under the FOIA?
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