Do you suppose this is why we have a Kenyan Communist in the White House who is trying to fill the government with corrupt tax-cheats, criminals, incompetents and fellow communists? WTF? What happened to J Edgar Hoover's heroic "G-Men", who struck fear in the hearts of criminals and communists, captured the bad guys and protected America from the barbarians?
FBI Finds Nothing for 2 of 3 Who Seek FOIA Records
Friday, March 13, 2009 9:02 AM
WASHINGTON -- If information were a river, the FBI would be a dam.
Two out of every three people who ask for FBI records under the Freedom of
Information Act are told by the bureau no such documents exist - a failure rate
five times higher than at other major federal agencies, a private study finds.
The FBI is using an outdated and deliberately limited search process to avoid
full compliance with the records law, the National Security Archive asserts. The
Archive is a private group that publishes declassified government documents and
files many FOIA requests.
The Archive awarded the FBI its Rosemary Award for the worst Freedom of
Information Act performance by a federal agency. Named for former President
Richard M. Nixon's secretary, Rose Mary Woods, the award is given annually
around Sunshine Week, when journalism organizations promote open government and
freedom of information. Woods is best known for re-enacting her claim to have
accidentally erased 18 1/2 minutes of a White House tape recording when she
stretched to answer a phone.
"The FBI knowingly uses a search process that doesn't find relevant records,"
Archive director Tom Blanton said Thursday. "Not only does this woeful
performance lead to unnecessary litigation, but the bureau apparently uses the
same searches in its criminal investigations as well."
The Archive said FBI records show that over the past four years the bureau told
66 percent of requesters _ 37,342 out of 56,530 requests _ that it found no
responsive records. The 33 large federal agencies that receive the bulk of all
FOIA requests responded that way only 13 percent of the time on average, the
archive calculated.
In 2008, only 89 requesters, 0.5 percent of the year's total, got everything
they asked for from the FBI; 2,276, 13 percent, got part of what they sought.
David Hardy, chief of the FBI's FOIA section, has said the bureau checks FOIA
requests against the names on an electronic index of its files.
The electronic index contains names of individuals, organizations, companies,
publications, activities and counterintelligence programs. It includes the main
name for each file and other names in the file - or cross-references - that case
agents think might be useful in the future, but not all names in every file. The
electronic index for searching only goes back to 1980s; earlier records have to
be searched by hand on paper.
The FBI checks the main names on the index, Hardy has said. It does not check
cross-reference names unless specifically asked to, and does not check the
entire file. It won't look at paper or field office records unless specifically
asked to.
Blanton said modern information systems use electronic search tools that scan
the entire text of a document. "The FBI process, in contrast, is designed to
send FOIA requesters away frustrated, and no doubt has the same effect on the
FBI's own agents."
Hardy told The Associated Press on Thursday the indexing system is designed to
support bureau investigations.
"The names our agents pick to put in the index mean something to our
investigators," Hardy said. "We're not building a library. If you have something
of meaning to the FBI, it's going to be there."
But Blanton responded: "No FBI agent is omniscient. They can't always know what
names would be important to another field office or make or break an
investigation in the future."
Two men who turned out to be Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist hijackers lived in San
Diego and associated with an FBI informant before the attack, but if the agent
only indexed the informant's name, they wouldn't find the two hijackers, Blanton
said.
FBI spokesman Richard Kolko said "the reason for the huge number of no-records
responses is that it's become a cult phenomenon to ask the FBI for records on
yourself, and most people don't have FBI records."
But FBI searches frustrate other requesters. Salt Lake City lawyer Jesse
Trentadue wanted to know whether bureau documents showed a link between his
brother's death in custody and the 1995 bombing of the Oklahoma City federal
building.
Trentadue asked for a Jan. 4, 1996, message from FBI Director Louis Freeh's
office to the Oklahoma City and Omaha, Neb., offices that discussed the federal
building bombers (the FBI's OKBOMB case). His request supplied the correct date
for the memo, the names of the sender and two recipients and a newspaper story
with direct quotes from it, but the FBI told him no records matched his request.
Trentadue later found the very memo he wanted had been released to another FOIA
requester, so he sued the FBI for a better search. Hardy told the court the FBI
had used the search term "OKBOMB" to try to find the January 1996 message;
bureau officials couldn't say why that search failed to produce the Freeh
message, in which the first listed subject was "OKBOMB."
Hardy told AP the law requires reasonable, not exhaustive, searches. "If we were
to try to chase down every name with a full text search, the entire Russian army
couldn't finish the work in a timely manner," Hardy said. "We think our system
is reasonable."
Hardy said the FBI now has the shortest pending times for FOIA requests in its
history, no backlogged requests older than three years and fewer than 1 percent
older than two. But Blanton said the FBI's average response times of 109 days
for an expedited request and 374 days for a complex request are still among the
highest in government.
Blanton said the FBI has avoided processing requests by demanding privacy act
waivers from any living individual referenced. He said the bureau stopped a
student journalism project on the murder of Wall Street Journal reporter Daniel
Pearl in Pakistan by requesting a privacy waiver from al-Qaida leader Khalid
Sheikh Mohammed, a U.S. prisoner in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba.
"We are supposed to use common sense and waive that rule," Hardy said. "But we
correct our errors. We're processing the Pearl documents now."