| by Ted Bridis WASHINGTON — For at least a year, the
Homeland Security Department detoured requests for federal records
to senior political advisers for highly unusual scrutiny, probing
for information about the requesters and delaying disclosures deemed
too politically sensitive, according to nearly 1,000 pages of
internal e-mails obtained by The Associated Press.
The department abandoned the practice after AP investigated.
Inspectors from the department's Office of Inspector General quietly
conducted interviews last week to determine whether political
advisers acted improperly.
The Freedom of Information Act, (FOIA) the main tool forcing the
government to be more open, is designed to be insulated from
political considerations. Anyone who seeks information through the
law is supposed to get it unless disclosure would hurt national
security, violate personal privacy or expose confidential
decision-making in certain areas.
But in July 2009, Homeland Security introduced a directive requiring
a wide range of information to be vetted by political appointees for
"awareness purposes," no matter who requested it.
Career employees were ordered to provide Secretary Janet
Napolitano's political staff with information about the people who
asked for records — such as where they lived, whether they were
private citizens or reporters — and about the organizations where
they worked.
If a member of Congress sought such documents, employees were told
to specify Democrat or Republican.
This, despite President Barack Obama's statement that federal
workers should "act promptly and in a spirit of cooperation" under
FOIA, and Attorney General Eric Holder's assertion: "Unnecessary
bureaucratic hurdles have no place in the new era of open
government."
Information to Congress delayed
The special reviews at times delayed the release of information to
Congress, watchdog groups and the news media for weeks beyond the
usual wait, even though the directive specified the reviews should
take no more than three days.
The foot-dragging reached a point that officials worried the
department would get sued, one e-mail shows.
"We need to make sure that we flip these ASAP so we can eliminate
any lag in getting the responses to the requesters," the agency's
director of disclosure, Catherine Papoi, wrote to two of
Napolitano's staffers. "Under the statute, the requester now has the
right to allege constructive denial and take us to court. Please
advise soonest."
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The article continues, you can read it all by clicking the link
at top left. I just wanted to make the point that it's not worth the
trouble to try to get any information out of the DHS, and it's
liable to get you investigated for being a trouble-maker. Hell, just
talking about it is liable to get me branded as a trouble-maker, but
they already knew that. Right Janet?

Uhhh... Yes.
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