FOIA Advisor

FOIA News (2025)

FOIA News: Right-wing groups kvetch about DOJ's FOIA litigation stances

FOIA News (2025)Allan BlutsteinComment

Trump DOJ Promised Transparency. Conservative Orgs Think It’s Falling Short

By Katelynn Richardson, Daily Caller,

Transparency groups are growing frustrated that the Trump Department of Justice (DOJ) is maintaining positions in some cases previously held by the Biden administration.

Organizations like the Oversight Project, Empower Oversight and Judicial Watch are waiting for movement on dozens of pending Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) cases, expressing disappointment that the DOJ is not giving greater attention to disclosing documents related to what they believe are past examples of government weaponization or misconduct.

Read more here.

FOIA News: Marine veteran loses FOIA suit in effort to prove murder plot

FOIA News (2025)Kevin SchmidtComment

Marine veteran loses FOIA suit in effort to prove murder plot

By Jonathan Ellis, The Dakota Scout, June 17, 2025

A retired Marine Corps officer who sought records related to what he claims is a 40-year-old murder attempt lost his case when a federal judge dismissed his lawsuit Friday.

Rory Walsh had sought letters of censure and reprimand he claimed were issued against two Marine Corps general officers. Walsh filed a request for the letters under the federal Freedom of Information Act. He then sued the Department of the Navy in 2023 when the letters were not produced.

Read more here.

FOIA News: More on FOIA delays

FOIA News (2025)Allan BlutsteinComment

Federal government record requests languish — and not just those aimed at DOGE

Washington staff cuts have slowed responses to Freedom of Information Act requests, and the agency engineering many reductions is so far escaping normal disclosure rules.

By Rich Lord, Public Source, June 17, 2025

“Hello, the FOIA office has been placed on admin leave and is unable to respond to any emails,” the April 18 auto-response email indicated.

That request was one of eight submitted by PublicSource in an effort to better understand the impact a new governmental player — the Department of Government Efficiency, or DOGE — is having on the Pittsburgh region. The effort comes at a time when the public’s stake in federal government decisions and actions is high, but the ability to access records appears to be at a low point.

Federal government documents appear to be even less readily available to citizens, organizations and the press this year than in the recent past, according to three advocates for openness whose organizations regularly work to pry information from public agencies.

Read more here.

FOIA News: This and that

FOIA News (2025)Allan BlutsteinComment
  • The software contractor OPEXUS has a new blog post highlighting how FOIA professionals are struggling to keep up with a surge in requests due to staffing cuts and lack of direct access to agency records. It unsurprisingly suggests that integrating eDiscovery technology can significantly improve efficiency by giving FOIA teams immediate access to documents and automating key processes like redaction.

  • Law Street Media’s latest FOIA-related article explores the controversial past of entrepreneur Chase Herro and his role in a Trump-backed crypto venture, while detailing media FOIA requests investigating potential regulatory issues tied to Herro and related financial entities.

  • A reminder that the federal FOIA Advisory Committee for the 2024-2026 term will meet on June 12, 2025.

FOIA News: Yale journal analyzes recent Fifth Circuit decision

FOIA News (2025)Allan BlutsteinComment

Texas Public Policy Foundation v. Department of State and Its Potential Unanticipated Consequences

By Bernard Bell, Yale L.J. on Regs., Notice & Comment, June 9, 2025

Recently, as noted in this blog, a Fifth Circuit panel considered whether the names and email addresses of low-level federal employees who worked on climate change issues must be provided to a Freedom of Information Act (“FOIA”) requester.  The divided panel issued a strong pro-transparency decision, concluding that government employees, even low-level ones, generally lack a privacy interest in their identities and official email accounts.  Texas Public Policy Foundation v. Department of State, 136 F.4th 554, 2025 WL 1287890 (May 5, 2025).  Indeed, the information requested would enable the public to learn the “seniority, backgrounds, and areas of expertise” of employees who contributed to the development of an important public policy, furthering FOIA’s transparency goals.[1] 

However, the Fifth Circuit’s decision may produce unanticipated anti-transparency consequences.  It may enhance the government’s justification for withholding records prepared as a part of developing public policy under FOIA Exemption 5’s deliberative process privilege.  And such potential consequences take on special meaning in the context of the “foreseeable harm standard” of disclosure added to FOIA in 2016, FOIA Improvements Act of 2016, Pub. L. 114-186, §2, 130 Stat. 538, 539 (codified at 5 U.S.C 552(8)(A)(i)(I)). Under that standard, agencies must disclose records falling within FOIA’s exemptions unless their release risk the types of harms the exemption was designed to prevent.  See, OIP Guidance: Applying a Presumption of Openness and the Foreseeable Harm Standard[2]  Ultimately, then, the Fifth Circuit panel’s decision may result in less, not more, transparency.

Read more here.

FOIA News: Tesla claims its crash data is protected under Exemption 4

FOIA News (2025)Allan BlutsteinComment

Tesla Moves to Shield Crash Data from Public Disclosure, Citing Competitive Risk

By Samir Gautam, Techstory, June 8, 2025

In a move that underscores the increasing tension between corporate secrecy and public transparency, Tesla Inc. has formally requested a U.S. federal judge to block the release of certain vehicle crash data maintained by the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA). The electric vehicle (EV) giant claims that disclosing the data could provide competitors with insights into Tesla’s proprietary technology, causing significant commercial damage.

Read more here.

FOIA News: DOJ seeks to dismiss NYT suit for Mar-a-Lago report

FOIA News (2025)Allan BlutsteinComment


‘Conflicting court orders’: Trump admin moves to dismiss FOIA lawsuit for Jack Smith’s Mar-a-Lago report because ‘Judge Cannon’s injunction’ is still in effect

By Colin Kalmbacher, Law & Crime, June 7, 2025

The U.S. Department of Justice on Friday filed a motion to dismiss a Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) lawsuit aimed at unearthing the second volume of former special counsel Jack Smith’s final report on the Mar-a-Lago investigation into President Donald Trump.

The underlying litigation is a relatively terse five-page lawsuit filed in January by The New York Times and one of their reporters.

The plaintiffs accuse the DOJ of failing to make a determination for expedited processing of their FOIA request for the second volume of the Smith report – within the timeline mandated by federal law.

Now, the Trump administration, in no uncertain terms, wants to wash its hands of the matter and have the lawsuit dismissed. The filing also offers itself as, in the alternative, a motion for summary judgment.

Read more here.

FOIA News: SCOTUS limits discovery request against DOGE

FOIA News (2025)Allan BlutsteinComment


Supreme Court limits outside access to DOGE records

The high court said a judge’s directive allowing a watchdog group to examine DOGE’s recommendations for cost savings at executive branch agencies was “not appropriately tailored.”

By Josh Gerstein, Politico, June 6, 2025

The Supreme Court has reined in a lower-court order that allowed a watchdog group wide-ranging access to records of the Trump administration’s Department of Government Efficiency.

The high court’s majority said a judge’s directive allowing Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington to examine DOGE’s recommendations for cost savings at executive branch agencies was “not appropriately tailored.”

In a two-page order Friday, the Supreme Court said such access was not a proper way to resolve an ongoing dispute about whether DOGE is a federal agency subject to the Freedom of Information Act or operates as a presidential advisory body that does not have to share its records with the public.

Read more here.

FOIA News: SCOTUS pauses DOGE discovery

FOIA News (2025)Allan BlutsteinComment

US Supreme Court temporarily halts access sought by watchdog group to DOGE records

  • Watchdog group sought records on DOGE's operations

  • Lower court found DOGE is likely subject to FOIA law

By Andrew Chung, Reuters, May 23, 2025

The U.S. Supreme Court on Friday temporarily paused judicial orders requiring the Department of Government Efficiency, established by President Donald Trump and spearheaded by his billionaire adviser Elon Musk, to turn over records and answer questions in the coming days and weeks concerning its operations.

The court put on hold Washington-based U.S. District Judge Christopher Cooper's orders for DOGE to respond to a government watchdog group's requests for information after finding that DOGE likely is a government agency covered by the federal Freedom of Information Act.

Read more here.