FOIA Advisor

Commentary: Making FOIA great again?

FOIA Commentary (2017-2024)Allan BlutsteinComment

As we reported yesterday, a bill expected to be introduced by Senators Marco Rubio and Tom Cotton would, among other things, prohibit federal agencies from disclosing records to certain foreign citizens and entities under the Freedom of Information Act. The FOIA Advisor staff—Ryan Mulvey (RM), Kevin Schmidt (KS), and Allan Blutstein (AB)—weighs in on the proposed amendments below.

KS: I’m not sold on the national security justification for the bill. FOIA exemptions exist to make sure the most sensitive government information stays secret regardless of the status of the requester. And speaking of that, how is a FOIA officer going to confirm the citizenship of the requester? There’s no information about that in the draft bill. FOIA officers have enough to deal with already. They don’t need to try to find out the citizenship status of every requester.

Sen. Rubio says the fact that foreign nationals can request records under FOIA is a “glaring loophole.” Are agencies facing a glut of FOIA requests from foreign nationals outside of the immigration space? I have no idea, but I’d be interested if anyone has seen numbers. A more reasonable argument in my mind would be that we shouldn’t use scarce resources on requests from foreign nationals, but that’s not the leading argument being made.

RM: I agree that it would be interesting to see what percentage of requesters are foreign nationals (or foreign governments or foreign business entities), assuming such information is even collected and verified by agencies. I should think the percentage is rather low, and lower still once one brackets out people seeking immigration-related records, who are still permissible requesters in the Rubio-Cotton bill.

I also take issue with the “glaring loophole” characterization of FOIA. I’m not sure the legislative history, or attendant caselaw, supports Senator Rubio’s claim. There are already judicially created exceptions to the “any person” standard, but I’ve never seen language suggesting Congress accidentally gave foreigners the right to request records. If anything, the fact Congress has already amended FOIA to prohibit requests from foreign government entities to intelligence community agencies—see 5 U.S.C. § 552(a)(3)(E)—suggests it knows how to grapple with the sort of national security concerns raised by Senator Cotton.

Turning to the other substantive proposals in the bill, I can only conclude this is a political stunt rather than a serious attempt at reform. We’re offered a bunch of (bad) solutions in search of non-existent problems. I note, for example, the vagueness of the provision criminalizing what I assume to be proxy requests on behalf of prohibited requesters. Another, more troubling provision would give an agency the discretion to “determine the manner in which a request is fulfilled . . . if [it] has a reasonable belief that fulfilling the request in the manner requested by the requester” would “result in the exposure of [non-responsive] material” or “pose[] a material security risk” to the federal government. What is this? Is this an exclusion? An exemption? What does it mean to “fulfill” a request? And why is non-responsive material, as such, a problem? How will that first sub-provision impinge on the open question of what constitutes a “record”? The latter clause touching on “material security risks” seems ambiguous. Do Exemptions 1 and 3 not already provide enough protection to keep sensitive, national-security information secret?

Finally, I have deep reservations about the proposed tenth exemption for materials “susceptible to reverse engineering.” This strikes me as a sort of “catchall” that draws on mosaic theory and the pre-Milner scope of Exemption 2. I have a hard time imaging what the exemption would cover that couldn’t already be withheld under another existing exemption. I won’t even get into the problem of understanding the “interests of the United States” in the proposed balancing test, and the implications for the foreseeable harm standard.

AB: Your points are well taken and I am confident this effort will fail. I am not offended by—but do not think it necessary to enact—a FOIA citizenship requirement. Our neighbor to the North limits access to agency records to Canadian citizens and permanent residents; however, they do not criminalize or disallow proxy requests. Additionally, a number of U.S. states have citizenship or residency requirements, including Alabama, Arkansas, Delaware, Kentucky, South Carolina, Tennessee, and Virginia, which the U.S. Supreme Court has blessed. I agree with you, Kevin, that enforcement would be logistically challenging, but where there’s a will there’s a way? The government has managed to create a “PreCheck” travel program with 10 million members; it should be able to figure out a screening process for considerably fewer FOIA requesters.

As for the remaining provisions, I have long maintained that agencies should be able to “scope out” information that requesters have not asked for. Perhaps the language here needs to be tweaked, but I support the overall objective. I agree with you, Ryan, that the exemption proposed to protect certain technology appears to be unnecessary. Section 1.4(e) of Executive Order 13,526 already allows agencies to classify “scientific, technological, or economic matters relating to the national security.”

FOIA News: Senate bill would ban foreign FOIAs

FOIA News (2015-2024)Kevin SchmidtComment

Senate bill would ban foreign FOIAs

By Lachlan Markay, Axios, June 14, 2022

Republican members of Congress are introducing legislation to bar foreign nationals and entities from obtaining government records under the Freedom of Information Act, Axios has learned.

Why it matters: The bill's sponsors say it would prevent potentially adversarial foreign actors from accessing sensitive government records. FOIA lawyers are writing it off as a solution in search of a problem.

The details: The bill is set to be introduced this week by Sens. Marco Rubio (R-Fla) and Tom Cotton (R-Ark.).

Read more here.

Copy of draft bill here.

Court opinion issued June 10, 2022

Court Opinions (2015-2024)Allan BlutsteinComment

Avila v. U.S. Dep't of State (D.D.C.) -- holding that: (1) agency’s use of plaintiff’s full name as sole search term was too narrow to uncover all records responsive to plaintiff’s request for records concerning a February 2011 attack involving plaintiff; (2) agency adequately justified withholding some but not all documents pursuant to Exemption 1, and it provided inadequate description for one document withheld under Exemption 3 in conjunction with the National Security Act; (3) agency properly relied on Exemption 5’s deliberative process privilege to withhold draft documents, all but one document constituting outward-facing deliberations, and all but two miscellaneous records; and (4) agency properly withheld emails reflecting policy and legal advice pursuant to the attorney-client privilege.

Summaries of all published opinions issued since April 2015 are available here.

FOIA News: Clock ticking on DOJ summary of 2021 annual FOIA reports

FOIA News (2015-2024)Allan BlutsteinComment

When will the Department of Justice’s Office of Information Privacy release its summary of annual FOIA data for fiscal year 2021? We don’t know. But probably soon. Since 2011, OIP has released its annual summary no later than June nine times. The two outliers involved the FY 2013 summary, which was issued on July 18, 2014, and its FY 2011 summary, which was issued on September 6, 2012.

In the meantime, the raw data is available on FOIA.gov. A summary of the data is available in a FOIA Advisor post dated March 3, 2022.

Court opinion issued June 9, 2022

Court Opinions (2015-2024)Allan BlutsteinComment

Deep Sea Fishermen's Union of Pac. v. U.S. Dep't of Commerce (W.D. Wash.) -- concluding that: (1) agency performed adequate search for personal text messages related to fishing observer program on or after September 20, 2017, when a new agency policy required such messages to be forwarded to agency email accounts; (2) agency’s search for all other records was inadequate, in part because agency neglected to explain its search process; and (3) agency’s “withholding log” and declaration were sufficiently detailed.

Summaries of all published opinions issued since April 2015 are available here.

FOIA News: FOIA Advisory Committee approves final report

FOIA News (2015-2024)Allan BlutsteinComment

FOIA advisers recommend independent review into how DHS handles immigration record requests

By Justin Doubleday, WFED, June 9, 2022

Congress should fund an independent review into how the Department of Homeland Security handles immigration records requests, one of the largest drivers of the Freedom of Information Act backlog, according to an advisory group.

The FOIA Advisory Committee approved its final report for the 2020-2022 term on Thursday. The committee is now seeking applications for new members ahead of the first meeting of the 2022-2024 term in September.

The committee’s final report digs into a range of legislative, technology and process recommendations, including suggestions for how to improve “first-person requests,” where individuals seek access to government records on themselves.

Read more here.

Court opinions issued June 7, 2022

Court Opinions (2015-2024)Allan BlutsteinComment

Inter-Cooperative Exch. v. U.S. Dep't of Commerce (9th Cir.) -- in a 2-1 decision, reversing and remanding district court’s decision and holding that agency employee failed to use adequate terms when searching his personal cell phone for records concerning the arbitration system that sets the price of crab.

Am. Small Bus. League v. SBA (N.D. Cal.) -- concluding that: (1) plaintiff was a representative of the news media for fee purposes, consistent with multiple court decisions holding that “non-profit organizations that conduct investigations and publish press release and other articles about their findings” so qualified; and (2) plaintiff failed to demonstrate that it was entitled to public interest waiver of duplication fees for requests seeking communications from agency’s press office and board members.

Summaries of all published opinions issued since April 2015 are available here.

FOIA News: DHS Announces Move to New Case Management System

FOIA News (2015-2024)Kevin SchmidtComment

Change is Underway at DHS Freedom of Information Act (FOIA)

DHS FOIA is moving to a NEW system which will allow us to process records faster. We expect to begin moving to the system in June. There may be a temporary delay in response to your request while launching the new system. 

The move will be staggered across DHS FOIA processing centers to minimize disruptions. We will provide dates for impacts at each DHS FOIA processing center as soon as they are available. We are giving you advance notice so that you can plan accordingly. We appreciate your patience as we move forward with this new technology.

PLEASE NOTE: This change event will NOT affect requests sent to the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) and the United States Secret Service.  

If you have a Public Access Link (PAL) account at https://foiarequest.dhs.gov, you will need to create a new account after the move. Documents in your PAL account will remain available until the move to the new system is complete.  Please download any content from your PAL account you may need later!

Read more here.