Read This!
On October 12, 2001,U.S.Attorney General Ashcroft issued a memorandum
to the heads of all departments and agencies that supersedes the
Department of Justice FOIA policy memorandum that had been in
effect since October 1993.
The new Ashcroft FOIA Memorandum was effective immediately upon
issuance, and the presidential statement on the FOIA that was
issued in 1993 remains in effect as well.
The following is an edited version of the October memorandum.
From: John Ashcroft,Attorney General Subject: The Freedom of
Information Act.
UNDER THE SPOTLIGHT: After months of uncritical coverage,
some media outlets such as the investigative and leftleaning Mother
Jones, have taken the Bush administration to task for the way
it has curtailed access to information in the wake of the September
11 terrorist attacks.When he issued his famous memo, it became
clear that attorney general John Ashcroft was the chief architect
of the administration’s restrictive policies.
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As you know, the Department of Justice and this Administration
are committed to full compliance with the Freedom of Information
Act (FOIA), 5 U.S.C. § 552 (2000). It is only through a well-informed
citizenry that the leaders of our nation remain accountable to
the governed and the American people can be assured that neither
fraud nor government waste is concealed. The Department of Justice
and this Administration are equally committed to protecting other
fundamental values that are held by our society.
Among them are
safeguarding our national security, enhancing the effectiveness
of our law enforcement agencies,protecting sensitive business
information and, not least, preserving personal privacy. Our citizens
have a strong interest as well in a government that is fully functional
and efficient. Congress and the courts have long recognized that
certain legal privileges ensure candid and complete agency deliberations
without fear that they will be made public. Other privileges ensure
that lawyers’ deliberations and communications are kept private.
No leader can operate effectively without confidential advice
and counsel. I encourage your agency to carefully consider the
protection of all such values and interests when making disclosure
determinations under the FOIA. Any discretionary decision by your
agency to disclose information protected under the FOIA should
be made only after full and deliberate consideration of the institutional,
commercial, and personal privacy interests that could be implicated
by disclosure of the information.
In making these decisions, you
should consult with the Department of Justice’s Office of Information
and Privacy when significant FOIA issues arise, as well as with
our Civil Division on FOIA litigation matters. When you carefully
consider FOIA requests and decide to withhold records, in whole
or in part, you can be assured that the Department of Justice
will defend your decisions unless they lack a sound legal basis
or present an unwarranted risk of adverse impact on the ability
of other agencies to protect other important records.
In light
of ….further terrorist activity in their aftermath, federal agencies
are concerned with the need to protect critical systems, facilities,
stockpiles, and other assets from security breaches and harm —
and in some instances from their potential use as weapons of mass
destruction in and of themselves.Such protection efforts, of course,must
at the same time include the protection of any agency information
that could enable someone to succeed in causing the feared harm.