US Attorney General Commands Open Government

In a recent memorandum to heads of federal executive departments and agencies, Attorney General Eric Holder, Jr. has followed President Obama’s earlier lead in instructing that the Freedom of Information Act be administered with the clear presumption of openness.

According to the Attorney General, this presumption has two important implications.

The first implication is that an agency should not withhold requested government information simply because it is permitted to do so under the law. Rather, discretionary disclosures are strongly encouraged. Just because an agency technically may be able to establish that certain records are covered by a FOIA exemption is not reason enough to withhold the records.

Perhaps more sun will shine on the affairs and activities of government, says Eric Sinrod

Perhaps more sun will shine on the affairs and activities of government, says Eric Sinrod

The second implication is that even when an agency concludes that it cannot make a full disclosure with respect to requested records, it nevertheless must consider whether a partial disclosure is appropriate. Indeed, according to the Attorney General, agencies always should be cognizant that the FOIA requires that reasonable steps be taken to segregate and release non-exempt information.

The Attorney General, of course, notes that the disclosure obligation arising under the FOIA is not absolute. He understands that the statute contains meaningful exemptions designed to protect interests such as national security, personal privacy, and law enforcement.

Nevertheless, the Attorney General echoes the President in reminding government officials that they cannot shield information as confidential merely because they may be embarrassed by disclosure, because errors or failures might be made public, or because of “speculative or abstract fears.”

In responding to President Obama’s directive that he issue new FOIA guidelines, Attorney General Holder rescinded an Attorney General FOIA memorandum from 2001 that provided that the Department of Justice would defend decisions to withhold records “unless they lack a sound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 its place, Attorney General Holder has announced that the Department of Justice now will defend a denial of a FOIA request only if the agency reasonably foresees that disclosure would harm an interest protected by one of the FOIA exemptions or if disclosure is prohibited as a matter of law.

In response to the President’s instruction to agencies to “use modern technology to inform citizens what is known and done by their Government,” the Attorney General has directed that agencies should “readily and systematically post information online in advance of any public request.”

Attorney General Holder also has encouraged agencies to reduce FOIA backlogs and to respond to information requests in a more timely manner. Along those lines, he notes that “timely disclosure of information is an essential component of transparency,” and that “long delays should not be viewed as an inevitable and insurmountable consequence of high demand.”

Perhaps the foregoing directives by the Attorney General will cause more sun to shine on the affairs and activities of government. However, this will not happen overnight. Agencies are staffed by actual human beings. These people have been operating within a different, less-disclosure-oriented culture over the past eight years. But, over time, paradigm shifts are possible, starting from the top down.

This column is written by Eric Sinrod, an attorney at Duane Morris and a guest blogger at TechPulse 360. It was originally published on FindLaw.com.

One Response to US Attorney General Commands Open Government

  1. Cordie Deon says:

    I’m wondering if the new case law that will bring Twitter, Facebook, Myspace into the 21 century is going to happen anytime soon. How will these new technologies fit into our current system and how can they be controlled across cyberspace?

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