http://www.truth-out.org/revealed-fbis-secretive-practice-blackballing-files/1326811421



Revealed: The FBI's Secretive Practice of "Blackballing" Files
Tuesday 17 January 2012
by: Jason Leopold, Truthout | Report


Have you ever filed a Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) request with the FBI 
and received a written response from the agency stating that it could not 
locate records responsive to your request?


If so, there's a chance the FBI may have found some documents, but for unknown 
reasons, the agency's FOIA analysts determined it was not responsive and 
"blackballed" the file, crucial information the FBI withholds from a requester 
when it issues a "no records" response.


The FBI's practice of "blackballing" files has never been publicly disclosed 
before. With the exception of one open government expert, a half-dozen others 
contacted by Truthout said they were unfamiliar with the process of 
"blackballing" and had never heard of the term.


Trevor Griffey learned about "blackballing" last year when he filed a 
FOIA/Privacy Act request with the FBI to determine whether Manning Marable, a 
Columbia University professor who founded the Institute for Research in 
African-American Studies, sought the FBI's files on Malcolm X under FOIA. At 
the time of his death last April, Marable had just finished writing an 
exhaustive biography on the late civil rights activist. Griffey filed the FOIA 
hoping he would receive records to assist him with research related to a 
long-term civil rights project he has been working on.


In a letter the agency sent in response to his FOIA, the FBI told Griffey that 
it could not locate "main file records" on Marable responsive to his request. 
Last November, in response to a FOIA request Truthout filed with the FBI for a 
wide-range of documents on the Occupy Wall Street, the agency also said it was 
unable to "identify main file records responsive to [our] FOIA," despite the 
fact that internal FBI documents related to the protest movement had already 
been posted on the Internet. The FBI has been criticized in the past for 
responding to more than half of the FOIA requests the agency had received by 
claiming it could not locate responsive files.


Griffey, who also teaches US history at The Evergreen State College in Olympia, 
Washington, and is co-editor of the book, "Black Power at Work: Community 
Control, Affirmative Action and the Construction Industry," was baffled. He 
found it difficult to believe that Marable would not have filed a FOIA for 
Malcolm X's FBI file. So, he sent an email to an FBI FOIA analyst asking for 
clarification.


The FBI FOIA analyst responded to Griffey in an email, asking him to supply 
additional "keywords" to assist in a search of the agency's main file records 
for documents on Marable responsive to his FOIA request. The analyst then 
disclosed to Griffey, perhaps mistakenly, that a search for previous requests 
for records on Marable turned up a single file that was "blackballed" per the 
agency's "standard operating procedure." 


So last May, Griffey again turned to FOIA, this time to try and gain insight 
into the blackballing process. He filed a FOIA request with the FBI seeking a 
copy of the agency's standard operating procedure for "blackballing" files.


Two months later, he received five pages from an untitled and undated 
PowerPoint presentation that outlined procedures for blackballing files from 
FOIA requests. The FBI cited three exemptions under the law to justify 
withholding a complete and unredacted copy of the PowerPoint:


(b)(6) Personnel and medical files and similar files, the disclosure of which 
would constitute a clearly unwarranted invasion of personal privacy.


(b)(7) Records or information compiled for law enforcement purposes, but only 
to the extent that the production of such law enforcement records or 
information:


C. Could reasonably be expected to constitute an unwarranted invasion of 
personal privacy;


E. Would disclose techniques and procedures for law enforcement investigations 
or prosecutions or would disclose guidelines for law enforcement investigations 
or prosecutions if such disclosure could reasonably be expected to risk 
circumvention of the law ...


Griffey appealed the FBI's decision to withhold information contained in the 
PowerPoint under the (b)(7)(E) exemption, but it was denied.


Still, the PowerPoint pages the FBI did turn over to Griffey provide insight 
into the "blackballing" process. On a page titled, "Blackball Files," it says 
files identified as 190 and 197 "main files," which are FBI classifications 
pertaining to FOIA/Privacy Act requests for files on people and civil 
litigation, are blackballed unless "specifically ask[ed] for" by the requester 
when an initial FOIA request is made.


Moreover, the agency deems certain "control files," "separate files which 
relate to a specific matter and is used as an administrative means of managing, 
or 'controlling' a certain program or investigative matter," that pop up and 
are unresponsive to a FOIA to be ripe for blackballing. However, a FOIA analyst 
must first get permission from a supervisor before a "control file" can be 
blackballed.


Finally, according to the PowerPoint, some files are automatically blackballed 
by an FBI FOIA analyst, but the public is not permitted to know the 
classification of files that fall into that category because the FBI redacted 
that part of the PowerPoint, claiming disclosure would reveal "techniques and 
procedures for law enforcement investigations and procedures."


"Not only are we not told when the FBI withholds material from FOIA requests, 
but we are not even allowed to know all of the kinds of material it withholds," 
Griffey told Truthout. "The law itself and not just its enforcement, is now 
effectively secret."


But Bill Carter, an FBI spokesman, told Truthout in an interview that 
"blackballing" is not about secrecy nor is the process used in any way to 
conceal responsive records, which the Justice Department revealed it has been 
doing for more than two decades in certain cases.


"Blackball is a term of art used by the [FBI's] FOIA section people in the 
records management division," he said. "It's an unfortunate term. It applies to 
people and events. It means that we pulled a file that initially looked 
responsive but after a review it turned out it wasn't because the file didn't 
match the requesters' specific request" for records.


Carter sent Truthout an email that contained an explanation of the blackballing 
process as provided to him by Dennis Argall, the assistant section chief of the 
Record/Information Dissemination Section, FBI's Records Management Division:


"[B]lackball" is a term we typically use to describe a file (not a request) 
that initially looked responsive but upon review we find it's for a different 
guy or event. It can also be used to describe a file that we won't process 
because, i.e., a guy makes a request for his "FBI file" in 2005 and [we] 
process it for him. When he makes another request for his "FBI file" in 2011, 
we will only process his "records" but will not process the file that was 
created to respond to the 2005 FOIA request, which is 190 file series [the 
classification the FBI uses for files requested on people].


That's exactly how the FBI described the blackballing process to attorney Kel 
McClanahan, executive director of Arlington, Virginia-based National Security 
Counselors, a public interest law firm.


McClanahan told Truthout in an email interview that he first learned about 
blackballing when the term was used in a set of FBI "processing notes" he 
requested from the agency to determine how FBI FOIA analysts had handled one of 
his FOIA requests.


Although McClanahan believes there is "definitely a place for blackballing in 
the FOIA process" he said the way the FBI "does blackballing leaves a lot to be 
desired."


"First of all, even though [the FBI] may blackball 50 records and release 3, 
they never tell the requester about the 50," McClanahan said, hitting on 
Griffey's main complaint about blackballing. "They never mention word one about 
'and we found other records that we deemed non-responsive.' The requester is 
left to wonder why the FBI only found 3 records about the subject in question 
and he will never know that they found 50 others that they ultimately deemed 
non-responsive unless he has the foresight to FOIA the FBI's processing notes 
for his request. Knowledge like that is very important when a requester is 
trying to decide whether or not to tie up [the Justice Department's's Office of 
Information Policy] with an administrative appeal, let alone litigation."


McClanahan said his concerns would largely be addressed if the FBI "only 
blackballed records for good reasons."


"If I could trust the FBI only to blackball things that were clearly 
non-responsive, I don't need to know that they found completely unrelated 
records," he added. "However, that's not what the FBI does. I have seen it 
blackball records because they 'weren't FBI records,' even though they were in 
FBI files (they were FBI copies of other agencies' records, which any FOIA 
person worth his salt knows are still responsive to a FOIA request made to 
FBI). I've seen it blackball records because the request asked for 'internal 
FBI records' and the records in question were sent outside of the FBI, based on 
a strained interpretation of the word 'internal.'"


The FBI will be forced to make a choice "if it wants to apply FOIA correctly," 
McClanahan said.


"The agency can either limit its blackballing to records that nobody would 
think are responsive (e.g. different people with the same name, records outside 
a set time frame); or it can tell requesters in the administrative stage that 
it determined that certain records were non-responsive and why," he said. 
"Failing to do either, however, is bad FOIA."


This work by Truthout is licensed under a Creative Commons 
Attribution-Noncommercial 3.0 United States License.

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Just because i'm near the punchbowl doesn't mean I'm also drinking from it.

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