Source
Your Freedom Of Information Act request may be about to hit a dead end.
A proposed rule to the Freedom of Information Act would allow federal agencies to tell people requesting certain law-enforcement or national security
documents that records don't exist - even when they do.
Under current FOIA practice, the government may withhold information and issue what's known as a Glomar denial that says it can neither confirm nor
deny the existence of records.
The new proposal - part of a lengthy rule revision by the Department of Justice - would direct government agencies to "respond to the request as if
the excluded records did not exist."
Open-government groups object.
"We don't believe the statute allows the government to lie to FOIA requesters," said Mike German, senior policy counsel for the American Civil
Liberties Union, which opposes the provision.
While I am sure they deny certain items exist anyways, this is making so that it will for sure become common practice. Really the government does
nothing but lie anyways, this is just making it legal.
They have denied the existence of area 51 for how long? You could be sitting at the gates looking towards the military base and they would still deny
it existed. What idiots...
So now not only do they lie, they make it legal for them to lie........
Any thoughts?
Pred...