Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byClarissa Webb Modified over 8 years ago
1
Access to Information Chapter 7 1
2
The Supreme Court and the Right to Hear Bd. of Educ. v. Pico Stanley v. Georgia Kleindeist v. Mandel Chapter 7Access to Information2
3
No constitutional right to gather news Stewart speech at Yale Law School-- First Amendment is “neither a Freedom of Information Act nor an Official Secrets Act.” Chapter 7Access to Information 3
4
What about Hidden Cameras? Chapter 7Access to Information4
5
Military access issues Military bases Reporters embedded in combat zones Chapter 7Access to Information 5
6
A limited “equal protection” claim Chapter 7Access to Information 6 Honolulu mayor Frank Fasi could not bar specific reporters from press conferences
7
A limited “equal protection” claim Chapter 7Access to Information 7 Same true of Toledo mayor Carty Finkbeiner
8
A limited “equal protection” claim Chapter 7Access to Information 8 Same rule applied to Jefferson Parish (LA) sheriff Harry Lee
9
A limited “equal protection” claim Chapter 7Access to Information 9 But MD governor Robert Ehrlich did not have to return disfavored reporters’ calls
10
A right to hear from criminals and bureaucrats? Simon & Schuster v. NYS Crime Victims Board (1991). Struck down NYS Son of Sam law U. S. v. NTEU (1995). Struck down portions of Ethics Reform Act Both cases emphasize public interest Chapter 7Access to Information10
11
Chapter 7Access to Information11
12
Chapter 7Access to Information12
13
Chapter 7Access to Information13 A right to videotape police conduct (Simon Glik case)
14
Federal FOIA Hundreds of thousands of requests annually Hundreds of resulting court cases Chapter 7Access to Information 14
15
FOIA and Statutory Construction Is this an agency? A record? An “agency record?” Does this exemption apply here? Chapter 7Access to Information 15
16
What is an “Agency?” Includes: Executive Departments Military Departments Govt and Govt- controlled corporations Excludes President, Congress, Federal Judiciary and staff Advisors Chapter 7Access to Information 16
17
What is a record? Need not be paper Can be audio/video tape, computer data, etc Chapter 7Access to Information 17 Created or Obtained Physical Location Unimportant
18
Making an FOIA request Locate appropriate agency’s FOI officer Chapter 7Access to Information 18 Make specific request Eligible for fee waiver?
19
Be prepared to appeal Refusal Redactions Vaughn Index Glomar Response Chapter 7Access to Information 19
20
Exemptions Chapter 7Access to Information 20
21
Exemption 1: National Security Varies with each Administration’s style Judges may use in camera inspection Chapter 7Access to Information 21
22
Exemption 1 used often in terrorism cases Chapter 7Access to Information22
23
Exemption 2: Internal Agency Personnel Rules Protects relatively trivial matters UPDATE (after book was published)– No more “High 2” (“records whose disclosure would risk circumvention of the law”) Chapter 7Access to Information23
24
Exemption 3: “We bow down to other laws” Sometimes called the ‘catch all” exemption A ‘dance of deference’ often happens Privacy Act very often implicated Chapter 7Access to Information 24
25
Exemption 4: Confidential Commercial Information Chapter 7Access to Information 25 Involuntary disclosure = National Parks test Difficult to get this info in future? Fair to company involved? Voluntary Disclosure = Critical Mass test Substitute for 2 nd bullet: “would a company “customarily reveal” this info to the public?
26
Exemption 5: Internal Policy Discussions Includes the “working papers” exemption Also allows agencies to consult with their own attorneys Chapter 7Access to Information 26
27
Exemption 6: Personnel, Medical and Similar files Is this such a file? “Similar” hard to define Unwarranted invasion of privacy? Chapter 7Access to Information 27 Challenger astronauts John Walker Lindh
28
Exemption 7: Law Enforcement Interference with law enforcement proceedings Jeopardizing fair trial Invasion of privacy Disclosing confidential source Revealing techniques Endangering life or health Chapter 7Access to Information 28
29
Exemption 7: Law Enforcement Chapter 7Access to Information 29 Its privacy provision may apply to surviving family
30
(but not to the tort law of privacy) Chapter 7Access to Information 30 Showler v Harper’s Magazine Foundation
31
Exemption 7: Law Enforcement Chapter 7Access to Information 31 Its privacy provision does NOT apply to corporations
32
Exemption 7: Law Enforcement Chapter 7Access to Information 32 Circuits conflict on whether mug shots are private
33
Exemptions 8 and 9 Financial Institutions Chapter 7Access to Information 33 Geological & Geophysical data
34
Government in the Sunshine Act Covers meetings rather than files Chapter 7Access to Information 34 The group must have policy making authority “Meetings” can be quite informal Restrictions on executive sessions Exemptions mirror FOIA
35
Federal Advisory Committee Act Fills in some gaps of the Sunshine Act Designed to open up meetings of groups composed of private citizens These groups were NOT covered: Hillary Clinton’s Health Care Reform Presidential Legal Expense Trust Cheney’s National Energy Policy Development Group Chapter 7Access to Information35 Bill & Hillary with the Health Care Task Force (1993)
36
State FOIA’s All 50 states plus DC Chapter 7Access to Information 36
37
State FOIA’s Chapter 7Access to Information 37 Out-of-State requestors (Sup Ct ruling)
38
State FOIA’s Chapter 7Access to Information 38 Government job candidates
39
State FOIA’s Chapter 7Access to Information 39 Civil Service test scores
40
State FOIA’s Chapter 7Access to Information 40 Use of outside contractors
41
State Open Meetings Laws Majority of these predate federal law Federal law is modeled after the law in Florida Chapter 7Access to Information 41
42
State Open Meetings Laws Chapter 7Access to Information 42 Not a violation of First Amendment Criminal sanctions OK’d for violations
43
When is a group covered? Created by statutory or constitutional provisions? Chapter 7Access to Information 43 Are most members public officials? Are public funds used ? Does the group make policy? Does it perform govt. functions?
44
Officials try to skirt the laws Chapter 7Access to Information44 “Spontaneous” meetings Serial Communication Improper use of executive sessions
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.